NSU’s College of Education, Oklahoma’s premier teacher education center, dates to the Cherokee National Female Seminary founded in 1846. Through a rich history that has graduated some of Oklahoma’s finest educators, the College focuses on teaching, service, and scholarship.
Our faculty is dedicated to training professional educators committed to excellence in the classroom. They are frequent presenters at the state, national and international levels of their respective disciplines. Besides preparing candidates for initial and advanced areas of certification, NSU is home to three innovative professional development programs for educators in the field: the Great Expectations Program, the Oklahoma Institute for Learning Styles and the Rural Education Institute.
The College of Education includes four academic departments:
These departments provided instruction in courses which contribute to the general education, specialized education and professional education of students pursuing degrees and/or certificate programs in virtually every area of teacher education.
NSU is proud to be accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). The teacher education program prepares professional educators to be teaching scholars, educational leaders, and developers of human potential. This conceptual framework is performance-based, and it is articulated throughout the teacher education course work and the clinical experiences.
Northeastern State University offers four professional degrees in the field of teacher education:
Curriculum for the degrees of Bachelor of Arts in Education and Bachelor of Science in Education consists of three parts:
Part I and Part III are common to the requirements for both bachelor degrees. It is Part II in the field of specialization where differences occur in the requirements for Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees.
The mission of the College of Education is to prepare educators, professional school personnel, and other allied professionals to have a positive impact on the lives of all students, families, and communities with whom they come in contact. The College of Education is committed to continual program improvement by providing and maintaining high quality faculty, program content, and utilization of resources, thus creating the context for effectively facilitating the transformation of candidate to professional.
The Northeastern State University Teacher Education Program is guided by the philosophy that learning is a social transaction and an active, constructive process. The College of Education believes that in order for social transaction and active learning to occur, professional educators must:
The philosophical approach to teaching and learning provides the foundation for the Conceptual Framework that is threaded throughout the NSU Teacher Education Program.
The Master of Education degree is designed to enable experienced teachers to increase their proficiencies by extending their studies in the area of general education, specialized education, and professional education beyond that attained in the baccalaureate program.
This is accomplished by interview committees and advisers assist each candidate in formulating a program of studies to meet individual needs. Refer to the Graduate Catalog for more information on master’s level programs.
All entering teacher education majors are required to fulfill competency in a language other than English. Please check with your advisor regarding this requirement.
Full Internship sites are carefully selected so that students are provided experiences consistent with the goals for NSU’s Teacher Education Program, the State Department of Education, Oklahoma Commission for Teacher Preparation, and the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) standards and criteria.
When the prerequisites for full internship have been met and approval granted by the Clinical Education Director, the prospective teacher candidate will be assigned to a university field coordinator. The approval of a teaching site is the responsibility of the Clinical Education Director in the College of Education.
Any academic division may establish admission criteria in addition to or more stringent than the above listed criteria.
It should be noted that according to Article I, Section 34 of the School Code of Oklahoma (1980):
No person shall receive a certificate for instructional, supervisory or administrative position in an accredited school of this state who has been convicted of a felony, any crime involving moral turpitude or a violation of the narcotic laws of the United States or the State of Oklahoma, provided the conviction was entered within the preceding ten-year period. Oklahoma law requires applicants for initial teacher licensure to have on file with the Oklahoma State Board of Education a current Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation criminal history record and Federal Bureau of Investigation fingerprint-based criminal history record.
An outline of the specialized education required for the undergraduate degree programs administered through the College of Education is listed on the following pages. Students are referred to the graduate catalog for graduate degree and/or certificate programs.
Students certifying to teach in Secondary Schools will receive their advisement and degree from the Colleges that offer that specialization and/or major. Major fields offered are: Art, Biology, Chemistry, English, Health and Physical Education, Mathematics, Music, Physics, Social Studies, Spanish, and Speech. However, students must receive admission to teacher education, enroll in professional education courses, and internships from the College of Education. See content major for specific courses.
Beginning with the fall 1999 semester, all students who graduate with a teacher education/ certification degree are required to fulfill a competency in a language other than English. Please check with your advisor regarding this requirement.