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Show 212 Professional course work in the program is organized into sequential levels. As students move through the program, they are required to demonstrate in a variety of ways the knowledge, skills and dispositions that embody the department's organizing theme and program model. It is important that interested students contact the Teacher Education Advisement Center (ED 230) as quickly as they decide to become a teacher. Specific program admission requirements, required courses, and recommended general education course work are available. Admission to Teacher Education Admission to the Teacher Education Programs is a separate process from general university admission. The Teacher Education programs maintain a competitive admissions process. A specific number of applicants are provisionally admitted each semester after having made application and met the minimum admission criteria listed below. Meeting the minimum requirements only qualifies a student to be considered for admission. Students are admitted two times per year: fall semester and spring semester. Applicants are evaluated using a 100 point system: 30 points maximum for GPA; 30 points maximum for the Collegiate Assessment of Academic Proficiency (CAAP); 40 points maximum for interview/biographical statement. Minimum Admission Requirements 1. Formal Application and provisional Admission form submitted to Teacher Education Admissions Office (ED 230A) by the deadline date. Transcripts of all college course work must accompany the application. 2. At least 40 semester hours of general education and relevant prerequisite courses and a) have a cumulative GPA of 3.00 or above, or b) 3.25 GPA or above on the last 30 semester hours taken. Those intending to teach at the elementary level, please note: The Professional Education component of the Elementary Education and Composite Elementary Education and Special Education majors requtes four semesters to complete. Therefore, it is very important that candidates have completed the General Education requtements and have taken at least some of the requted Support Courses prior to entering the program. Because of possible scheduling difficulties, failure to do so could mean spending an extra semester (or more) in completing the program. Those intending to teach at the secondary level, please note: The Professional Education component of the Secondary Education program requtes three semesters to complete. Therefore, it is very important that candidates have completed the General Education requtements and most of the major and minor requtements prior to entering the program. Because of possible scheduling difficulties, failure to do so could mean spending an extra semester (or more) in completing the program. 3. Minimum score on the CAAP. The Collegiate Assessment of Academic Proficiency is a standardized achievement assessment designed to show achievement levels in reading, writing, mathematics, and critical thinking. Registration should be at least 10 days prior to the test date. Applicants who have received a Bachelor's degree more than 5 years prior to application are requted to take the CAAP. Applicants with degrees within 1-5 years are not required to take the CAAP. Dates for testing and administration are available in ED 230 and the University Testing Center in the Student Services Center. (See CAAP description following.) 4. Evidence of fingerprinting/background check must be completed immediately after being admitted. See Teacher Education Admissions Office (ED 230) for further information. 5. Sign up for an interview in the Advisement Center (the schedule will be available approximately one (1) month prior to the interview dates). 6. English competency completed (grade "C" or above in Engl ENIOIO and Engl EN2010, or equivalent). 7. University mathematics competency completed (see general requirements in this catalog). Note: Elementary and Early Childhood Education majors need Math QL1050 as prerequisite for MathEd support courses. 8. Communication competency completed (grade "B-" or above in Comm HUl020, Comm HUl050, or Comm 3070 or equivalent). 9. University Computer and Information Literacy competency completed (see General Requirements on pages 36-41 in this catalog) 10. Teacher Education also recognizes specific program and diversity needs of professional education and reserves the right to consider such factors in the admission of candidates. Additional Notes a. Students are provisionally admitted to a specific teacher education program: (1) early childhood education; (2) elementary education; (3) composite elementary and special education; (4) secondary education. b. Provisional admission to a specific program is valid for a period of five years. If a student has not completed the program within the five-year period or desires to pursue a different program, he/ she must seek readmission under the current admission standards and complete current course/program requirements. Changes in state licensure requirements may necessitate more immediate program changes. c. Professional education credits older than five years at the time of program admission generally will not be counted. However, students may revalidate outdated course work by following procedures available in the Teacher Education Advisement Center, ED 230A. d. Applicants with BS or BA degrees seeking initial licensure in Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, or Secondary Education, must meet the current minimum GPA requirement, submit a formal application and transcripts, complete the interview/statement (See Requirements 1, 2, 3 [if applicable], and 4 of Admission to Teacher Education Program). They are then placed in the pool with others seeking admission. e. Applicants who hold Bachelor's degrees older than five years and who have not had more recent relevant course work or work experiences related to their major and minor must take at least two courses in their major and one course in their minor as designated by the academic department. f. Applicants with an earned graduate degree seeking initial licensure must satisfactorily complete requirements 1, 2, 4, and 5. They are then placed in the pool with others seeking provisional admission. Collegiate Assessment of Academic Proficiency Tests The Collegiate Assessment of Academic Proficiency Test (CAAP) tests reading, mathematics, writing, and critical thinking. Each are separate standardized achievement tests designed to measure basic proficiency in these areas and require 40 minutes for completion. The Reading test measures student achievement in reading comprehension, using questions based on reading selections in prose fiction, humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Each passage is accompanied by a set of multiple-choice questions that require students to derive meaning, manipulate information, make comparisons and generalizations, and draw conclusions. The Mathematics test measures the development of math skills generally. The test emphasizes the solution of quantitative problems encountered in many algebra courses and also beginning- WEBER STATE UNIVERSITY 2003-2004 CATALOG |