Approved
Minutes
Present: Athinarayanan, Bertrand, Buis, Cron, Curtis,
Guests: Bob Buchanan, Anthony Duben, Beth Easter, Bob Hamblin, Mike Hogan, Carol McDowell, Gale McMahan, Gary Miller, Steve Overmann, Joe Pujol, and David Reinheimer.
A. Minutes of
B. Action Items
Because some of the items from the last meeting listed as Information Items were brought back to this meeting as Action Items, Stephens explained if the Phase II curriculum revisions do not raise issues with another college but are truly internal, they would be considered Information Items; however, if they impacted another College, they would be considered an Action Item and put on the agenda for voting/discussion purposes.
1. Revisions
in Sport Management Curriculum. (Council members were previously
provided a copy with the agenda.) Pujol
explained that the revisions were minor and internal to the College. Upon a
motion by Prater; seconded by Jones, the changes to the Sport Management
Curriculum were approved.
2. Revisions in Elementary, Early and Special Education – B.S. in Elementary Education; B.S. in Exceptional Child Education; and B.S. in Early Childhood Education. (Council members were previously provided a copy with the agenda.) Shepard explained that the revisions lowered the hours required for program completion but remained within the certification requirements for elementary teachers. Jones introduced McDowell from the Department of Music. She strongly opposed the deletion of MU356 as a pre-requisite for ED255. She explained that elementary teachers needed this breadth for music in elementary school curricula. Stephens questioned whether a one-hour in the pre-requisite provided breadth and also inquired about the concern of the other colleges since DESE certification requirements did not include this music class. Others supported Dean Jones’ position against the deletion of the pre-requisite. There was a request to split the motion into 2 parts; deletion of MU356 and the programmatic revision. McGowan moved and McDougall seconded the motion that the pre-requisite be retained. The motion passed. After much discussion regarding the concerns of deleting MU 356, Shepard withdrew the second part of the motion for revisions from the table.
3. Revisions in Middle and Secondary Education – Secondary Teacher Education and Middle Level Teacher Education. (Council members were previously provided a copy with the agenda.) McMahan explained that these revisions had approval of the effected departments. After discussion and upon a motion by Shepard; seconded by McGowan, revisions were approved.
4. Title Change: B.S. in
Applied Computer Science to B.S. in Computer Information Systems.
(Council members were previously provided a copy with the agenda.) McGowan moved for approval of the name
change. McDougall seconded.
5. New Options in B.S. in Environmental Science – Biology; Business; Chemistry; Environmental Health; Geoprocessing and Soils; and Information Systems. (Council members were previously provided a copy with the agenda.) McGowan explained that this action was to convert “concentrations” into “options” to match with the earlier approved definition of an “option.” Steve Overmann was on hand to answer questions. McGowan moved to approve the changes; McDougall seconded. Motion passed.
6. Revision in Master of Arts in Elementary Education; Exceptional Child Education; and School Counseling. (Council members were previously provided a copy with the agenda.) Janzow explained that the revisions had Graduate Council approval. McMahan discussed the need for the revisions and noted that DESE requirements were met. Discussion arose about admission standard requirements to the program. It was agreed that it was a separate issue. Janzow moved and Buis seconded the revision. The motion passed with one dissenting vote.
The Master of Arts in School Counseling was discussed. Changes have been made in order for community counselors to become certified as school counselors according to DESE requirements. Upon a motion by Janzow; seconded by McDougall, the motion passed.
7. New Program: Specialist in Educational Leadership
Development. (Council members
were previously provided a copy with the agenda.) Janzow stated that the new program had
received Graduate Council approval. There
was discussion as to whether this was a new option under the Specialist Program
or whether this is a new degree. Buchanan
explained that the new degree is in response to market demand because most
teachers now have a Master’s degree and want to be able to advance in the
salary scale but not to be a principal or superintendent. Buchanan noted that the forms listing the
delivery sites would be changed from “
C. Discussion Items
1. EN100 Requirements. Jones introduced Hamblin, Hogan and Reinheimer to lead the discussion concerning the EN 100
English requirements. Reinheimer distributed three handouts. A flowchart showing the process of
composition and writing assessment and placement statistics were
discussed. Due to the length of the
meeting and hour of the day, Stephens asked that the discussion be continued at
April 5th