2023-2024 Catalog 
    
    Nov 24, 2024  
2023-2024 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Education, Humanizing Educators and Learners Concentration with Single Subject Bilingual Authorization Credential, MAT


Situated at San Jose City College, the USF South Bay program intends to engage candidates in transformative education that is built upon humanizing relationships and a commitment to social justice. We prepare candidates with a deepened social consciousness so that they understand the complexities and challenges around teaching, and leave our program with the pedagogical and curricular tools to work toward a just, humane, and healthy world. Earn your Master of Arts in Teaching and credential through our Humanizing Educators and Learners (H.E.A.L.) framework.

Program Learning Outcomes


Teaching for Diversity & Social Justice Strand

  • Understand that social justice issues are always operating, affect everyone, and are manifested in relationships, curriculum, pedagogy and assessment
  • Problematize education practices, programs, and policies using social justice concepts, theories, frameworks
  • Contribute to honest and open-minded dialogue across different perspectives, cultures, experiences
  • Teach responsively and compassionately with a student advocacy, assets-based orientation vs. deficit perspective
  • Understand institutional, systemic forces of racism, classism, sexism, homophobia, and other forms of oppression and how they play out in classrooms and schools
  • Develop tools to recognize and confront dehumanizing speech and actions
  • Develop a critically reflective teacher identity with the ability to question one’s own assumptions
  • Develop familiarity with and motivation to apply educational principles, approaches, and resources for teaching to diversity and for social justice


Learning & Teaching/Development Strand

  • Develop awareness of classroom teaching as a complex endeavor that involves understanding of curricular knowledge, diverse learners, high leverage pedagogies, classroom community/leadership, multiple forms of assessment, and the contexts of schooling
  • Contemplate the different purposes of education and one’s own classroom teaching, and the implications for our role as teachers that foster our students’ growth as humane, competent, and empowered learners
  • Understand the connections among theories, principles, and classroom practice and critique the assumptions that underlie them

 

Curriculum & Instruction Strand

  • Teachers are critical consumers of curriculum in the schools so they adapt vs. adopt curricular/instructional materials
  • Teachers conduct ongoing assessment (of students’ strengths, where students are, needs) that informs planning and teaching
  • Teachers know how to develop lesson plans and sequences of instruction
  • Teachers know how to build on student assets to develop literacy and numeracy in the content areas
  • Teachers connect their own curriculum and pedagogy to teaching for diversity and social justice
  • Teachers connect theory to their practice (e.g. how children learn to read to reading instruction; how children develop number sense to math instruction)
  • Teachers identify broad and specific curricular purposes (e.g. powerful ideas, skills and strategies)
  • Teachers apply frameworks and tools (“nuts and bolts”) to their curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment

Major Requirements (44 units)