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CIC’s
Teachers
for the 21st Century program (Teach 21), funded by the Microsoft
Corporation, is establishing a national faculty development network
for college and university faculty members responsible for teacher
preparation programs. During the program’s first two years,
a group of 19 leadership institutions is working to develop this
program (see list of participating institutions in the summer
2006 Independent). The design of the Teachers for the 21st Century
program includes work by institutional teams, national meetings,
shared readings, webinars, clusters of institutional teams and individuals,
and shared lessons and assignments.
Each institution is represented by a team that includes faculty
members from an institution’s education department as well
as faculty members from the disciplines in which future teachers
major, such as mathematics or English. The teams were selected on
the basis of the success they have already demonstrated in infusing
21st century learning into their teacher preparation programs and
for their plans to build on their successes during the 2006–2007
academic year. For example, one of the teams is engaged in a campus-wide
project in which the science and mathematics curriculum for all
students (including future teachers) is being infused with inquiry-based
learning strategies. Faculty from this college’s education
and math/science departments spearheaded these strategies, which
are now being spread campus-wide. Another team is focusing on extending
students’ use of portfolios by piloting the use of an eportfolio
system beginning in January 2007. This institution’s education
department has been requiring portfolios from their students since
1998. Their participation in CIC’s Teach21 project stimulated
a process that led their team and their colleagues to evaluate various
eportfolio packages last semester, pick a finalist, and pilot its
use this semester.
A key national component of the program is a monthly online seminar
providing access to national leaders in teacher education. Three
webinars were conducted in fall 2006. The first, in October, featured
the Quest Atlantis simulated environment with Sasha Barab, the program’s
creator and an internationally recognized leader in the use of online
games to enhance 21st century learning for children in grades 4–6.
In the November webinar, Ann Lieberman and Desiree Pointer Mace
of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching introduced
the Foundation’s Quest Project, which has created a library
of web-based videos and materials highlighting exemplary teaching
and teacher preparation. The third webinar, in December, was an
opportunity to exchange ideas with Arthur Levine, the author of
a controversial and influential new report, Educating School
Teachers, on the current status of the nation’s teacher
preparation programs.
During the program’s third and fourth years, teams from up
to 100 additional institutions will join the program.
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