Current Courses
EDUC BC1510 FOUNDATIONS OF EDUCATION. 3.00 points.
Students are required to attend a discussion section.
Introduction to the psychological, philosophical, sociological, and historical foundations of education as way to understand what education is, how education has become what it is, and to envision what education should be
Fall 2024: EDUC BC1510
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 1510 | 001/00372 | M W 1:10pm - 2:25pm 140 Horace Mann Hall |
Drew Chambers | 3.00 | 30/40 |
EDUC 1510 | 002/00373 | M W 4:10pm - 5:25pm 323 Milbank Hall |
Ishrat Ahmed | 3.00 | 28/40 |
Spring 2025: EDUC BC1510
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
EDUC 1510 | 001/00795 | M W 4:10pm - 5:25pm 203 Diana Center |
Ishrat Ahmed | 3.00 | 0/40 |
EDUC 1510 | 002/00796 | T Th 11:40am - 12:55pm Room TBA |
Fawziah Qadir | 3.00 | 0/40 |
EDUC BC3032 INVESTIGATING THE PURPOSES AND AIMS OF EDUCATION POLICY. 4.00 points.
Prerequisites: The instructor's permission.
Prerequisites: the instructors permission. Course enrollment will be determined after the first class meeting. Open to all students; preference given to Urban Teaching, Education Studies, and Urban Studies students. This course explores a broad continuum of educational policies, with a critical eye toward the impact these policies have on promoting equity and justice. Because no one course can do everything, our focus will be on educational policy in the United States. However, a major research assignment will be for you to do a critical analysis of one of these policies in the context of another country
EDUC BC3044 EDUCATION AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN COMPARATIVE GLOBAL CONTEXTS. 4.00 points.
This course will examine the relationship between education and social change in different regions of the world, with a focus on vulnerable populations (e.g., indigenous groups, street and working children, immigrants, women and girls; refugees)
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3044
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3044 | 001/00388 | Th 2:10pm - 4:00pm 119 Milstein Center |
Fawziah Qadir | 4.00 | 17/24 |
EDUC BC3050 SCIENCE IN THE CITY. 4.00 points.
Prerequisites: the instructor's permission.
Prerequisites: the instructors permission. In partnership with the American Museum of Natural History students investigate science, science pedagogical methods, and ways to use New York City as a resource for science teaching and learning. Sessions will be held at Barnard and the museum. Field trips and fieldwork required. Non-science majors pre-service elementary students and first year students, welcome. Note: Students in the Childhood Urban Teaching Program may use this course as a pedagogical elective
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3050
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3050 | 001/00390 | F 10:10am - 12:00pm 222 Milbank Hall |
Althea Hoard | 4.00 | 9/20 |
EDUC BC3051 SEMINAR URBAN EDUCATION. 4.00 points.
This seminar serves as the capstone course for students pursuing the Education Studies minor/special concentration or the Urban Studies major/concentration with an Urban Education Specialization. The Seminar in Urban Education explores the historical, political and socio-cultural dynamics of urban education in the U.S. context. Over time, a range of social actors have intervened in the “problem” of urban education, attempting to reshape and reform urban schools. Others have disputed this “problem” focused approach, arguing that policy makers, teachers, and researchers should start from the strengths and capacities located in urban communities. Despite decades of wide ranging reform efforts, however, many urban schools still fail to provide their students with an adequate, equitable education. Seminar in Urban Education investigates this paradox by pursuing three central course questions: 1) How have various social actors tried to achieve equity in urban schools over time? 2) What are the range and variation of assets and challenges found in urban schools? and 3) Considering this history and context, what would effective reform in a global city like NYC look like? Students will engage these questions not only through course readings and seminar discussions, but through a 40-hour field placement in a New York City public school classroom, extra-curricular program, or other education based site
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3051
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3051 | 001/00394 | Th 12:10pm - 2:00pm 501 Diana Center |
Rachel Throop | 4.00 | 14/18 |
EDUC BC3053 MULTICULTURAL ELEMENTARY PEDA. 4.00 points.
This seminar will engage prospective teachers in developing effective strategies for teaching at the elementary school level in ways that draw upon five specific domains of knowledge: knowledge of self, content, pedagogy, context and students. Students will be introduced to a variety of teaching approaches and develop ways to adapt them to teach various subjects to students in urban public school settings, understanding the intellectual, social and emotional needs of elementary school students. Students will learn to write lesson plans, develop assessments and practice teaching in “microteaching” sessions taught to peers. We will explore state standards, approaches to classroom management, and Universal Design for Learning as we develop approaches to create caring, democratic learning communities
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3053
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3053 | 001/00396 | W 4:10pm - 7:00pm Ll001 Milstein Center |
Lisa Edstrom | 4.00 | 4/10 |
EDUC BC3054 MULTICULTURAL SECONDARY PEDAG. 4.00 points.
What does it mean to be an excellent teacher? The Seminar in Secondary Multicultural Pedagogy will engage this question as you work to develop methods for teaching your subject(s) in ways that draw upon five specific domains of knowledge: knowledge of self, content, pedagogical methods, context, and students. You will be introduced to a variety of multicultural teaching approaches and develop ways to adapt them to your particular subject area and to the intellectual, social, and emotional needs of adolescent learners. Throughout the course, we will consider how to effectively differentiate instruction for and support ELL students and students with special needs. Seminar sessions will include discussions, presentations of lessons, group activities, and problem-solving issues teachers encounter in the classroom. We will explore culturally responsive approaches to: learning; learning standards; instruction and assessment; creating caring, democratic learning communities; selecting curriculum content, and engaging all students in learning. Assignments will ask you to reflect on the teaching/learning process in general, and on the particulars of teaching your academic discipline. We will accomplish this through lesson planning, practice teaching two mini-lessons, observing your peers teaching and offering feedback, and exploring stances and strategies for multicultural pedagogy in your content area
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3054
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3054 | 001/00397 | W 4:10pm - 7:00pm Ll001 Milstein Center |
Lisa Edstrom | 4.00 | 6/10 |
EDUC BC3055 ARTS AND HUMANITIES IN THE CITY:CRITICAL. 4.00 points.
Using the theme of “Arts and Humanities in the City”, this seminar will build participants’ knowledge of critical literacy, digital storytelling methods, and ways to use New York City as a resource for teaching the Arts (Dance, Theatre, Music, and Visual Arts), Social Studies, and English Language Arts in grades K-12. Critical literacy is an approach to teaching and learning that focuses on developing students’ abilities to read, analyze, understand, question, and critique hidden perspectives and socially-constructed power relations embedded in what it means to be literate in a content area
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3055
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3055 | 001/00399 | Th 10:10am - 12:00pm 502 Diana Center |
Drew Chambers | 4.00 | 15/20 |
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3055
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
EDUC 3055 | 001/00460 | Th 12:10pm - 2:00pm 214 Milbank Hall |
Drew Chambers | 4.00 | 0/20 |
EDUC BC3064 SEM: ISSUES URBAN TEACHING. 4.00 points.
Corequisites: EDUC BC3063 or EDUC BC3065. Enrollment limited to student teachers enrolled in the Education Program. Designed to help student teachers develop as reflective practitioners who can think critically about issues facing urban schools, particularly how race, class and gender influence schooling; and to examine the challenges and possibilities for providing intellectually engaging, meaningful curriculum to all students in urban classrooms
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3064
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3064 | 001/00403 | T 4:10pm - 6:00pm 318 Milbank Hall |
Maria Rivera Maulucci | 4.00 | 9/12 |
EDUC BC3150 SCIENCE IN THE CITY FIELDWORK LAB. 0.00 points.
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3150
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3150 | 001/00406 | W 2:10pm - 6:00pm Room TBA |
Althea Hoard | 0.00 | 3/10 |
EDUC 3150 | 002/00407 | Th 2:10pm - 6:00pm Room TBA |
Althea Hoard | 0.00 | 4/10 |
EDUC 3150 | 003/00910 | M 2:10pm - 6:00pm Room TBA |
Althea Hoard | 0.00 | 2/10 |
EDUC BC3155 ARTS&HUMANITIES IN CITY FIELDWORK LAB. 0.00 points.
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3155
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3155 | 001/00408 | M 2:10pm - 6:00pm Room TBA |
Drew Chambers | 0.00 | 12/10 |
EDUC 3155 | 002/00409 | W 2:10pm - 6:00pm Room TBA |
Drew Chambers | 0.00 | 3/10 |
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3155
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
EDUC 3155 | 001/00799 | M 2:10pm - 6:00pm Room TBA |
Drew Chambers | 0.00 | 0/10 |
EDUC 3155 | 002/00800 | W 2:10pm - 6:00pm Room TBA |
Drew Chambers | 0.00 | 0/10 |
EDUC BC1510 FOUNDATIONS OF EDUCATION. 3.00 points.
Students are required to attend a discussion section.
Introduction to the psychological, philosophical, sociological, and historical foundations of education as way to understand what education is, how education has become what it is, and to envision what education should be
Fall 2024: EDUC BC1510
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 1510 | 001/00372 | M W 1:10pm - 2:25pm 140 Horace Mann Hall |
Drew Chambers | 3.00 | 30/40 |
EDUC 1510 | 002/00373 | M W 4:10pm - 5:25pm 323 Milbank Hall |
Ishrat Ahmed | 3.00 | 28/40 |
Spring 2025: EDUC BC1510
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
EDUC 1510 | 001/00795 | M W 4:10pm - 5:25pm 203 Diana Center |
Ishrat Ahmed | 3.00 | 0/40 |
EDUC 1510 | 002/00796 | T Th 11:40am - 12:55pm Room TBA |
Fawziah Qadir | 3.00 | 0/40 |
EDUC BC3025 INCLUSIVE APPROACHES TO TEACHING LITERACY: THEORY AND PRACTICE. 6.00 points.
This seminar engages students in an exploration of how schools prepare students to be literate across multiple subject areas. Engaging students with theory and practice, we will look at how students learn to read and write, considering approaches for literacy instruction from early childhood through adolescence. Understanding that schools are required to meet the needs of diverse learners, we will explore literacy instruction for K-12 students with special needs, multilingual learners, and students from diverse cultural backgrounds. This course requires 60 hours of clinical experience (fieldwork)
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3025
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3025 | 001/00798 | T 9:00am - 11:50am 501 Diana Center |
Drew Chambers | 6.00 | 0/16 |
EDUC BC3030 Critical Pedagogies. 4.00 points.
This course explores education as a process through which critical consciousness and epistemic justice combat oppression in communities. Students will connect seminal work by critical pedagogues, such as Paolo Freire and bell hooks, to systemic educational challenges and lived experience. As a class, we will investigate power dynamics and structural inequalities at the systemic, institutional, interpersonal and individual levels. Students will problem-pose, dialogue and create pedagogical tools through praxis, by integrating the theory learned in the class to educational practice
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3030
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3030 | 001/00378 | T 2:10pm - 4:00pm 227 Milbank Hall |
Fawziah Qadir | 4.00 | 19/24 |
EDUC BC3040 MIGRATION, GLOBALIZATION, AND EDUCATION. 4.00 points.
Globalization and mass migration are reconfiguring the modern world and reshaping the contours of nation-states. New technologies that facilitate the movement of information, goods and people across borders have made it easier for people to remain culturally, politically, economically and socially connected to the places from which they migrated. This seminar focuses on the experiences of the youngest members of these global migration patterns—children and youth—and asks: What do these global flows mean for educating young people to be members of the multiple communities to which they belong? This seminar will explore the following questions: What is globalization and why is it leading to new patterns of migration? How do children and youth experience ruptures and continuities across contexts of migration? How do language policies affect young people’s capacity to be educated in a new land? What does it mean to forge a sense of belonging and citizenship in a “globalized” world, and how does this challenge our models of national citizenship? How are the processes by which young people are incorporated into their new country entwined with structures of race, class, and gender? Drawing on fiction, autobiography, and anthropological and sociological research this class will explore these questions from a variety of disciplinary perspectives
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3040
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3040 | 001/00384 | M 10:10am - 12:00pm 502 Diana Center |
Orubba Almansouri | 4.00 | 14/20 |
EDUC BC3042 GENDER, SEXUALITY, AND SCHOOL. 4.00 points.
Broadly, this course explores the relationship between gender, sexuality, and schooling across national contexts. We begin by considering theoretical perspectives, exploring the ways in which gender and sexuality have been studied and understood in the interdisciplinary field of education. Next, we consider the ways in which the subjective experience of gender and sexuality in schools is often overlooked or inadequately theorized. Exploring the ways that race, class, citizenship, religion and other categories of identity intersect with gender and sexuality, we give primacy to the contention that subjectivity is historically complex, and does not adhere to the analytically distinct identity categories we might try to impose on it
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3042
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3042 | 001/00442 | M 11:00am - 12:50pm Room TBA |
Ileana Jimenez | 4.00 | 0/20 |
EDUC BC3051 SEMINAR URBAN EDUCATION. 4.00 points.
This seminar serves as the capstone course for students pursuing the Education Studies minor/special concentration or the Urban Studies major/concentration with an Urban Education Specialization. The Seminar in Urban Education explores the historical, political and socio-cultural dynamics of urban education in the U.S. context. Over time, a range of social actors have intervened in the “problem” of urban education, attempting to reshape and reform urban schools. Others have disputed this “problem” focused approach, arguing that policy makers, teachers, and researchers should start from the strengths and capacities located in urban communities. Despite decades of wide ranging reform efforts, however, many urban schools still fail to provide their students with an adequate, equitable education. Seminar in Urban Education investigates this paradox by pursuing three central course questions: 1) How have various social actors tried to achieve equity in urban schools over time? 2) What are the range and variation of assets and challenges found in urban schools? and 3) Considering this history and context, what would effective reform in a global city like NYC look like? Students will engage these questions not only through course readings and seminar discussions, but through a 40-hour field placement in a New York City public school classroom, extra-curricular program, or other education based site
Fall 2024: EDUC BC3051
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3051 | 001/00394 | Th 12:10pm - 2:00pm 501 Diana Center |
Rachel Throop | 4.00 | 14/18 |
EDUC BC3052 MATH & THE CITY. 4.00 points.
Prerequisites: the instructor's permission.
Prerequisites: the instructors permission. In partnership with NYC public school teachers, students will have opportunities to engage in mathematical learning, lesson study, curriculum development, and implementation, with a focus on using the City as a resource. Students will explore implications for working with diverse populations. Non-math majors, pre-service elementary students and first-year students welcome. Fieldwork and field trips required. Note: Students in the Childhood Urban Teaching Program may use this course as a pedagogical elective
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3052
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3052 | 001/00495 | W 10:10am - 12:00pm 306 Milbank Hall |
Maria Rivera Maulucci | 4.00 | 0/20 |
EDUC BC3058 SCIENCE IN THE CITY II. 4.00 points.
Prerequisites: the instructors permission. Open to Non-science majors, pre-service elementary students, and first-year students. Students investigate the science of learning, the Next Generation Science Standards, scientific inquiry and engineering design practices, and strategies to include families in fostering student achievement and persistence in science. Fieldwork required. Note: Students in the Childhood Urban Teaching Program may use this course as a pedagogical elective
EDUC BC3061 ASSESSMENT OF TEACHING. 3.00 points.
Open to Urban Teaching students in the Education Program.
EDUC BC3063 STUDENT TEACHING/URBAN SCHOOLS. 6.00 points.
Prerequisites: completion of EDUC BC2052 or EDUC BC2062 and EDUC BC2055, with grades of B or better. NYCDOE Fingerprinting. Corequisites: EDUC BC3064. Enrollment limited. Supervised student teaching in elementary schools includes creating lesson plans, involving students in active learning, using cooperative methods, developmentally appropriate assessment, and meeting the needs of diverse learners in urban schools. Teaching skills developed through weekly individual and/or group supervision meetings (to be scheduled at the beginning of the semester), conferences, and portfolio design. Requires 100 hours of teaching at two different grade levels, full-time for one semester. Note: Students are only permitted to leave their student teaching placements early twice a week, once for EDUC BC3064 and one other day for one additional course having a start time of 2 pm or later. Students are only permitted to take one additional course while enrolled in EDUC BC3063 and EDUC BC3064
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3063
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3063 | 001/00464 | T 4:10pm - 6:00pm 225 Milbank Hall |
Drew Chambers | 6.00 | 0/5 |
EDUC BC3065 SECONDARY STU TCHNG URB SCHLS. 6.00 points.
Prerequisites: Completion of EDUC BC2052 or EDUC BC2062 and EDUC BC2055, with grades of B or better. NYCDOE Fingerprinting required. Corequisites: EDUC BC3064. Enrollment limited. Supervised student teaching in secondary schools includes creating lesson plans, involving students in active learning, using cooperative methods, developmentally appropriate assessment, and meeting the needs of diverse learners in urban schools. Teaching skills developed through weekly individual and/or group supervision meetings (to be scheduled at the beginning of the semester), conferences, and portfolio design. Requires 100 hours of teaching at two different grade levels, full-time for one semester. Note: Students are only permitted to leave their student teaching placements early twice a week, once for EDUC BC3064 and one other day for one additional course having a start time of 2 pm or later. Students are only permitted to take one additional course while enrolled in EDUC BC3064 and EDUC BC3065
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3065
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3065 | 001/00465 | T 4:10pm - 6:00pm Ll001 Milstein Center |
Ishrat Ahmed | 6.00 | 0/5 |
EDUC BC3089 Senior Research Seminar: Inquiry. 4.00 points.
This is the second semester of a year-long senior capstone experience for Educational Studies majors. Over the course of the year, you will design and carry-out an inquiry project, and you will report on this project through an appropriate medium, for a specific purpose and audience
Spring 2025: EDUC BC3089
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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EDUC 3089 | 001/00484 | T 4:10pm - 6:00pm 306 Milbank Hall |
Thea Abu El-Haj | 4.00 | 0/12 |
EDUC 3089 | 002/00485 | T 4:10pm - 6:00pm 318 Milbank Hall |
4.00 | 0/12 |
URBS UN3310 RACE. SPACE, URB SCHOOLS. 3.00 points.
Many people don’t think of themselves as having attended segregated schools. And yet, most of us went to schools attended primarily by people who looked very much like us. In fact, schools have become more segregated over the past 30 years, even as the country becomes increasingly multiracial. In this class, we will use public schools as an example to examine the role race plays in shaping urban spaces and institutions. We will begin by unpacking the concept of racialization, or the process by which a person, place, phenomenon, or characteristic becomes associated with a certain race. Then, we will explore the following questions: What are the connections between city schools and their local contexts? What does it mean to be a “neighborhood school”? How do changes in neighborhoods change schools? We will use ethnographies, narrative non-fiction, and educational research to explore these questions from a variety of perspectives. You will apply what you have learned to your own experiences and to current debates over urban policies and public schools. This course will extend your understanding of key anthropological and sociological perspectives on urban inequality in the United States, as well as introduce you to critical theory
Fall 2024: URBS UN3310
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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URBS 3310 | 001/00410 | W 2:10pm - 4:00pm Ll001 Milstein Center |
Amelia Herbert | 3.00 | 33/40 |
Spring 2025: URBS UN3310
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
URBS 3310 | 001/00492 | Th 4:10pm - 6:00pm Ll001 Milstein Center |
Fawziah Qadir | 3.00 | 0/48 |
EDUC BC3250 EDUCATION IN A POLARIZED AND UNEQUAL SOCIETY. 4.00 points.
The rise in political polarization and social inequality over the past few decades has challenged the ideals that public schools were founded on nearly two centuries ago. In the past few years, we have witnessed a surge in homophobic, racist, misogynist, and xenophobic rhetoric in our society and our schools. At the same time, teachers in classrooms across this country have been engaged in the difficult work of challenging oppression and injustice in their schools, communities, and nation. These teachers know that the future of our democracy is at stake. Using a historical and sociological framework, this course examines the past and present conditions that have led to political polarization, escalating inequality, and persistent injustice. It seeks to examine the lineage of racism, sexism, nativism, and imperialism on our nation and its schools and to consider the extent to which these challenges are uniquely American or part of a more global phenomenon. It offers an introduction to the deep current of American social, political, and economic culture that many argue has produced the challenges that our nation faces today: personal and political gain marred by intolerance, derived from wealth, and rooted in the history of segregation, sexism, and exploitation. Instead of seeing these challenges as separate entities, the course acknowledges the intersectional nature of power and politics. Students will consider how these conditions affect their roles as educators and the lives of the youth and families in their schools and communities. They will leave the course with a deeper appreciation and understanding of the historical and sociological antecedents that have contributed to polarization, inequity, and injustice around the globe
Cross-Listed Courses
ECON BC3012 THE ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION. 3.00 points.
Prerequisites: ECON BC3035 and ECON BC2411 or permission of the instructor. Analyzes education policies and education markets from an economic perspective. Examines challenges that arise when researchers attempt to identify the causal effects of inputs. Other topics: (1) education as an investment, (2) public school finance, (3) teacher labor markets, (4) testing/accountability programs, (5) school choice programs, and (6) urban public school reforms
Spring 2025: ECON BC3012
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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ECON 3012 | 001/00803 | T Th 10:10am - 11:25am Ll001 Milstein Center |
Randall Reback | 3.00 | 0/45 |
PHIL UN2100 Philosophy of Education. 3 points.
Drawing on classical and contemporary sources, this course will introduce students to a variety of texts that address the philosophical consideration of education, including its role in the development of the individual and the development of a democratic society. Readings from Plato, Rousseau, Dewey, and others.
PSYC BC2134 Educational Psychology. 3 points.
Prerequisites: BC1001 or permission of the instructor.
Through a participative classroom model, the major theories of child and adolescent development and learning fundamental to the educative process are examined. Analysis of applications and implications of psychological knowledge for classroom teaching through observations and research in elementary and secondary school classes. Examines models of instruction and assessment; motivation, teaching, and learning strategies; and gender, economic, and racial issues.
PSYC BC3382 ADOLESCENT PSYCHOLOGY. 4.00 points.
Prerequisites: BC1001 and BC1129 Developmental Psychology or permission of the instructor. Enrollment limited to 20 senior majors. Barnard students receive priority. Examines adolescent development in theory and reality. Focuses on individual physiological, sexual, cognitive, and affective development and adolescent experiences in their social context of family, peers, school, and community. Critical perspectives of gender, race and ethnicity, sexuality, and teen culture explored
Spring 2025: PSYC BC3382
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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PSYC 3382 | 001/00264 | T 2:10pm - 4:00pm Room TBA |
Erica Musser | 4.00 | 0/16 |
URBS UN3310 RACE. SPACE, URB SCHOOLS. 3.00 points.
Many people don’t think of themselves as having attended segregated schools. And yet, most of us went to schools attended primarily by people who looked very much like us. In fact, schools have become more segregated over the past 30 years, even as the country becomes increasingly multiracial. In this class, we will use public schools as an example to examine the role race plays in shaping urban spaces and institutions. We will begin by unpacking the concept of racialization, or the process by which a person, place, phenomenon, or characteristic becomes associated with a certain race. Then, we will explore the following questions: What are the connections between city schools and their local contexts? What does it mean to be a “neighborhood school”? How do changes in neighborhoods change schools? We will use ethnographies, narrative non-fiction, and educational research to explore these questions from a variety of perspectives. You will apply what you have learned to your own experiences and to current debates over urban policies and public schools. This course will extend your understanding of key anthropological and sociological perspectives on urban inequality in the United States, as well as introduce you to critical theory
Fall 2024: URBS UN3310
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
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URBS 3310 | 001/00410 | W 2:10pm - 4:00pm Ll001 Milstein Center |
Amelia Herbert | 3.00 | 33/40 |
Spring 2025: URBS UN3310
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Course Number | Section/Call Number | Times/Location | Instructor | Points | Enrollment |
URBS 3310 | 001/00492 | Th 4:10pm - 6:00pm Ll001 Milstein Center |
Fawziah Qadir | 3.00 | 0/48 |