r eport - College of Education
Transcription
r eport - College of Education
University of South Carolina report College of Education education Fall 2008 consistent and continuous educational success House and synergy ACCESS achieving 1 Dean’s Letter U n i v e r s i t y o f S o u t h C a r o l i n a Challenging the status quo…exceeding expectations 2 House and synergy success educational college of and continuous Education ACCESS consistent ver since I joined the faculty of the College of Education, I have had the distinct pleasure of periodically participating in a PBS call-in radio show hosted by Doug Keel called Speaking of Schools. During those broadcasts, I have the opportunity to talk about a topic of potential interest to the education community and then field questions from parents and community members. Sometimes those questions relate directly to the topic. Other times, the questions come out of left field. About 18 months ago, the topic of my broadcast had to do with some new certificate programs that were being developed for community college leaders in our Department of Educational Leadership and Policies. A call came in, and the caller asked, “So, Dean Sternberg, do you have any ideas about how to meet the need to recruit and retain teachers in our rural, high-needs schools? We sometimes get new teachers to come here but after a year, they’re gone.“ One thing you learn after doing a broadcast like this is that even though the question might have little if any connection to what you have been talking about, you have to be prepared to provide some answer that the caller and the community’s involvement as a key player in continual support. Through such a synergistic and comprehensive support system for mentoring and assistance, the entire community would ultimately benefit. A short time later, I decided to float the concept to a number of rural school district superintendents who historically have experienced significant problems in recruiting teachers as well as significant turnover in their teaching force. The reaction was quite positive. However, two major stumbling blocks were evident. The first had to do with finding funds to either construct or renovate current structures for housing for new teachers. The second was to find funding to put into place all of the support systems that would be necessary once those teachers were hired. As with any new idea, the old adage holds: Where there is a will, there is a way. Through collaborative efforts between the State Department of Education and Department of Commerce, funds have become available to help these high-need school districts to provide these types of housing facilities for new teachers at no or low cost to those teachers. And through our own initial fund-raising efforts by the college, we have been able to interest members of our business community to provide monies in support of the various mentoring and assistance activities that will be initiated once these new teachers are recruited into the ACCESS House program. What is most interesting is that, for the most part, those individuals providing funding for the support programs are city business leaders who truly understand the need to assist our rural communities in addressing their educational challenges. We know we have a long way to go, but the start is very promising. —Les Sternberg achieving E others listening might consider intelligent. I recall responding that our College of Education at the University of South Carolina is located in an urban area, and, although we pride ourselves on preparing educational professionals to meet the needs of all children and youth, the vast majority of our clinical placements happen to be in non-rural areas. However, being a College of Education at the flagship institution in the state of South Carolina, I stated that we did have an obligation to work to provide solutions for major state challenges, and certainly recruiting and retaining high-quality teachers for high-needs rural schools ought to be something in which we should be involved. I then told the caller that I had previously been employed at an institution in close proximity to more rural areas. While there, I had toyed with the idea of designing and ultimately getting support for housing for a cohort of “newly minted” teachers. The cohort concept was crucial because I thought that by recruiting teachers into groups or clusters, they could support each other as they began their teaching careers. The caller seemed to think the idea was a good one. Once the show was over, Doug asked if I might take the time to “put the flesh on the bones of the concept” and perhaps at a later broadcast discuss the idea in more detail. That evening, I bounced some conceptual and operational ideas off of my wife, Jean, to get her reaction. Her input was more than helpful, and focused almost entirely on housing issues. The next morning, I composed a brief that provided a fuller description of the philosophical basis of the concept and a name for it as well: ACCESS House. The idea expanded upon simply providing housing for new teachers. If ACCESS House was to really work, it had to create a synergistic relationship between a number of crucial partners, including the schools, current teachers and administrators, the community, the University, and of course, the new teachers themselves. The focus of ACCESS House had to be on support for success. Success would be defined as the ability of these rural school districts to recruit new teachers, to retain them, and to also enhance Comparative and International Education Office Holds Grand Opening On April 26, 2007, faculty and students from the College of Education packed the Wardlaw auditorium for the opening ceremony of the new Office of International and Comparative Education (OICE). Dean Sternberg, Vice Provost Karl Heider, and Director of the Walker Institute of International and Area Studies Gordon Smith offered opening remarks noting the importance of international study and research both in education and for South Carolina. Dean Sternberg noted that “Although many people seem to credit Tom Friedman with making all of us aware of the fact that the world is truly flat, there are many who have known for years that the world has been and will forever be interconnected, and that there has been and will forever be a need for the peoples of this world to understand each other and to work together for positive, global ends.” 2006–2007 has been a big year for international and comparative education at Carolina. Dr. Doyle Stevick, director of the OICE, published Reimagining Civic Education: How Diverse Societies Form Democratic Citizens. Professor Alan Wieder, chair of educational studies, published Teacher and Comrade: Richard Dudley and the Fight for Democracy in South Africa. Dr. Kara Brown won the Gail P. Kelly Dissertation Award from the Comparative and International Education Society (CIES). Dr. David Virtue is working with the AERA Middle School SIG on a book about international perspectives on early adolescence. Dr. Louise Jennings obtained a research grant to work in Brazil, Dr. Kara Brown extended her research in Estonia, and Dr. Jennifer Wilson will spend a month in Beijing, China. Five scholars visited our faculty from Capitol Normal University in Beijing, and six colloquia were held with scholars from places as diverse as South Africa, Niger, and Cleveland, Ohio. The future looks bright as well. Christian Anderson (Ph.D., Penn State, 2007), who has extensive experience in South America, will join the higher education program. In addition, the provost’s office has awarded the program in educational administration the funding to hire a new tenure-track faculty member in sub-Saharan African educational leadership and policy. Next summer, Dr. Doyle Stevick will lead a group of superintendents and principals on a two-week tour of Finland and Estonia in cooperation with SCASA, the South Carolina Association of School Administrators. (For additional information, contact Dr. Stevick at stevick@gwm.sc.edu.) The featured speaker was Dr. Gita Steiner-Khamsi, professor at Teachers College, Columbia University, and president of the Comparative and International Education Society, 2009. We often lose track of the international component of American education, yet Horace Mann examined schools in Prussia as a model for his reforms, and movements ranging from kindergarten (Germany), Montessori (Italy), and even the research university drew upon foreign models. While Finland leads the world in reading, science, and math test scores, they do not achieve these results through increased time in class nor through accountability systems. In fact, standardized tests there are rare, and the teaching hours per year in lower secondary school, for example, are barely half of the U.S. total (Finland 599 hours, U.S. 1,127 hours)! “Everything is interesting when you compare,” she noted, showing a map of the world that categorized countries by whether they were cleaned by students, by cleaners, or by a combination. The comparison revealed that students did the cleaning in many high-poverty countries, but also in wealthy parts of Asia like Japan. There, Confucian values of collective responsibility come into play. This example was a prelude to her discussion of the use of standardized test scores in development policy in education. International scores are now used to rank countries against one another, and aid is connected to these rankings, rather than individual benchmarks. This important shift in development policy often leads to competition, coercion, and convergence. But Steiner-Khamsi’s most exciting announcement was her decision to bring the CIES annual conference in late March 2009 to Charleston. The University of South Carolina will cosponsor the conference. OICE’s Web site, which is under development, is located at www.ed.sc.edu/ice. 3 PDS National Conference Continues to Grow For the ninth consecutive year, the University of South Carolina’s College of Education offered P–20 educators from across the nation and around the world the opportunity to share with each other the power of their work in Professional Development Schools. The 2008 PDS National Conference, held April 10–13 in Orlando, Fla., attracted more than 1,100 education professionals, a growth of 10 percent over last year’s event in Las Vegas, Nev. The PDS initiative continues to grow, and, in collaboration with the National Association for Professional Development Schools (NAPDS), the University of South Carolina continues to lead the way in encouraging and helping sustain these very powerful school-university partnerships. The 2008 conference featured two remarkable keynote presentations, beginning with Thursday afternoon’s offering by Cleveland State University’s Kristien Marquez-Zenkov and Euclid, Ohio, High School’s Jim Harmon. The two of them described for the audience their partnership’s “Through Students’ Eyes” project in which urban high school and middle school students were given digital cameras and asked to address, with their own 4 personal photographs, three questions: What do you believe are the purposes of school? What supports your success in school? And, what impedes your school success? The stories Kristien and Jim shared moved the audience and offered a perfect segue into Friday morning’s keynote presentation by Liz Murray, who shared her life story of growing up in the Bronx and somehow surviving an obviously challenging environment to eventually succeed at Harvard. The two presentations in combination served as a powerful reminder that educators can make a significant difference in the lives of their students. In the conference’s other general session on Saturday morning, the University’s Bruce Field joined with Northeastern Illinois University’s Elliott Lessen and the University of South Florida’s Roger Brindley in releasing the NAPDS’s first-ever major position paper, “What It Means to Be a Professional Development School.” Crafted in collaboration with representatives from other national education organizations, the statement seeks to clarify the meaning of PDSs in the crowded world of school-university partnerships by presenting nine essentials of PDS work. The NAPDS will be following up on the release of this statement by sponsoring the “National Leadership Forum on the Nine Essentials of PDS Work” in New Orleans in August, and the University of South Carolina will send a team to that important event. While the PDS National Conference has typically opened on Thursday afternoon, the steady growth in attendance prompted the conference planning team to expand the time frame to include Thursday morning. Such a change would normally produce mixed, or even negative, results, but event organizers were impressed with the number of individuals who altered their travel plans to attend three Thursday morning workshops, as well as forums for deans, PDS directors, and persons interested in writing for the NAPDS journal, School-University Partnerships. The workshops, which addressed principal leadership in PDSs, a framework for research in PDSs, and working with teacher candidates who struggle to succeed in the classroom, all had at least 40 participants, and the forums were equally well attended. The PDS Directors Forum was particularly well-received, and so Bruce Field will take the lead in designing a system to allow PDS directors from across the nation to communicate with each other on an ongoing basis throughout the year. The heart of the conference, as always, were the presentations by individual PDS partnerships, which this year reached an all-time high in terms of numbers with 287 such sessions. And once again, these sessions demonstrated a well-balanced representation of P–12 educators and individuals from colleges and universities that sponsor PDS relationships. While the majority of these presentations were made by partnerships within the United States, a growing number of them were offered by PDS educators from around the world, including the Netherlands, Canada, Japan, and Middle Eastern nations. In addition to welcoming so many foreign guests, the conference planning team made a concerted effort this year to attract teacher candidates. In fact, the conference theme, “Growing and Sustaining Our Own: The Power of PDSs in Preparing Professionals,” was decided upon with the recognition that the current state of the PDS initiative will only continue to grow if we nurture and support the next generation of educators. To that end, 11 groups of teacher candidates participated in Saturday morning poster sessions, which received significant, and very positive, attention from conference participants. All teacher candidates attending the conference were then treated to a student-teacher reception on Saturday afternoon. The students, however, were not the only ones who found the time to relax and participate in conversations in less formal settings. Thursday and Friday evening receptions on the Wyndham Orlando Resort’s Grand Lawn gave everyone the opportunity to enjoy the terrific Florida weather—and at Friday’s event to pose with statues which, to everyone’s surprise, came to life. The “let’s relax” part of the conference expanded into Saturday evening when three busloads of conference attendees headed off to Universal CityWalk for a night of dining and entertainment. The conference ended Sunday morning with the NAPDS business meeting, which included a discussion of plans for the future, as well as praise for the work of the conference planning team. In fact, one participant summed up her experience with these words: “Thanks for a great experience in Orlando; I learned from true professionals in a beautiful setting.” The University of South Carolina and the National Association for Professional Development Schools will continue to provide this genuine learning experience in years to come, and we look forward to an equally stimulating conference in Daytona Beach in 2009. 5 Take Advantage of an Incredible Opportunity … If you are eligible for S.C. early childhood teacher certification to earn a master’s degree in early childhood special education, we urge you to consider the University’s Early Childhood Special Education Master’s Degree Program. We are soliciting a new cohort of full-time graduate students who have undergraduate early childhood education, special education, or elementary education degrees; teacher certification; and S.C. residency. Full-time status includes 12 hours of course work and a 20-hour per week internship each semester in an early childhood setting with young children with and without developmental delays. Successful applicants will receive tuition reimbursement and a stipend of $4,000 spread across the spring and fall semesters. The next group of graduate students will begin their studies in August 2008. If you are interested, we urge you to proceed quickly. Applicants must meet the following entrance requirements and apply through The Graduate School at USC for the Master’s Degree in Special Education with an emphasis in early childhood special education (www.gradschool.sc.edu): •have an earned bachelor’s degree in early childhood, elementary education, or special education from an accredited college or university •be certified as a teacher and be a resident of South Carolina •have an undergraduate grade point ratio of at least a 2.50 on a 4.00 scale •provide two current letters of professional recommendation from former instructors or present employers •be able to attend graduate school full-time •score at least 35 or better on the Miller Analogies Test (MAT) or score at least 800 or better (at least 400 on both verbal and quantitative subscales) on the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) •write a letter of intent explaining why you want to earn a master’s degree in early childhood special education and your long-term professional goals Applicants who meet initial entrance requirements will be asked to write an extemporaneous writing sample based on a contemporary professional article and interviewed for about 30 minutes about their professional interests and goals. 6 If you are an interested student who can be a full-time student or have questions about the program, contact us immediately: Bill Brown | Phone: 803-777-6582 E-mail: bbrown@sc.edu Information on graduate school examinations may be obtained from the University Testing Office, Russell House, Room 310, 803-777-2782. Bookman Road Elementary Named 2008 Riley School Improvement Award Winner COLUMBIA, S.C. —The School Improvement Council (SIC) of Bookman Road Elementary School has been named the recipient of the Dick and Tunky Riley School Improvement Award for 2008. The award was presented Saturday, March 8, at the S.C. School Improvement Council’s Annual Conference in Columbia. The annual Dick and Tunky Riley School Improvement Award was created in 2002 to recognize the significant contributions made to public education by the more than 15,000 School Improvement Council (SIC) members who volunteer in every public school in the state. Bookman Road Elementary, a Richland School District Two school in Elgin, S.C., numbered among its SIC’s accomplishments in 2006–2007 the coordination of community and local business support for construction of the school’s Lighthouse Lookout Nature Trail at the school. The SIC also spearheaded a $2,300 Palmetto Pride grant for improvements to the school grounds, and members coordinated Bookman Road’s first Take Pride (in the Outside) Day, involving more than 140 community volunteers. These efforts contributed to the school’s designation as a National Wildlife Federation School Yard Habitat. “We are very pleased to present this well-deserved honor to the School Improvement Council of Bookman Road Elementary,” said SC-SIC Board of Trustees Chair Jeff Nicholson. “This impressive effort to engage parents and community members in the life and betterment of the school is truly what SICs are all about and what this award acknowledges.” The Riley award is named in honor of former S. C. governor and U.S. education secretary Richard Riley and his late wife, Tunky, and recognizes the couple’s long-standing commitment to quality public education. Mrs. Riley, who passed away on March 7, was remembered at the conference for both her gracious nature and her great contributions to education in South Carolina. The following S.C. schools received Honorable Mentions for the work of their SICs last school year: Camden Elementary School of the Creative Arts (Kershaw County School District), Camden; Laurel Hill Primary School (Charleston County School District), Mt. Pleasant; Meadowfield Elementary School (Richland School District 1), Columbia; and Pineview Elementary School (Lexington School District 2), West Columbia. Located at the University of South Carolina’s College of Education in Columbia, the S.C.-SIC provides training, resources, and technical assistance to parent, community, staff, and student members of legislatively mandated SICs in each of South Carolina’s nearly 1,200 public schools. 2008 Dick and Tunky Riley School Improvement Award Finalists Laurel Hill Primary (Charleston County School District), Mt. Pleasant Julie Allan, SIC Chair; Michael Antonelli, Principal Laurel Hill Primary School’s SIC is committed to supporting and developing literacy skills for at-risk students in the community. The SIC assists with designing and implementing several literacybased initiatives to proactively help needy preschool students. The school’s LEAP (Linking Education and Preschoolers) Into Reading Night has become an annual event introducing preschool children and their parents to the love of reading through a variety of literacy activities. The SIC also helps to coordinate a free summer enrichment program for 15 preschool students and organizes children’s book drives and gathers materials to distribute to students in the community. Camden Elementary School of the Creative Arts (Kershaw County School District), Camden Brian R. Hann, SIC Chair; Ed Yount, Principal Camden Elementary School of the Creative Arts is located in the downtown historic district of Camden. The school serves a diverse population of 550 students and has integrated the arts throughout the entire curriculum. The SIC adopted the International Standards Organization’s (ISO) methodology, which allows the ranking and evaluation of school activities based on their overall impact on students and the learning environment. The SIC focuses on increasing English/language arts scores, increasing individualized assistance programs, making the school’s decision process more data driven, and improving the school’s grounds and facilities. Pineview Elementary (Lexington County School District Two), West Columbia Tim Fitzgerald, SIC Chair; Miley Rhodes, Principal Pineview is a community school serving many diverse ethnic and economic groups through a variety of programs. The SIC has focused on community outreach, healthy learners, student achievement, and school attendance. The Panther ROAR recognition program was established to praise student attendance, achievement, and effort for each quarter. Reading initiative programs generated much excitement that remained long after the fall and spring programs concluded. Community members, students, and parents joined together to make the Walk to School, Grandparent’s Lunch Week, and Halloween Hike big successes. The SIC has worked closely with the PTA to ensure continuity of efforts benefiting everyone in the school community. continued on page 8 7 2008 Riley School Improvement Award Winner (cont.) Meadowfield Elementary (Richland County School District One), Columbia Debra Tedeschi, SIC Chair; Paula Stephens, Principal Meadowfield Elementary set numerous goals in its 2005–2010 School Renewal Plan, including increased student achievement, positive professional development, and an improved school community. The school and its SIC sought a comprehensive framework which would allow for the realization of these objectives. Along with the Meadowfield faculty, staff, and PTO, the school’s SIC investigated the Paideia instructional method. The Paideia philosophy incorporates three complementary instructional techniques: didactic instruction, intellectual coaching, and seminar dialogue. Funding was secured, extensive training was provided, and Paideia arrived at the school in the 2006–2007 school year. Meadowfield Elementary will become the first nationally certified Paideia academy in South Carolina. Bookman Road Elementary (Richland School District Two), Elgin (2008 Riley Award Winner) Tanya Rodriguez-Hodges, SIC Chair; Michael Guliano, Principal The Bookman Road Elementary SIC regularly evaluates the school’s needs based upon its students’ needs. The SIC coordinated local business support (including a $5,000 Lowe’s Toolbox Grant) for construction of the Lighthouse Lookout Nature Trail. This trail is used for student observations of animals, habitats, and vegetation. The SIC also spearheaded a $2,300 Palmetto Pride grant for improvements to the school grounds. Members coordinated Bookman Road’s first Take Pride (in the Outside) Day, which included more than 140 volunteers from across the community. Based on the environmental improvements in their schoolyard, Bookman Road Elementary School received designation as a National Wildlife Federation School Yard Habitat. ATCs Are Not Just for Sports Teams Anymore By Heath Hamacher In a partnership with the University of South Carolina, Fort Jackson training battalions are adding certified athletic trainers (ATCs) to their rosters in an effort to reduce missed training time and to complement medical services that are already provided to the soldiers. Modeled after the Marine Corps program that has been successful in recent years, ATCs will work hand-in-hand with unit cadre to educate, train, and treat soldiers. As part of the Athletic Trainer-Forward Program, the ATCs will work an average of 25 hours a week, but are expected to become an integral part of their respective battalions. They will attend physical training sessions, sick call, and field training exercises and work with the drill sergeants to minimize injuries and keep soldiers who are on limited training profiles active and motivated. “Hopefully, they’ll be like a part of the staff,” said Kelly Williams, Ph.D., experimentation and analysis element, basic combat training directorate. “They’ll attend staff meetings, give and receive feedback, and just be fully indoctrinated into the battalion.” As an orientation to Army life, ATCs recently took a class at Victory University and have been shadowing physical therapists at the troop medical center. “The physical therapists have been very good with showing them through and kind of getting them oriented to the types of injuries they’re going to see,” Williams said. “There’s also some accreditation and HIPA-style stuff they have to do over there.” ATCs are not medics, and they’re not strength and conditioning coaches, but serve a purpose somewhere in between. “At the very beginning, they will help the medics with the musculoskeletal, but they don’t want to do the job of the medic,” Williams said. 8 “They have a different skill set than medics. They do both a training type function and a rehabilitative type function. They’ve all been exposed to some type of strength and conditioning training. Some have certifications in it. They all have a good general knowledge in all areas,” Williams added. In addition to possessing at least a bachelor’s degree, often in athletic training, health, physical education, or other related fields, ATCs must fulfill certification requirements established by the National Athletic Trainers’ Association Board of Certification Inc., including a comprehensive examination on the following areas: • prevention of athletic injuries • recognition, evaluation, and immediate care of athletic injuries • rehabilitation and reconditioning of athletic injuries • health care administration • professional development and responsibility. The contract with the University is good for two years, during which results will be monitored. “We are measuring it to see its success as far as reducing attrition,” Williams said. “There will be objective measurements and some subjective measurements, asking the battalions, ‘What do you think, was it worth it? Did they become part of the team?’” Williams said while some training injuries are inevitable, a “big proportion” of the ATCs’ function will be the prevention of injuries, as well as the proper rehabilitation of those injuries that do occur. “Everyone from USC involved in this program wants to make a contribution to the United States Army,” said program coordinator Teri LaSalle. “We feel we can use our knowledge and skills as athletic trainers to do so. To us, soldiers-intraining are like warrior athletes.” College of Education Cosponsors First Annual Latino Children’s Literature Conference The University’s College of Education sponsored its first annual Latino Children’s Literature Conference on April 26, 2008, in Columbia, S.C., in partnership with the School of Library and Information Science. The exciting inaugural event celebrated Latino children’s literature and heralded our joint partnership to prepare future and practicing educators, teachers, and librarians for opportunities to serve Latino children. As the Latino population continues to grow, so does the need for understanding these diverse cultures. The conference provided a forum for current research on the education and information needs of Latino children and Latino children’s literature’s social influences on a developing child. The conference theme was “Connecting Cultures and Celebrating Cuentos.” Award-winning Latino artist and children’s book author Yuyi Morales highlighted our theme with a storytelling and family event on the evening of Friday, April 25, at the Lexington County Public Library. This free community event began at 7 p.m. and provided an evening of cuentos (stories) that celebrate El día de los niños/El día de los libros (Children’s Day/Book Day). The conference began the following day, Saturday, April 26, at the Russell House University Union. Dr. Kathy Short of the University of Arizona delivered the keynote address, discussing international children’s literature and intercultural understandings through youth literature. Breakout sessions on a variety of Latino children’s literature and literacy topics were available for both researchers and practitioners, and research posters, created by undergraduate and graduate students from the School of Library and Information Science and the College of Education, were presented throughout the conference. During the luncheon, notable Latina author Lucía González read from her forthcoming bilingual picture book “The Storyteller’s Candle/La velita de los cuentos” and provided a historical perspective on the development of Latino children’s literature in the United States. Afternoon breakout sessions included book discussions and topics related to education, storytelling, and library services for Latino children. Morales closed the conference with a grand finale performance followed by a book signing by conference and local authors. Conference participants learned ways to connect cultures and celebrate cuentos with both Latino and non-Latino children and families. The conference was cochaired by Dr. Julia LópezRobertson and Dr. Jamie Campbell Naidoo. 9 Second Annual Cord Ceremony Recognizes Honor Graduates The College of Education recognized its spring 2008 undergraduate honors graduates on May 9, 2008. This ceremony marked the college’s second annual Honors Cord Ceremony. Dean Les Sternberg and Rob Dedmon, associate director for undergraduate programs, addressed the honors graduates. Afterward, Dean Sternberg presented honors cords to 64 students from programs in early childhood education, elementary education, middle level education, and physical education. These students earned the distinction of cum laude, magna cum laude, or summa cum laude by demonstrating high levels of academic achievement. 10 Family and friends of the honors graduates, teachers, administrators from College of Education partner schools, and College of Education faculty were invited to attend the ceremony in Gambrell Hall. A reception followed the ceremony and was held on the Gambrell rooftop terrace. Many attendees enjoyed the opportunity to show their support and celebrate the graduates’ achievements. We congratulate these honors graduates and each of the 140 students who were awarded undergraduate degrees from the College of Education in May 2008. 2008 Education Awards Ceremony Held The 2008 College of Education’s Awards Ceremony was held the evening of April 22, 2008, in the Russell House University Union Ballroom. Dr. Diane Harwell, co-chair of the Student Affairs/Scholarship Committee, opened the ceremony and assisted with the presentation of awards. Dr. Les Sternberg, dean of the College of Education, inspired honorees with his closing remarks. Award Recipients University of South Carolina Teacher Cadet Scholarship Amanda Hardin Carolina Students’ Association for the Education of Young Children (CSAEYC) Award Samantha Jackson Alanda McKinney Harvey A. Allen Scholarship Megan Shull Cecil-Self Scholarship Christine Richard Hal and Mickey Anderson Endowed Scholarship in Science Education Roger Crazy Wolf Jessica Lewis Conrad-Becton Scholarship Alanda McKinney Christine Richard Lorin Anderson Award in Doctoral Research Quantina Haggwood Joshua Patterson Margaret Anliker Fellowship Kinsey Cooper Paul Berg Graduate Fellowship Tara Kermiet Richelle Sexton National Business Education Award of Merit Judith Allyson Carmichael South Carolina Business Education Association Scholarship Johanna Bodenhamer Bennett Weigle Campbell-Witten Fellowship Molly Gilbride Dorothy Weigel Frances Gibson Daniel Scholarship Lisa Taylor Mary L. Duffie Endowed Fellowship Delpha Diane Manning Education Achievement Awards Early Childhood Education–Cara Cox Elementary Education–Elyse Kunzel Middle Level Education–Charles Williams Secondary Education–Beth Coen, Jackie Ortner, and Kristin Turner The Department of Educational Studies Outstanding Student Award Master’s Level–Omar Troutman Doctoral Level–Leah McCallum and Anita Rawls The Department of Instruction and Teacher Education Undergraduate Awards Early Childhood Education Outstanding Senior Award–Hope Halfacre and Caroline Welsh Elementary Education Outstanding Senior Award–Tasia Wilson Middle Level Education Outstanding Senior Award–Kevin Smoak 11 2008 Education Awards Ceremony (cont.) Paul P. Fidler Award Fay Coleman Jenifer DeHart Katherine Harrison Mary Carter Grant Memorial Scholarship Jennie Williams Mary J. Heimberger Memorial Award Alex Steedley Richard E. Ishler Award Alex Steedley Kappa Delta Epsilon George Poda Jr. Memorial Scholarship Christine Richard Preston Award in Secondary Education Beth Coen Elizabeth Scruggs Scholarship in Romance Language Education Maria Charles Nelle Taylor Scholarship in Special Education Amy England Ostrom Leadership and Service Award Katherine Walters Robert G. Thurber Award Erin Payseur Kappa Delta Pi Excellence in Leadership Award Lamar Johnson University High School/J. McTyeire Daniel/C.B. Harvey Scholarship Siddeeqah Moss Kappa Delta Pi Outstanding Member Award Jessica Graling Dr. Patterson Wardlaw Memorial Fellowship Tonya Jasinski Dorothy Weigel Gerald and Myra Lahn Fellowship in Early Childhood Education Cara Cox Lyndsey Knight Alanda McKinney Dorothy H. Lavisky Scholarship David Taylor Black Paul Montgomery MacMillan III Memorial Fellowship Katherine Harrison Carl H. Medlin, Jr. Scholarship Rebecca Battle-Bryant Outstanding Athletic Trainer Student Award in Physical Education Kimberly Murray Outstanding Teaching Major Award in Physical Education Garrett Knight Scottye Hedstrom Memorial Athletic Training Scholarship Amy Fraley Peabody Scholarship Amy Dunkelberger Delpha Diane Manning Robert A. Weber Memorial Award Elyse Kunzel Teacher Quality Partners Project Scholarship Chasity Brazell Lisa Brice Vanessa Burgos Krystal Burns Laurie Gentry-Goodale Amanda McCarthy Gunter Amanda Hartfield David King Amber Pace Jennifer Pepin Melissa Senseney Nikita Smith Davida Watson South Carolina Teaching Fellows Lauren Altman-Blackwell Marques Ardoin Samanthah Beach Maggie Blackwell Lexi Bourn Elizabeth Burke Rebecca Burney Jeremy Cantrill Jonathan Carey Carrie Conrad Amanda Davis Adams Dean Deanna Donald Ashley Douglas Allyson Farmer Wendy Goss Brittany Gunn Brittany Halfacre Stephanie Ham Matthew Herring Kinsley Keels Elizabeth Layne Aubrie Mayson Michelle Metts Sarah Parker Shantelle Patterson Lauren Reames Brittany Robinson Kristen Rowan Valori Schubiger Sara Beth Shelton Lucas Snyder Vincert Talbert Melissa Texin Lyndsey Trickett Katy Tucker Caitlan Underwood Distinguished Alumni Award Helena Mariella-Walrond The Leonard Maiden Spirit of Service Award Stephen Thompson College of Education Research Award Erik Drasgow George H. Lackey Jr. Award for Inspirational Teaching Diane Harwell Catherine Packer The College of Education extends a special thanks to our Student Affairs Committee and expresses our sincere appreciation for the support and generosity of all those who make these awards and scholarships possible. 12 2008 College of Education Awards Day Highlights 13 Homecoming Homecoming Cookout Was Fantastic The college’s annual Homecoming Cookout was a great success. The weather was beautiful for guests to enjoy interacting with one another over an outdoor dinner of barbecue and fried chicken. The Pantasia Steel Band entertained the crowd while Cocky mingled with everyone and children played in the inflatable giraffe. The evening ended with Dean Sternberg announcing the winners of the door prize drawing. 14 15 The Museum of Education Celebrates Its 30th Anniversary On Oct. 1, the Museum of Education staged its 30th anniversary celebration with the Eighth Charles and Margaret Witten Lectureship and the presentation of the First Chester Travelstead Award for Courage in Education. S.C. Superintendent of Education James Rex was this year’s Witten Lecturer, and The Honorable Judge Matthew J. Perry Jr. received the Travelstead Award. Craig Kridel, curator, delivered a 30-year overview and appreciation of Museum of Education activities with special thanks to founder William Savage, former director Katherine Chaddock, supporters Charles and Margaret Witten, John King, George Terry, and McKissick Museum Director Lynn Robertson. Dr. Kara Brown, Dept of Educational Studies, presents Judge Matthew Perry with the Travelstead Award. The plaque reads: “Chester C. Travelstead Award for Courage in Education presented to Matthew J. Perry, Jr. in recognition of his leadership in South Carolina to further the values of integrity, intellectual spirit, justice, and stewardship and, in so doing, allowing schools to become more compassionate, more generous, more humane, and more thoughtful. “History, despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not be lived again.” Maya Angelou Dr. Michelle Jay, Dept. of Educational Studies, presents Superintendent Rex with a Museum of Education artifact. Dr. Craig Kridel, curator, delivering a historical overview of the museum. Anne Witten Bauknight, Charles Witten, James Rex, Margaret Witten, Margaret Bauknight J. McTyeire Daniel/C.B. Harvey Scholarship Fund In 1932, the University of South Carolina School (now College) of Education and Columbia City Schools established University High as the first “practice-teaching school” in the city. During its existence, dozens of students from Carolina received their first teaching experience in the small school. In 1966, the school closed because the University needed room to expand. At this time, Principal C.B. Harvey established a scholarship for Carolina education students who were aspiring to become secondary school teachers. The scholarship’s purpose was not only to assist deserving pre-teachers with tuition, but also to honor Dr. J. McTyeire Daniel, professor in the College of Education and director of the college’s practice teaching program. Harvey served as the primary fund-raiser for the scholarship, and in 2006 16 his name was added to the scholarship. Now the J. McTyeire Daniel/C.B. Harvey Scholarship annually awards exemplary College of Education students with tuition assistance. Sarah Elizabeth Cox of Florence, S.C., and Jennifer Lynne Guest of Gaffney, S.C., were the most recent recipients. Both are now pursuing the Master of Arts in Teaching degree in secondary mathematics. As of February 2008, the J. McTyeire Daniel/C.B. Harvey Scholarship Fund had slightly more than $60,000. The University High alumni have set a goal of $100,000, and in response, an anonymous University High graduate has made a challenge gift of $20,000. If you are interested in contributing to this scholarship fund, please contact Harley Carpenter at harleyc@gwm.sc.edu. Alumni Spotlights Shawn Abbott After completing his undergraduate studies at the University of New Hampshire, Shawn came to the College of Education and graduated in 1994 with a Master of Education in Higher Education Administration. During his studies with the College of Education, he became quite involved on campus, interning with the Carolina Alumni Association, serving as a graduate assistant in student affairs, and participating in a practicum experience with the Office of Undergraduate Admissions. Now, Abbott lives in San Francisco and is the director of undergraduate admissions at Stanford University. Stanford admitted 2,465 undergraduate students for the 2007–2008 school year and has an impressively high yield rate. In fact, Stanford currently has one of the highest yield rates (percentage of students accepting admissions invitations) among its peers, and Abbott expects it to increase this year. Overseeing this admissions project is hard work, but Abbott does it well. He is also working on his doctoral dissertation through Columbia University, where he previously served as senior associate director of admissions. His Ed.D. will be in higher education administration, with a concentration in urban studies. Before working at Columbia University, Abbot worked in administration at Boston University, Drexel University, and North Shore Community College in Massachusetts. In 2005, Abbott served on the scholarship committee composed of three Ivy League admissions officers for ABC’s reality TV show The Scholar. The show was the first unscripted dramatic series celebrating higher education. Ten qualified high-school seniors from economically disadvantaged families competed for a full scholarship to a college or university of their choice. Abbott reports that he had a lot of fun participating as a judge on the show. Abbott’s experiences as a graduate student with the College of Education have served him well by laying a foundation with which he has built a flourishing career. He says that he is thankful for the training he received through the College of Education and that he enjoyed his time at the University of South Carolina very much. DeVita Lane DeVita is an award-winning algebra teacher at Richland Northeast High School in Columbia, S.C. She earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics at the University of South Carolina and a Master of Arts in Teaching mathematics from the College of Education in 2006. Her enthusiasm for math and teaching is what sets her apart in the classroom. Lane says that she has known she wanted to be a teacher from a very early age, but it was not until high school that her love of math grew. With the help of several inspiring math teachers, Lane learned that math came naturally to her and that she had a passion for the subject. During her time as a student at the College of Education, Lane was awarded a Knowles Science Teaching Foundation Fellowship. As part of her experience with Knowles, she has had the opportunity to engage in regular professional development and network with other dedicated beginning math teachers. In response to a classroom observation of Lane, Dr. Gene Fiorini, math program officer for Knowles, stated, “What I observed was a second-year teacher whose skills far exceed her experience. It was a virtuoso performance. The way in which she orchestrated the classes, engaged the students through language and action, used the space to develop an atmosphere of learning, was awe-inspiring. I have rarely seen such ‘command’ of both the classroom and the content from experienced teachers, let alone new teachers.” Lane loves going to work each morning. In fact, she thinks its fun to help students understand math and how it is used in everyday life. She believes the best part of teaching is the “Aha!” moments when the material really clicks with students. Lane is currently a member of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, National Education Association, and Mathematical Association of America. In the future, she plans to work toward national board certification and to remain in the classroom, where she feels she really belongs. Barry Lee Barry (Master of Education, 1996) has worn many hats during his time as an educator. He has served in the classroom, in administration, and in the locker room. He currently teaches world cultures of the 1600s through the present to seventh grade students at Irmo Middle School, coaches men’s C-team basketball at Irmo Middle School, and coaches long- and triple-jumpers on the Irmo High School track team. In August 2007, Lee was named Teacher of the Month at his school. Lee began his career in education by teaching at Airport High School. He remained there six years before taking a position as an assistant principal at Irmo Middle School. Then, in 2004, Lee decided to go back to the classroom and to teach seventh grade social studies. He found it refreshing to be back in the classroom, working with students in areas other than discipline, and he also found it challenging. During the six years he was working in administration, classroom technology drastically changed. He viewed this technological challenge as an opportunity to grow professionally and learn new ways to communicate with students. He now strives to use a variety of media in the classroom so that he can address each student’s specific needs. On the court and on the track, Lee loves seeing the success of student athletes, but, being an educator at heart, he especially loves seeing athletic success transfer to success in the classroom. The intrinsic rewards of interacting with his 17 alumni spotlights (cont.) students and student athletes are what keep Lee going back to school every day. It has also motivated him to apply for National Board Certification. Lee expects to hear back from the board regarding his certification within the next few months. Lee attended Furman University for his undergraduate education and earned his master’s degree and an additional 30 hours of graduate credit in administration from the College of Education. He is active in the community through his involvement with Northside Baptist Church. Lee lives with his wife, Amy, and three young sons, Graham, Andrew, and Ryan. Buffy Murphy Master of Arts in Teaching program alumna Buffy Murphy was South Carolina’s 2006– 2007 State Teacher of the Year. Murphy usually serves as a fifth-grade teacher at Irmo Elementary School in School District Five of Lexington and Richland Counties and as a clinical adjunct for the College of Education’s Professional Development School (PDS) Network. Last year, instead, she represented the state’s 50,000 teachers as she participated in a yearlong residency with the Center for Educator Recruitment, Retention, and Advancement (CERRA). “Buffy Murphy is an extraordinary teacher and exemplifies outstanding teaching in South Carolina,” says Jim Shirley, principal of Irmo Elementary School. “When you walk into her classroom, you have entered a laboratory of learning. Her innovative approach to teaching has inspired not only her students, but other educators in our building as well as those with whom she comes into contact.” Murphy goes beyond the call of duty in many ways. Each fall, just before her former fifth grade students begin middle school, Murphy sends a personal note to each of them. Her “first-class” kids still receive letters from her, even though they are currently in high school. Murphy has promised to support her students all through their edu18 cational careers, and that is what she has done. Additionally, Murphy is certified by the National Board in early and middle childhood literacy. As a clinical adjunct with PDS, Murphy works with the College of Education to enhance preservice and in-service educators’ knowledge and skills. Through her work with PDS, she has mentored numerous teacher candidates. According to Bruce Field, director of the Professional Development School Network and University Partnerships at the college, “The students’ praise for and appreciation of her work are legend.” As State Teacher of the Year, Murphy worked with CERRA and chaired the South Carolina Teacher Forum. She traveled the state supporting CERRA’s programs, such as Teacher Cadet, Teacher EXPO, Teaching Fellows, and Future Educators of America. CERRA offers programs for precollegiate students, preservice teachers, and service teachers. And as State Teacher of the Year, Murphy received a $25,000 cash award, a 2006 BMW Z-4 Roadster to use for the year, and a SMART board. Through a sponsorship from the Notre Dame Club of the Western Carolinas, she also attended Notre Dame’s annual three-day Excellence in Teaching Symposium. Murphy decided to become a teacher late in her college career. She started as a nursing major, but in the spring of her junior year, she lost her first patient. After that, she knew she could not work as a nurse, but she loved watching the children come to life in the hospital classroom. This sparked her interest in teaching. Murphy finished her undergraduate degree and then came to the University of South Carolina to work on her master’s in teaching. She had a great time in the College of Education and still keeps in touch with all of the classmates in her cohort. They are scattered all across the state and serve as a networking and support system for one another. Alumni News Leadership South Carolina Selects New Class, Prepares Leaders for the Future Leadership South Carolina, the state’s oldest and most respected leadership development program, would like to announce Kristine Karol Hartvigsen (Class of 1982) of the S.C. Chamber of Commerce as a member of its Class of 2008. The Class of 2008, with the aid of state and regional experts in various fields, will jointly explore natural resource, quality of life, economic development, education, social, and diversity issues in seven three-day sessions held around the state. At each session, participants meet additional professionals, business executives, community and government leaders, and social change agents who network and encourage them to pursue positive change in South Carolina. Leadership South Carolina, now in its 29th year, accepts approximately 50 participants a year who have demonstrated commitment to their community and strive to reach a higher level of service to the Palmetto State. Alumni Highlights WLTX-TV Teacher of the Week: Brittany Daniels Brittany has only been teaching two years, but she believes she has the only job where she can shape and change the future. Even wearing heels, she’s not much taller than her second grade class. “I have singers, doctors, and lawyers,” says Daniels. Yet when it comes to character, Daniels is a giant among educators. When we visited her, she was teaching her class the story of a bear named Corduroy who lives in a toy store. His only wish is to find love from a “forever family.” The story reminds Daniels of the day her own family fell apart the night before a math test. “I was in the third grade,” explains Daniels. It was the night before a math test when her parents were in the middle of a divorce, and there was little peace in her home. “Things were heated, and I remember a horrible experience and not sleeping. The next day, I went to school and started the test, and I’m usually the first one to finish, but not this day. I just broke down in tears.” Instead of her teacher questioning or warning Daniels, she consoled her. “She picked me up, took me to her desk and just held me and told me it was okay, ”adds Daniels. Her only regret is that she never told her teacher “thank you,” but more than a decade later she’s found a way to show her thanks. “Teaching is only a small part of what we do; we raise these children and make sure they’re safe physically, educationally and emotionally,” adds Daniels. Reported by: Sharie Harvin, WLTX-TV Brewer Elected Foundation Chair During its annual meeting 2007, Trustees of the Pi Kappa Phi Foundation elected Jerry T. Brewer (Master of Education, 1980) as its new chair. A 1975 initiate of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity’s Sigma Chapter at the University of South Carolina, Brewer has been a consistent volunteer for his fraternity for more than 30 years. “We are thrilled to have Jerry’s leadership on the Foundation’s Executive Committee,” said Mark E. Timmes, chief executive officer of Pi Kappa Phi Foundation. “Jerry has been involved for many, many years,” continued Timmes, “and brings both talent and experience from his career in higher education and development to our foundation.” Prior to his service on the Pi Kappa Phi Foundation Board of Trustees, Brewer served as Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity’s 29th national president from 1994–1996. Brewer also held numerous volunteer positions, including two-year terms as national secretary, national treasurer, and national vice president. Brewer succeeds outgoing chair Allen O. Woody III (Xi Chapter—Roanoke College). He is the foundation’s first chair from Sigma Chapter and is joined by 10 trustees who are charged with development, investment, and stewardship of the foundation’s $6.2 million in assets. The Pi Kappa Phi Foundation, through the educational programs of the Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, each year touches the lives of thousands of undergraduate members of Pi Kappa Phi. By connecting the generosity of alumni to the desire of today’s student members to have a meaningful leadership and educational fraternity experience, the Pi Kappa Phi Foundation builds bridges between generations and helps to redefine the fraternity as a lifelong brotherhood of leaders. Dewalt Receives Prestigious Award at Winthrop University Winthrop University recently selected Mark Dewalt as a recipient of the Bank of America Endowed Professorship for the Richard W. Riley College of Education. He will use the endowed professorship to continue the next phase of his already 20-year research project of Amish education in the United States and Canada. During the professorship, which is renewable for up to three years, Dewalt will begin his next book on Amish education and write articles on Amish Mennonite schools and the 1972 Supreme Court case Wisconsin v. Yoder, which ruled that Amish children do not have to attend school after eighth grade. In addition, he will design two symposium courses for the Winthrop honors program. University leaders chose Dewalt because of his continuous record of excellence in teaching, scholarship, and service. “Mark is well respected as a teacher, scholar, and contributor to the life of the university. His research is well-grounded and addresses a unique area of education in North America,” said Patricia Graham, dean of the Riley College of Education. Dewalt grew up in Pennsylvania near the Amish community and has traveled to dozens of communities stretching from New York to Iowa to observe Amish schools. He used the information as the basis for his latest book, Amish Education in the United States and Canada, which portrays the culture and history of the oneroom schoolhouses of the Amish community. National and local media turned to Dewalt in fall 2006 to explain the Amish culture in the wake of a horrific shooting in an Amish schoolhouse near Nickel Mines, Pa. Dewalt will be the second recipient of the Bank of America Endowed Professorship, which supports teaching and research for an outstanding faculty member in education. Winthrop’s first recipient was Marshall G. Jones, who studied how those familiar and unfamiliar with digital technologies learn differently. After joining the Winthrop faculty in 1996, Dewalt has since become director of the college’s graduate studies program. He has previously taught at Lenoir-Rhyne College and at Susquehanna University, where he was chair of the Department of Education. He also taught math, elementary school, and adult education 19 alumni (cont.) during an eight-year stint in the Manning, S.C., and Clark County, Va., public schools. He earned an AB degree in social studies from Muhlenberg College, a master’s degree in elementary education from the University of South Carolina, and a Ph.D. in educational research and evaluation from the University of Virginia. Rebecca Laffitte (Master of Teaching, 1978) of Sowell Gray Step & Laffitte LLC, has been selected as one of the best lawyers in her field for the 2008 edition of The Best Lawyers in America. The directory is used by thousands of lawyers and corporations as a referral guide to the legal profession in the country. The top attorneys in the country compile it through an exhaustive peer-review survey of more than 2 million confidential evaluations. Nancy Kay Ayers graduated in 1981 with a Master of Education in English, and on March 24, 2007, she married fellow USC graduate Charles Augustus Garren. Ayers currently serves as an ESOL instructor with Lexington School District One in Lexington, S.C. James Carlisle Saxon, a 1987 graduate of the Master of Education program, married Mary Ellen Haile Carter on April 14, 2007. Saxon is an attorney at the S.C. Department of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation. Dr. Vivia Lawton Fowler, a 1994 graduate of the Ph.D. program in foundations of education, has been appointed dean of Wesleyan College. Beginning in late June, she will also serve as the vice president for academic affairs. Wesleyan College is a United Methodist women’s college in Macon, Ga. Prior to her new appointment, Fowler was employed by Columbia College in Columbia, S.C., for 21 years. Most recently, she served as director of general education and director of the Center for Engaged Learning at Columbia College. Army Major Mark Lee, a 1998 Master of Education graduate, recently completed his yearlong deployment to Afghanistan with the 10th Mountain Division (Light) out of Ft. Drum (Water- 20 ville), N.Y. Major Lee was the comptroller/ resource manager for Regional Command East (eastern section of Afghanistan and Pakistan). He earned several awards while deployed: the Afghanistan Campaign Medal for selfless service; a medal for operations in support of and service to the NATO countries of Germany, Japan, Poland, Australia, France, New Zealand, Canada, Great Britain, South Korea, and the Afghan National Army; a Joint Commendation Medal for exceptional service while deployed in direct support of the global war on terrorism; an Army Overseas ribbon (3rd award); and a Unit Meritorious Ribbon, and he is allowed to wear the Shoulder Sleeve Insignia of the 10th Mountain Division (L), better known as the combat patch, permanently on all of his uniforms. Lee is presently stationed at Ft. Leonard Wood in St. Roberts, Mo., as a comptroller of the Military Police School Brigade. Virginia Richards Named Director-atLarge of American Association of Family and Consumer Sciences Virginia Richards, CFCS, Ed.D., associate dean, College of Health and Human Sciences, Georgia Southern University, was named director-at-large of the American Association of Family and Consumer Sciences (AAFCS) at the recent AAFCS 98th Annual Conference and Expo in Reno, Nev. In a formal installation ceremony, Past President Don Bower, CFCS, officially swore in Richards and other AAFCS officers for the fiscal year 2007–2008 before an audience of nearly 900 members and other conference participants. “I am looking forward to serving the members of AAFCS in this leadership role,” said Richards. “As we look toward the celebration of our centennial, I hope to honor past, present, and future members and leaders in my tenure on the AAFCS board of directors.” Richards brings more than 10 years of leadership experience in AAFCS to her new role as director-at-large. At the affil- iate level, she has served as Georgia Association of Family and Consumer Sciences (GAFCS) treasurer, president, and chair of the Finance Committee. At the national level, she has served as chair and member of the History and Archives Committee and the Ethics Committee. In recognition of her outstanding contributions to the family and consumer sciences profession, Richards has received the AAFCS Leaders award and GAFCS Outstanding Professional award. With more than 30 years of professional experience, Richards spent the first part of her career teaching family and consumer sciences classes at the secondary school level in Huntsville and Lubbock, Texas. She then became assistant professor of family and consumer sciences at Georgia Southern University and now holds the positions of associate professor of family and consumer sciences and associate dean for the College of Health and Human Sciences. Richards earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree in home economics from Texas Tech University and a doctoral degree in general curriculum from the University of South Carolina. Other officers for the 2007–2008 fiscal year are Bonnie Braun, CFCS, president; Shelly M. Nickols-Richardson, presidentelect; Peggy Wild, CFCS, treasurer; Susan S. Shockey, CFCS, director of affiliates; Sue Buck, CFCS, director-at-large; Kay M. Wilder, CFCS, director-at-large; Kristin L. Warner, student unit chair; Dixie R. Crase, CFCS, past president; and Carolyn W. Jackson, ex officio, executive director. About AAFCS Founded in 1909, AAFCS is the only national not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization providing leadership and support to FCS students and professionals in multiple practice settings. FCS professionals help individuals, families, and communities make informed decisions about their well-being, relationships, and resources to achieve optimal quality of life. AAFCS’ 8,000 members are elementary, secondary, and postsecondary educators, researchers, and administrators; cooperative extension educators; and other professionals in business and industry, not-for-profit organi- zations, and government. With national headquarters based in Alexandria, Va., AAFCS has 52 affiliates located across the United States and Puerto Rico. Lucas Named Superintendent Dr. R. Michael Lucas (BA, 1978; M. Ed., 1982; Ed. S., 1992) was named district superintendent for the School District of Oconee County on Aug. 17, 2007. Prior to this position, Lucas served as assistant superintendent of instructional services in Oconee. Lucas has served in teaching and leadership positions in Chesterfield County and Lexington-Richland 5 prior to moving to Oconee County in 2005. Alumni Notes Megan Grace Avinger (Master of Arts in Teaching, 2004) and William Franklin Estes were married on July 28, 2007. Avinger now teaches English at Dutch Fork High School in Irmo, S.C. Elizabeth Sewell Boykin, a 2005 graduate of the Master of Arts in Teaching program, married Joseph Allen Carrington, a USC graduate, on April 14, 2007. Boykin is a first grade teacher at Rice Creek Elementary School in Columbia, S.C. Dorothy Shelburne Dew and Tarrence Brayn McGovern (Master of Education, 1997; Master of Education, 2001) married on June 9, 2007. McGovern is a special education consultant for Richland County School District One in South Carolina. Ashleigh Amanda Enlow (Class of 2005; Master of Teaching, 2006) married Justin Michael Lewis on June 2, 2007. Enlow is employed as a math teacher at BrooklandCayce High School in Cayce, S.C. Mary Rutlege Fowler (Master of Education, 2002) and Eugene Wang were married on June 9, 2007. Fowler is a second grade teacher at Brennen Elementary School in Columbia, S.C. Ashley Christian Goode (Master of Education, 2000) and Kevin Harrison Culp were married on June 9, 2007. Goode is currently a special education teacher at Forest Lake Elementary School in Columbia, S.C. Kathryn Esther Hendrix (Class of 2006) and John Caughman Alexander were married on July 28, 2007. Hendrix now serves as a fifth grade teacher at Gilbert Elementary School in Gilbert, S.C. Gina Elizabeth Jones (Master of Arts in Teaching, 2004) and Justin Phillip Elias were married on July 21, 2007. Jones is employed at Dominion Christian School in Oakton, Va. Carol Marie Wyatt (Master of Education, 1995) and Steven William Yarborough were married on Oct. 20, 2007. Wyatt is employed as a therapist at the Dickerson Center for Children and as an adjunct faculty member at the University of South Carolina College of Social Work. In Memoriam Jennifer Lynn Miller (Master of Arts in Teaching, 2003) married Sean Michael Branham on July 7, 2007. Miller teaches third grade at Forest Lake Elementary School in Columbia, S.C. Sara B. Griffin (Class of 1929) Elizabeth Ellen Murphy (Master of Teaching, 2006) married Frank Adams Murphy on June 2, 2007. Murphy now teaches at Burns Elementary School in North Charleston, S.C. Kathrine R. Fellers (Class of 1941) Elizabeth Regina O’Brien (Ed.S., 2002) and Kyle Matthew Oden were married on Oct. 27, 2007. O’Brien is an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee Chattanooga. Callie L. Coleman (Master of Education, 1947) Sandra Michelle Pirkle (Master of Education, 2006) married Christopher Stark Anfin on July 28, 2007. Pirkle is a third grade teacher at Nursery Road Elementary School in Irmo, S.C. Joseph E. Wimberly (Class of 1949; Master of Education, 1955) Francis Beasley Roberts (M.Ed., 1987) of Bishopville, S.C., has been named childcare director for the Gail and Terry Richardson Center for the Child at Francis Marion University. Charles E. Inabinet (Class of 1950) Sandi Denise Robinson, a 2003 graduate of the Master of Education program in Secondary Education, married Gregory Threadgill on Feb. 17, 2007. Robinson is currently a mathematics instructor at Transit Technical High School in Brooklyn, N.Y. Sarah Virginia Schumacher (Master of Teaching, 2003) and Matthew Ridgeway Gams were married on May 20, 2007. Schumacher is an English teacher in Lexington/Richland School District Five. Kerry Mencken Taylor, a 2005 Master of Arts in Teaching graduate, married Edward Mortimer Boykin on May 5, 2007. Taylor is currently employed by Richland School District Two. Dr. Griffith T. Pugh (Class of 1930) Anne New Timmerman (Class of 1930) Sara P. Brody (Class of 1934) Frances E. Roberts (Class of 1941) Dr. Lewis R. Kirk Jr. (Class of 1943) Camilla D. Glenn (Class of 1946) Bryant A. Meeks (Class of 1947) Elizabeth D. Truluck (Class of 1947) W.E. Griffin (Class of 1949) Benjamin A. Cothran (Class of 1950) Joe Bryant (Class of 1950) Dr. William Fitzgerald Donny (Class of 1951) Ernest Redfern Reeves (Master of Education, 1952) Levi E. Gable Jr. (Master of Education, 1953) Sam R. Haskell (Master of Education, 1953) Marguerite K. Bradley (Master of Education, 1954) Dr. David V. Martin (Class of 1955) Ethel F. McKibben (Class of 1955; Master of Education, 1965) E.L. Mangum (Class of 1956) Alma Huggins Felder (Class of 1957) William Clyde Wesley (Class of 1958) Billy Gene Stone (Class of 1959; Master of Education, 1976) 21 in memoriam (cont.) Howard E. Weeks (Class of 1959) Janice Sligh Bacot (Class of 1959; Master of Education, 1975) Michael J. Callahan (Class of 1960) Kenneth E. Mance Sr. (Master of Education, 1981) Dr. Irene H. Myers (Master of Education, 1962; Ph.D., 1991) Ellie Felker Halfacre (Master of Education, 1981) Dr. Peggie L. Shealy (Ph.D., 1962) Dr. Marie E. Summers (Ph.D., 1982) Elizabeth P. Ergle (Class of 1962) Dr. Renee G. Leake (Master of Education, 1982; Ed.S., 1986; Ph.D., 1989) Cyrus L. Shealy Jr. (Master of Education, 1964) Joanne S. Eubanks (MA, 1964) Harriet M. von Lehe (Class of 1966; MA, 1976) Dr. Thomas E. Kerns (Ph.D., 1983) Dr. Judy W. Fair (Master of Education, 1984; Ph.D., 2002) Dr. Min Ching (Ph.D., 1984) Dorothy Alda Gurganious (Class of 1966) Dr. Sandra L. Wertz (Ph.D., 1984) G. June Bishop (Class of 1967) Annelle Hogan Cherry (Master of Education, 1984) Martha Mallary Taylor (Master of Education, 1967) Kathy Ricketts Whelchel (Class of 1984) Julianne B. Thornton (Master of Education, 1968) Dr. Anthony L. Edwards (Master of Education, 1994; Ph.D., 1998) Allyson B. Dickens (Class of 1968) Dr. Shirley R. McKnight (Ph.D., 1987) Laurel A. Wehler (Class of 1968) Dr. William M. Lynn (Educational Specialist, 1989; Ph.D., 1992) Commander Charles Wiley Gibbs (Master of Education, 1969) William E. Bowie (Master of Education, 1969) Ruth M. Carlock (Class of 1969) Samuel L. Cassidy (Master of Education, 1969) Richard Calhoun Hitch (Educational Specialist, 1991) Primrose Nettles Green (Master of Education, 1992) Michelle L. Kubischke (Master of Education, 1995) Catherine M. Fellers (Class of 1969) Kathleen Delores Welch (Master of Education, 1997; Ed.S., 1999) Gary Evans Douglas Jr. (Master of Education, 1970) Aaron Paul Aviani (Class of 2000) Lenwood Robert Able (Class of 1970) Sharon Q. Shipes (Class of 1970) Dr. Nancy S. Mann (Master of Education, 1971; Ed.S., 1979; Ph.D., 1981) Elzona B. Johnson (Master of Education, 1971) Theodore M. Watson Jr. (Master of Education, 1972) Naomi A. Desiderio (Class of 1972) Dr. M. Ellen Burgess (Ph.D., 1980) Ann A. Campbell (Class of 1980) Doris D. Ervin (Class of 1980) 22 Beverly A. Ritmeester (Master of Education, 1980) This list is current as of May 31, 2008. Gifts from Corporations, Foundations, and Individuals July 1, 2006–June 30, 2007 Recognition levels are based on individual donor actual cash contributions and do not include any matching gifts received on the donors’ behalf. $10,000–$99,999 Dr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Allen Dr. Lorin W. Anderson S.C. Alliance for Health Spencer Foundation $2,500–$9,999 The Barnet Foundation Trust Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Alan Lahn Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Witten $1,000–$2,499 Dr. and Mrs. Hal C. Anderson Ms. Mary Beth C. Becton Mrs. Linda B. Jeffers Dr. Douglas E. Jones Ms. Dorothy H. Lavisky Dr. Anne L. Matthews Mr. Andrew W. Parks Ms. Elizabeth Ann Phibbs R.J. Waters and Associates Inc. Mrs. Nancy Rawl S.C. Association of School Administrators Dr. Terrance Kent Peterson and Ms. Scott S. Shanklin-Peterson Mrs. Harriett D. Smith Dr. Les Sternberg Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Waters Mrs. Amanda M. Westerkam $500–$999 Mr. Harvey A. Allen Jr. Mr. and Mrs. K. Brodie Brigman Jr. Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation Inc. DEW Investments Dr. Ed Dickey Jr. Dr. Nancy K. Freeman Ms. Anita Greenstein Dr. Therese M. Kuhs Dr. Garrett K. Mandeville Mr. Bob Moree Palmer Memorial Chapel Ms. Joyce B. Rish Sonoco Foundation Mrs. Rebecca Lefebvre Sullivan Mrs. Mary B. Weinberg Mr. William B. Wilson Jr. Mr. Victor G. Wright $250–$499 Mrs. Jane Appleyard Allen Mrs. Alwyn Berlin Mr. Bert Blechman The Honorable William Daniel Boan Miss Bess F. Burns Mrs. Carolyn B. Carpenter Mrs. Harley Bush Carpenter Dr. Amy E. DeBruycker Mr. Mark Dinges Ms. Emma D. Doughty Ms. Jane B. Durant Ms. Jill Norwood Gobel Dr. Margaret E. Gredler Ms. Patricia L. Gundler Mrs. Creola Coleman Harrelson Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Heide Dr. Huynh Huynh Dr. Robert L. Johnson Dr. Craig A. Kridel Mrs. Elizabeth Ward Looney Ms. Judith L. Medlin Mr. Murray F. Mitchell Mr. James L. Moreland Sr. Mrs. Carol H. Nordin Dr. Sandra L. Priestino Mrs. Joyce Boulware Pundt Mrs. Mary H. Rogers Ms. Arlene Rogrow Dr. Bernadette F. Scott Dr. Hiller A. Spires Ms. Carolyn V. Whitesell Mrs. Gaile E. Wingard $100–$ 249 Ms. Joyce Abel Dr. Mary C. Anderson Mrs. Vera Clark Baker Dr. and Mrs. Charles Stephen Bale Dr. Keith Reeves Barron Ms. Rebecca Battle-Bryant Ms. Tammy P. Beagen Mr. Alexander C. Becking Mr. and Mrs John D. Beckler Mrs. Jean W. Beckman Mr. and Mrs. David Harold Beja Mrs. Juanita Edwards Bell Ms. Lane W. Bennett Ms. Mary S. Bennett Ms. Randi A. Berry Ms. Gaye Besly Mrs. Marilyn B. Blackwell Ms. Barbara Rogers Blaney Mr. Fred M. Bodendorf Mrs. Geneva A. Bowman Mr. David P. Bradley Dr. Mac H. Brown Dr. Opal F. Brown Dr. William H. Brown Ms. Mary S. Bryan Dr. Sandra P. Byrd Dr. V. Keith Callicutt Ms. Melody Ann Carey Dr. G. Nathan Carnes Dr. Kathryn Gibson Carter Mrs. Susan C. Carter Dr. William H. Castine Sr. Mrs. Shirley Eidson Castro Ms. Barbara Cathey Mrs. Joan T. Caughman Dr. Edward R. Cerny Mr. James M. Chakales Ms. Bonnie S. Chappell Ms. Vivian G. Chase Ms. Carol F. Chestnut Ms. Jean L. Asbill Chow Mrs. Bessie H. Clarkson Mrs. Gloria Barr Cochran Mr. Theodore E. Colcolough Mrs. Rebecca Colvin Commercial Press Repair Inc. Mr. David Michael Condon Mrs. Betty B. Cook Ms. Ellen H. Cooper Mr. James P. Cooper Jr. Mrs. Claire A. Couch Mrs. Marilu Cowan Mr. Michael R. Cox Mrs. Clydene C. Creel Mrs. Diane Marshall Criminger Mrs. Daisy P. Crowley Mrs. Ferrell G. Crowley Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Currin Jr. CWH Consulting Company, Inc. Ms. Patricia Ann Davis Dr. Diane E. DeFord Mr. David N. Dickson Ms. Betty B. Disher Mr. James W. Duckett Jr. The Duke Energy Foundation Mrs. Georgianna C. Dukes Mr. W. Mark Dukes Mrs. Elizabeth A. Duncan Mrs. Harriet L. Dunn Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Earick Earl Whatley and Associates Inc. Ms. Donna Q. Eddings Dr. Kellah M. Edens Mrs. Kathleen A. Elam Mrs. Amy Anderson Elias Ms. Elaine C. Elliott Dr. Susan Coleman Fedor Dr. Gwendolyn M. Felton and Mr. Charles M. Felton Jr. Ms. Molly L. Firth Ms. Margaret M. Fitzsimons Mrs. Kathryn Dent Flanagan Mrs. Chana C. 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White Mrs. Kay J. Whitlock Ms. Anne C. Wideman Dr. Alan V. Wieder Ms. Reatha B. Wilkins Mrs. Carolyn W. Williams Mrs. Marion B. Williams Ms. Mary Lance Williams Ms. Margaret Beth Williamson Mr. L.L. Willis Mrs. Carol Williams Wilson Ms. Dinah Wilson Mrs. Jan Williamson Wilson Dr. Jennifer L. Wilson Mrs. Pamela P. Wilson Mr. Scott Alan Wilson Mrs. Kathryn H. Windham Ms. Sarah Jones Windley Ms. Joyce S. Wingate Ms. Corliss March-Wise Ms. Gloria C. Wise Dr. Cheryl A. Wissick Mr. Charles Eugene Witt Mr. Gerald Witt Mrs. Marcia A. Wood Mrs. Patricia N. Wood Mrs. Ruth H. Woodruff Mr. Peter Wk Yeh Sr. Mrs. Linda U. Yonce Ms. Edna L. Young Mr. Edward J. Young Ms. Miriam B. Zack Dr. Jane F. Zenger Mrs. Martha E. Zion 25 Ways to Give to the College of Education The College of Education requires the financial investment of our alumni and friends. You can make your gift to the College of Education in a number of different ways to suit your financial situation. Each giving method carries its own distinctive benefits for you and the University. Your donation qualifies as a charitable contribution to a tax-exempt organization as described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Gifts of Cash Gifts of Appreciated Assets A gift of cash is the most popular type of charitable gift. The gift is considered made on the date it is hand-delivered or a check is mailed (postmark on envelope). A contribution on a credit card can be deducted when the charge is made even though the donor’s record is updated at a later time. Gifts of cash are fully deductible up to 50 percent of your adjusted gross income. Any excess over the 50 percent deduction ceiling may be carried forward as a deduction on one’s personal income tax return for up to five additional years. Checks should be made payable to the USC Education Foundation. A contribution of long-term appreciated assets entitles you to a charitable contribution deduction equal to the fair market value of the assets, such as securities, at the time of the gift. And you avoid capital gains tax on any appreciation of those securities. Gifts of appreciated assets are fully deductible up to 30 percent of your adjusted gross income for that year. Any excess of the 30 percent deduction may be carried forward up to five additional years. When making a gift of long-term appreciated assets, you save twice—on income tax and capital gains tax. You get a charitable deduction for the full fair market value of the gift, and you save the capital gains tax that would otherwise be due if you sold the appreciated asset. Planned Gifts Many people would like to make a larger gift, but they also need to consider financial and family matters. Through the various planned giving strategies available, you can discover a way to make a meaningful gift and enhance your financial security. Bequests One of the most common types of planned gifts is a bequest. Bequests are estate-tax deductible and can help reduce taxes in large estates. For more modest estates, a bequest gives you the flexibility of keeping your assets during your life, and at the same time determining how they will be used upon your death. Charitable Gift Annuities Another often used gift planning instrument is a gift annuity. Part gift and part annuity, the charitable gift annuity is a contract between the University and the donor by which the University promises to pay a fixed annuity to the donor and another for life in exchange for cash or appreciated property. Charitable Remainder Trusts For larger life-income gifts, these trusts permit a donor to make a gift of appreciated assets, avoid all capital gains taxes that would come with a sale, and receive an income stream for life. 26 Valuation Securities are considered a gift to the University on the date the certificate and stock power pass unconditionally from your control (the postmark date if mailed, or the date on which we receive an overnight delivery package) or the date the securities are transferred directly to a University of South Carolina Foundation brokerage account. To value the securities, we calculate a mean price using the average of the high and low of the security on the day you relinquish control to the University, as per IRS rules. Gifts of Closely Held Stock Gifts of closely held stock exceeding $10,000 in value must have a fair market value placed on them by a qualified independent appraiser as required by the IRS for valuing gifts of non–publicly traded stock. An independent CPA who maintains the books for a closely held corporation is deemed qualified to value the stock of the corporation. Gifts of $10,000 or less may be valued at the per-share cash purchase price of the most recent transaction. Gifts of Real Property You may contribute real property to the University, either as a bequest or, more commonly, by a lifetime transfer, and realize significant tax benefits. The University looks at possible gifts of property on a case-by-case basis. It is a detailed process but very workable, and the rewards are great. Gifts of real property may consist of almost any type of property: a personal or recreational residence, a farm or ranch, a commercial building, subdivision lots, or any undeveloped parcel of land. The gift may be for all of your interest in the property or an undivided fractional interest. Individual charitable goals and financial needs determine which of the following methods of giving real property is most appropriate for your situation. Outright Gift You transfer the property by deed to the University of South Carolina Development Foundation or to one of the other University affiliated foundations, and it is subsequently sold unless there is a special reason for holding the particular parcel of real property. Life Income Gift Real property is transferred to a trust where the trustee sells it. The income is paid to you and/or other named beneficiaries. The income paid to the beneficiaries for life depends on the net proceeds realized on the sale of the real property in combination with a previously agreed upon rate of return. Upon the death of the last of the life beneficiaries, the assets of the trust pass to one of the University’s Foundations. Life Tenancy Gift In very limited situations, ownership of the real property may be transferred to one of the University’s Foundations, but you retain the right to live on the property for your lifetime. You receive an income tax charitable contribution deduction for the present value of the remainder interest of the gift. Upon the death of the “life tenant,” the property may be sold or used by the University. Young Alumni Recent College of Education graduates also have the opportunity to participate in the young alumni campaign called “We’re South Carolina Y’all.” a South Carolin University of For information on making a gift to the College of Education, contact Harley Carpenter at: Office: 803-777-2335 E-Mail: harleyc@gwm.sc.edu College of Education Wardlaw Building, Room 123 University of South Carolina Columbia SC 29208 27 Current College of Education Academic Enrichment Support Chairs/Professorships E. Smythe Gambrell Professorship John C. Hungerpiller Professorship Schuyler and Yvonne Moore Child Advocacy Dist. Chair John E. Swearingen Professorship Lectureships Witten Lectureship in Education Fellowships Margaret Anliker Fellowship Dr. Paul Berg Graduate Fellowship Campbell-Witten Fellowship Mary L. Duffie Endowed Fellowship Paul P. Fidler Fellowship Paul Montgomery MacMillan III Memorial Fellowship James A. Stoddard Memorial Fellowship Dr. Patterson Wardlaw Memorial Fellowship Scholarships/Awards Harvey A. Allen Scholarship Hal and Mickey Anderson Scholarship Loris W. Anderson Award Cecil-Self Scholarship Conrad-Becton Scholarship Frances Gibson Daniel Scholarship Education Achievement Award Department of Educational Studies Outstanding Student Awards Mary Carter Grant Memorial Scholarship Mary J. Heimberger Memorial Award Richard E. Ishler Award George H. Lackey Jr. Award Leonard Maiden Spirit of Service Award Gerald and Myra Lahn Scholarship Dorothy H. Lavisky Scholarship Carl H. Medlin Jr. Scholarship Outstanding Athletic Trainer Award Outstanding Teaching Major Award in Physical Education Scottye Hedstrom Memorial Athletic Training Scholarship Peabody Scholarship George Poda Jr. Memorial Scholarship Preston Award Elizabeth Scruggs Scholarship in Romance Language Education Nelle Taylor Scholarship in Special Education Robert G. Thurber Award University High School/J. McTyeire Daniel/C.B. Harvey Scholarship Robert A. Weber Memorial Award Planned Gifts for the College of Education Mr. and Mrs. Heyward C. Addy Mr. and Mrs. James Alberto Dr. Kathryn G. Carter and Mr. Harry C. Carter Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde B. Dobson Mrs. Joanne S. Eubanks Mrs. Myles Friedman Mr. Irby Lee Koon Mr. Kevin A. Lahn Mr. and Mrs. J.S. Lavisky Jr. Dr. Charles S. Marshall Dr. Patricia A. McClam Mr. William O. McKeown Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles R. Sloan Mr. and Mrs. Lee M. Thomas Dr. Sandra L. Tonnsen Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Vogel Dr. and Mrs. Cleveland Earl Whatley Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Witten The University of South Carolina is an equal opportunity institution. 08305 University Publications 8/08 Education college of U n i v e r s i t y c o l u m b i a , o f s c S o u t h C a r o l i n a 2 9 2 0 8 Challenging the status quo … exceeding expectations 28 Non-profit Organization U.S. postage Paid Permit #766 Columbia, SC www.ed.sc.edu n 800-842-7679