Teachers College, Columbia University is the graduate school of education, health and psychology in New York City at Columbia University. Founded in 1887, it has been a Faculty of Columbia University since its affiliation in 1898. Teachers College is also an academic department of the university and its Ph.D degrees are conferred by the Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Teachers College is the oldest and largest graduate school of education in the United States.
Consistently achieving top rankings, Teachers College alumni and faculty have held prominent positions in academia, government, music, non-profit, healthcare, and social science research. In general, Teachers College has over 90,000 alumni in more than 30 countries. Notable alumni and former faculty include John Dewey, Carl Rogers, Georgia O'Keeffe, Edward Thorndike, Maxine Greene, William Heard Kilpatrick, Donna Shalala, William Schuman (an American composer and former president of the Juilliard School), Lee Huan (Premier of the Republic of China), Shirley Chisholm (first black woman elected to the United States Congress), Mary Adelaide Nutting (the world's first professor of nursing), Zhang Boling (founder of Nankai University and the Nankai system of schools), Hamden L. Forkner (founder of FBLA-PBL), E. Gordon Gee (president of West Virginia University and former president of Brown University, Ohio State University, and Vanderbilt University), and Chester Earl Merrow (a U.S. Representative from New Hampshire).
True to its vision of "education writ large," the school offers Master of Arts (M.A.), Master of Education (Ed.M.), Master of Science (M.S.), Doctor of Education (Ed.D.), and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in over sixty programs of study in four core areas of expertise: health, education, leadership, and psychology. Despite the College's name, less than one-third of students are preparing to become teachers. Graduates go on to pursue careers in psychology, social and behavioral sciences, health and health promotion, educational policy, technology, international and comparative education, as well as education and educational leadership. Although administratively independent, Teachers College is represented in Columbia's governance structure and appoints two senators to the Columbia University Senate.
In 2018, Teachers College was ranked #7 among all graduate schools of education by U.S. News & World Report. However, Teachers College has achieved the #1 ranking in the past. In 2016, the QS World University Rankings by Subject rated Columbia University as #13 in Education. In 2017, The Times Higher Education ranked Columbia #12 in the World for social sciences, which included the combined citation, teaching, and research scores for international studies (SIPA), education (Teachers College/Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences), geography, psychology, and sociology (Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences).
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History
In the 1880s, the Kitchen Education Association was founded by philanthropist Grace Hoadley Dodge, the daughter of a very wealthy businessman William Dodge. The association's focus was to replace miniature kitchen utensils for other toys that were age appropriate for kindergarten-aged girls. In 1884, the KEA was rebranded to the Industrial Education Association, in the spirit of widening its mission to boys and parents as well. In 1887, William Vanderbilt Jr. offered a substantial financial sum, and with the support of Dodge, appointed philosopher Nicholas Murray Butler as new president of the IEA. The IEA decided to provide schooling for the teachers of the poor children of New York City. Thus, in 1887-88, the IEA employed six instructors and enrolled thirty-six juniors in its inaugural class as well as eighty-six special students. In order to reflect the broadening mission of education beyond the original philanthropic intent set forth by Dodge, the IEA changed its name to the New York School for the Training of Teachers. In 1892, the school's name was again changed to Teachers College.
The curriculum combined a humanitarian concern to help others with a scientific approach to human development. Beginning as a school to prepare home economists and manual art teachers for the children of the poor, the College affiliated with Columbia University in 1893 as the University's Graduate School of Education. Unlike normal schools, after 1893 Teachers College required all students to have a high school diploma. Its professional teacher education was considered the equivalent of the junior and senior years of college. Many early students who lacked preparation for the advanced coursework first took introductory liberal arts classes, often at Barnard College.
The founders early recognized that professional teachers need reliable knowledge about the conditions under which children learn most effectively. As a result, the College's program from the start included such fundamental subjects as educational psychology and educational sociology. The founders also insisted that education must be combined with clear ideas about ethics and the nature of a good society; consequently programs were developed in the history of education and in comparative education. As the number of school children increased during the twentieth century, the problems of managing the schools became ever more complex. The college took on the challenge and instituted programs of study in areas of administration, economics, and politics. Other programs developed in such emerging fields as clinical and counseling psychology, organizational psychology, developmental psychology, cognitive psychology, curriculum development, instructional technology, media studies and school health care.
The area of developmental psychology (mentioned earlier,) has specially received numerous accolades. Teachers College was also associated with philosopher John Dewey who taught at the facility.
From 1932 to 1939, Teachers College was home to the experimental New College for the Education of Teachers, a progressive undergraduate college. Founded by Richard Thomas Alexander, the College used the same facilities as Teachers College at the Morningside Heights campus; additionally, the College had learning communities established in North Carolina, Georgia, and abroad in foreign study groups. Using innovative ideas such as extended foreign study, community-based active research, and authentic assessment, a portfolio-based undergraduate learning curriculum was developed which rejected traditional summative grades or the accumulation of credits in favor of experiential education as the basis of degree completion. The college was closed due to a combination of growing financial deficits and student activism in 1939.
Teachers College has played a role in curriculum reform efforts, such as during the "New Math" movement of the 1960s with its Secondary School Mathematics Curriculum Improvement Study program.
In the 1970s, all Teachers College diplomas were conferred by Columbia University. Additionally, many of TC's departments ran joint Ph.D programs with the University including psychology, history, and anthropology and operated "as if they were a single department located on both sides of 120th street. TC students took courses at Columbia and vice versa."
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Role
According to its president, Teachers College, Columbia University provides solutions to the difficult problems of urban education, reaffirming its original mission in providing a new kind of education for those left most in need by society or circumstance. The college continues its collaborative research with urban and suburban school systems that strengthen teaching in such fundamental areas as reading, writing, science, mathematics, and the arts; prepares leaders to develop and administer psychological and health care programs in schools, hospitals and community agencies; and advances technology for the classroom, developing new teaching software and keeping teachers abreast of new developments. Teachers College also houses a wide range of applied psychology degrees, including one of the nation's leading programs in Organizational Psychology.
It also houses the programs in Anthropology (Anthropology and Education, and Applied Anthropology--the latter with the Anthropology Department of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Columbia, founded by Franz Boas). It was foundational in the development of the field of Anthropology and Education. By the 1930s, Teachers College had begun to offer courses in anthropology as part of the foundations of education. By 1948 Margaret Mead started what would be a long association with Teachers College where she taught until the early 1970s. In 1953 Solon Kimball joined the faculty. In 1954 nine professors (including Mead and Solon Kimball) came together to discuss the topic. In the 1960s, these people formed the Council on Anthropology and Education within the American Anthropological Association, and it is still considered as the leading organization in the field.
Teachers College also operates the Community English Program, a year-round English-Language school open to all English-Language learners in the New York City area. Classes are taught by Teachers College students who are pursuing graduate degrees in the field of ESL instruction.
While the name Teachers College reflects a dedication to producing quality teachers, less than one-third of Teachers College students are at any one time preparing to become teachers. With more than sixty programs of study, graduates go on to pursue careers in psychology, social and behavioral sciences, health and health promotion, educational policy, technology, international and comparative education, as well as education and educational leadership. Students are candidates for Masters of Arts (M.A.), Master of Education (Ed.M.), Master of Science (M.S.), Doctor of Education (Ed.D.), and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees.
The student experience at Teachers College is governed by a student senate, headed by the Senate President, followed by the Vice-President, Parliamentarian, Communications Officer, and Treasurer. Two Senators, a Master's candidate, & a PhD candidate, are elected each year to represent each academic department at Teachers College to advocate on behalf of current students and Alumni. The TC Senate meets bi-weekly to determine what issues need to be investigated.
Academic departments
- Arts & Humanities
- Biobehavioral Sciences
- Counseling & Clinical Psychology
- Curriculum & Teaching
- Education Policy & Social Analysis
- Health & Behavioral Studies
- Human Development
- International & Transcultural Studies
- Mathematics, Science & Technology
- Organization & Leadership
Rankings
In 2018, Teachers College was ranked #7 among all graduate schools of education by U.S. News & World Report.
The school is widely regarded as a top-five education school in the nation for a wide array of concentrations including #3 in curriculum & instruction, #3 in elementary teacher education, #4 in secondary teacher education, #5 in educational administration & supervision, and #6 in educational policy.
In 2010, Teachers College peaked at #2 in the annual U.S. News & World Report ranking of graduate schools of education.
In 2016, the QS World University Rankings by Subject rated Columbia University as #13 in Education.
In 2017, The Times Higher Education ranked Columbia #12 in the World for social sciences, which included the combined citation, teaching, and research scores for international studies (SIPA), education (Teachers College/Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences), geography, psychology, and sociology (Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences).
Relationship with Columbia University
Teachers College is Columbia University's Graduate and Professional School of Education.
According to David Estrella, the director of admissions at Teachers College, "Teachers College is the graduate school of education for Columbia University. In a sense, you get the best of both worlds, all the resources that are available here at Teachers College and everything else that is available at Columbia University, the facilities and the different schools that are at Columbia University." Out of the sixteen graduate and professional schools at Columbia University, Teachers College is the seventh oldest in the university system. The Columbia University senate has three representatives from Teachers College (two faculty and one student) serving two-year terms and full voting privileges regarding matters impacting the entire university. The University also has three administrative boards for special programs that are overseen by more than one academic Faculty unit. The Administrative Board for the Master of Arts in Teaching of Columbia University serves as the administrative oversight committee for the conferral of the master's degree.
The veteran's initiative at TC states, "Teachers College is part of Columbia University, which historically and currently enrolls the largest number of veterans among Ivy League institutions."
As with the other Faculties of the University, Teachers College Ph.D. degrees are specifically conferred by Columbia University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Teachers College holds its own corporate status separate from Columbia University, including an independent board of trustees.
Similarities and differences to other schools at Columbia University
Teachers College is considered one of the sixteen graduate and professional schools at Columbia University. Founded in 1889, Teachers College is the seventh oldest in the university system.
As with Barnard, Teachers College faculty hold Columbia University appointments; its president is a dean of the University; and all degrees are conferred by Columbia University and its Board of Trustees. Students at both institutions may cross-register for courses and have access to Columbia's student organizations, libraries, and facilities. Although Barnard offers an education major to all Columbia undergraduates irrespective of school affiliation, Teachers College is the only institution at Columbia that offers graduate degrees in the field.
Teachers College and Columbia Law School do not adhere to the University's standard tenure review process and maintain their own online library catalogs, which are respectively named Educat and Pegasus.
Graduate students at Teachers College are generally ineligible to serve as a student officer of instruction or research at the University.
Student, faculty, and guest housing
The university has three residence halls for single students. They are 517 West 121st, Grant Hall, and Whittier Hall. The university has three residence halls for family housing. They are Bancroft Hall, Grant Hall, and Sarasota Hall. One bedroom apartments are available for childless students and students who each have one child. Two and three bedroom apartments are available for students who each have more than one child.
Lowell Hall and Seth Low Hall have faculty housing units.
Publications
Teachers College Record has been published by the school continuously since 1900. In 1997 a group of doctoral students from Teachers College established the journal Current Issues in Comparative Education (CICE), a leading open-access online academic journal.
Teachers College Press, founded in 1904, is the national and international book publishing arm of Teachers College and is dedicated to deepening the understanding and improving the practice of education.
Teacher's college also publishes the Hechinger Report.
Presidents
Faculty
Current faculty
- Charles Basch, Health Education
- George Bonanno, Professor of Clinical Psychology
- Lambros Comitas, Applied Anthropology
- Christopher Emdin, Science Education
- Neil R. Grabois, Mathematics Education
- Henry Landau, Mathematics Education
- Elizabeth Midlarsky, Clinical Psychology
- Lisa Miller, Clinical Psychology
- Henry O. Pollak, Mathematics Education
- Derald Wing Sue, Professor of Counseling Psychology
- Barbara Tversky, Professor of Psychology and Education
- Helena Verdeli, Clinical Psychology
- Ruth Westheimer, Adjunct Professor
Past faculty
- Richard Thomas Alexander, founder of New College for the Education of Teachers
- Elizabeth Burchinal, authority on American folk dance especially for women and children.
- John Dewey, philosopher
- Arthur Wesley Dow, arts education
- David F. Duncan, health education
- Hamden L. Forkner, founder of Future Business Leaders of America
- Elbert K. Fretwell, Second Chief Scout Executive
- Maxine Greene, Philosopher of Education
- Linda Darling Hammond, Founder of the National Center for Restructuring Education
- William Heard Kilpatrick, Philosopher of Education
- Solon Kimball, anthropologist
- Charles J. Martin, arts instructor
- Margaret Mead, anthropologist
- Jack Mezirow, sociologist, former Professor of Adult and Continuing Education
- Nel Noddings, Philosopher of Education
- Mary Adelaide Nutting, nursing
- Donna Shalala, Former United States Secretary of Health and Human Services
- Douglas Sloan, Professor of History of Education, Educational Theorist & Author
- David Eugene Smith, Professor of Mathematics & Mathematics Education
- Edward Thorndike, psychologist
- Robert L. Thorndike, psychologist
Alumni
- Muhammad Fadhel al-Jamali, Prime Minister of Iraq (17 September 1953 - 29 April 1954)
- Charles Alston (1931), artist
- Hafizullah Amin, President of Afghanistan
- Nahas Gideon Angula (MA, EdM), Prime Minister of Namibia
- Mary Antin (1902), author of the immigrant experience
- Michael Apple, professor of Educational Policy Studies, University of Wisconsin
- William Ayers, elementary education theorist, founder of Weather Underground, and professor at University of Illinois, Chicago
- Sarah Bavly, nutrition education pioneer in Israel
- Abby Barry Bergman, science educator, author, school administrator
- Louie Croft Boyd (1909), nursing instructor
- John Seiler Brubacher, educational philosopher; professor at Yale
- Donald Byrd, jazz and fusion trumpet player; music educator
- Betty Castor, politician and President of the University of South Florida
- Chiang Menglin President, Peking University, Minister of Education, Republic of China
- Shirley Chisholm, first African American woman elected to Congress, and former US Presidential candidate
- Norman Cousins, editor, peace activist
- Ella Cara Deloria (1915), Yankton Sioux ethnologist
- Edward C. Elliott, educational researcher and president of Purdue University
- Albert Ellis, cognitive behavioral therapist
- Edward Fitzpatrick, president of Mount Mary College and noted expert on conscription during World War I and World War II
- Clarence Gaines (M.A. 1950), Hall of Fame basketball coach, Winston-Salem State University
- Gordon Gee (Ed.D. 1972), President of Ohio State University
- Tsuruko Haraguchi (Ph.D. 1912), psychologist
- Andy Holt (Ph.D. 1937), president of University of Tennessee
- Seymour Itzkoff, Professor Emeritus of Education and Child Study, Smith College
- George Ivany (M.A. 1962), President of the University of Saskatchewan
- Ani Kalayjian - (Ed. D, 1986) Psychologist and trauma effects of disasters expert
- Thomas Kean (M.A. 1963), former Governor of New Jersey
- Maude Kerns (M.A. 1906), pioneering abstract artist and teacher
- H. S. S. Lawrence (M.A. 1950, Ed.D. 1950), Indian educationist
- Lee Huan, former Minister of Education and Premier of the Republic of China
- Mosei Lin (Ph.D. 1929), Taiwanese academic and educator; first Taiwanese to receive a Ph.D. degree
- John C. McAdams, associate professor of political science at Marquette University
- Agnes Martin (B.A. 1942), artist
- Rollo May, existential psychologist
- Chester Earl Merrow, educator, U.S. Representative from New Hampshire
- Richard P. Mills, former Commissioner of Education for both Vermont and New York States
- Jerome T. Murphy, Dean Emeritus at the Harvard Graduate School of Education
- Georgia O'Keeffe, American artist
- Thomas S. Popkewitz (M.A. 1964), professor of Curriculum Theory at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
- Neil Postman (M.A. 1955, Ed.D. 1958), cultural critic
- Caroline Pratt (educator), progressive educator, founder of City and Country School (Bachelor of Pedagogy, 1894)
- Thomas Granville Pullen Jr. President University of Baltimore, Maryland State Superintendent of Education
- Robert Bruce Raup (Ph.D. 1926), Professor Emeritus, Philosophy of Education, and critic of the American Education system
- Henrietta Rodman (1904), teacher, feminist activist
- Carl Rogers (M.A. 1928, Ph.D. 1931), psychologist
- Martha E. Rogers (M.A. in public health nursing 1945), nursing theorist, creator of Science of unitary human beings
- Miriam Roth, Israeli writer and scholar of children's books, kindergarten teacher, and educator
- Adolph Rupp, Hall of Fame basketball coach, University of Kentucky
- William Schuman (B.S. 1935, M.A. 1937), composer, former president of the Juilliard School of Music and of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
- James Monroe Smith, president of Louisiana State University, 1930-1939
- Karl Struss (B.A. 1912), photographer and cinematographer; pioneer in 3D films
- Bobby Susser (M.A. 1987), children's songwriter, record producer, performer
- Tao Xingzhi, Chinese educator and political activist
- Edward Thorndike, psychologist
- Robert L. Thorndike (M.A. 1932, Ph.D. 1935), psychologist
- Merryl Tisch, educator, Chancellor, New York State Board of Regents
- Minnie Vautrin, (M.A. 1919), educator and missionary.
- Ruth Westheimer (Ed.D. 1970), sex therapist
- Floyd Wilcox (M.A. 1920), third president of Shimer College
- John Davis Williams, Chancellor of the University of Mississippi (1946 to 1968)
- David Zersen (M.A. 1995, Ed.D. 1998), President of Concordia University Texas (1994 to 2002)
- Zhang Boling (1917), Founder and president, National Nankai University, Tianjin, China
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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