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Corporation News
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FOUR UNIVERSITIES ASKED TO SUBMIT PROPOSALS FOR REFORMING TEACHER EDUCATION IN CARNEGIE CORPORATION OF NEW YORKS INITIATIVE, TEACHERS FOR A NEW ERA
$40 MILLION, MATCHED LOCALLY, TO DEVELOP STATE-OF-THE-ART SCHOOLS
OF EDUCATION
New York, NY - April 10, 2002. Carnegie Corporation of New York announced today that four higher education institutions have been asked to submit proposals for participating in a landmark initiative designed to strengthen K-12 teaching by developing state-of-the-art programs at schools of education. The four universities participating in this early phase of the multi-year initiative, called Teachers for a New Era, are Bank Street College of Education in New York City; California State University, Northridge; Michigan State University and the University of Virginia.
Teaching reform is central to school reform, and these institutions are pioneers in the movement, says Vartan Gregorian, president of Carnegie Corporation. If we really want to improve student achievement, we have no choice but to improve teaching. As the 19th century French philosopher, Victor Cousin, succinctly put it, As is the teacher, so is the school.
The Corporation, under Gregorians leadership, has made higher education issues, particularly reform of teachers education, one of its highest priorities. This reform initiative has established three guiding principles as critical in the redesign of schools that prepare teachers:
- Leadership on the part of the presidents of supported institutions that elevates the role and importance of schools of education within the university community and a design that builds on research evidence.
- Top-level collaboration between university faculty in the arts and sciences with the school of education faculty to ensure that prospective teachers are well grounded in specific disciplines and provided a liberal arts education.
- Establishing teaching as a clinical profession, with students mentored by master teachers in a formal two-year residency as they make a transition from college to classroom.
Research
findings about teacher education programs and students post-graduation
abilities will be critical elements in assessing these principles.
The four institutions asked to participate in Teachers for a New
Era have already embraced these ideas as critical for what it takes
to produce excellent teachers for tomorrows children.
Research in recent years has pointed to the pivotal role a
teacher plays in the education of young people, says Neil
Grabois, Vice President and Director for Strategic Planning and
Program Coordination. Clearly, it is imperative that this
country improve the way we prepare teachers. There is evidence that
the ideas in Teachers for a New Era can make a difference.
The success of the institutions chosen to be part of the initiative,
their graduates and the research produced during the next five years
are expected to challenge and inspire other institutions to follow
these ideas. At the conclusion of this investment, Daniel
Fallon, chair of the Corporations education division predicts,
the participating universities will be seen as having established
the standards for best practice in educating professional teachers.
The initiative, which will ultimately include at least eight higher
education institutions by 2004, involves a foundation investment
of up to $5 million that each university will match over a five-year
period. Additional foundation grants will cover evaluations and
up to $750,000 in grants that each university will share with its
local partners, including school districts and other teacher education
programs. In all, Carnegie Corporation has committed more than $30
million for the initiative at a total of six institutions; in addition
to making two awards this year, in each of the next two years the
Corporation will ask two additional universities to submit proposals.
Joining the Corporations initiative in todays round
of grants are the Ford Foundation and The Annenberg Foundation,
which each committed $5 million. The Rockefeller Foundation will
be covering the costs of a major ongoing external evaluation of
the initiative. The number of participating universities could increase
if other foundations join the initiative in future years.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York was created by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to
promote "the advancement and diffusion of knowledge and understanding."
As a grantmaking foundation, the Corporation seeks to carry out
Carnegie's vision of philanthropy, which he said should aim "to
do real and permanent good in the world." The Corporation's capital
fund, originally donated at a value of about $135 million, had a
market value of $1.7 billion on September 30, 2001. The Corporation
awards grants totaling approximately $75 million a year in the areas
of education, international peace and security, international development
and strengthening U.S. democracy.
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