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Elementary Inclusive Education

Welcome

The Elementary Inclusive Preservice Program prepares teachers to teach all children, particularly in urban contexts. The course of study emphasizes curriculum development for heterogeneous classrooms, critical multiculturalism, teaching for equity and social justice, and an inquiry approach to teaching and learning.  The Preservice Program reflects the pluralism at Teachers College; students in the program study a wide variety of approaches to education rather than a single approach.  In keeping with this philosophy, the emphasis is on leadership and decision making.

Our stance is that there is no single truth in education but there are many realities.  Each of us has the right to choose our own (educated) platform, but we who are teacher educators have the obligation to introduce our students to the spectrum of alternatives and help them to look at the important differences among approaches.  Because there is no one clearly superior way to engage in educating children, teachers must constantly set hypotheses and test them searching for the best way to teach each individual child and group of children.  Such teaching lacks the safety and predictability of the ‘tried and true” approach, and requires individuals who understand the limitations of fixed formulas and who enjoy reaching out into the unpredictable world created by the diversity and the uniqueness of each child and each group of children.

Read Elementary Inclusive's Position Statement on Inclusive Schooling and Teacher Preparation here.

Announcements

Events

There are no events listed at this time

Contact Us

Phone: 212.678.3695

Fax: 212.678.3237


Program Coordinator:
Dr. Celia Oyler

Program Information

Elementary Inclusive Education (Grades 1-6) with Initial Certification, Critical Special Education Program Dual Certification and Elementary Inclusive Education with Gifted Extension

Student Testimony

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    "Even though I am learning the difficulties of being a teacher, I am also gaining a deeper appreciation of the joys involved in teaching. There is nobody more courageous than a child that raises his hand to answer a question even though he is not certain if he is correct. When he gives an incorrect answer, he is not discouraged. He does not stop raising his hand because he did not give the right answer. Instead, he is the first student to raise his hand to give the answer for the next question."