2024-2025 Graduate Course Catalog 
    
    Dec 19, 2024  
2024-2025 Graduate Course Catalog

Arts Education: Preparation, MS


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: School of Education

Contacts:

Sharon Dotger, Faculty Director of Teacher Education and Undergraduate Studies, 315-443-9138, sdotger@syr.edu 
James H. Rolling Jr., Comstock Art Facility Rm 054, 315-443-6779, jrolling@syr.edu

Faculty

Beth Ferri, Duane Graysay, Janine Nieroda, James H. Rolling, Jr.

Program Description

The Arts Education: Preparation, M.S. program meets the academic requirements for New York State initial teaching certification in Visual Arts (all grades).  Arts Education program coursework emphasizes diverse creative processes as laboratories for the exploration of the materials and forms through which human beings have historically shaped enduring ideas, negotiated identity, and organized all that we know and value.

The program emphasizes three distinct areas of study:

  • arts & design practices as a means for personal agency and social responsibility,
  • developing arts & design curricula for teaching and learning in multiple contexts, and
  • interdisciplinary research promoting creative leadership and social entrepreneurship.

This program is designed for students with no education background who already have an undergraduate degree in a studio arts, media arts, or design; or a degree in another area with sufficient credits in these arts areas. This 39 credit hour program awards the M.S. degree from the School of Education, in cooperation with the College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA).  VPA programs are accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD). The School of Education is accredited for teacher preparation and other professional school personnel programs by the Association for Advancing Quality in Educator Preparation (AAQEP).

Student Learning Outcomes


1. Acquire knowledge of each student, and demonstrate knowledge of student development and learning to promote achievement for all students

2. Know the content they are responsible for teaching, and plan instruction that ensures growth and creative achievement for all students

3. Implement instruction that engages and challenges all students to meet or exceed the learning standards

4. Work with all students to create a dynamic learning environment that supports creative achievement and growth

5. Use multiple measures to assess and document student growth, evaluate instructional effectiveness, and modify instruction

6. Demonstrate professional responsibility and engage relevant stakeholders to maximize student growth, development, and learning

7. Set informed goals and strive for continuous professional and creative growth

Graduate Program requirements - 39 credits minimum


Emphasis on socially responsible approaches to artmaking and design, unconventional field placements and partners, and an interdisciplinary approach to the arts in relation to the humanities and sciences are woven throughout the program coursework. Students majoring in Arts Education must take the following requirements and specialized course electives. Courses are shown in the order a full-time student typically would follow, opting to begin in May of one summer, and finish in the subsequent summer.  A fall semester start would require more time to complete, as student teaching would take place in the spring semester of a second year. 

First summer


Spring semester


Intensive Examination


The final requirement of master’s degree study also requires the completion of an Intensive Examination. Completing a take-home Master’s Examination can fulfill this requirement. However, with departmental approval, a Master’s thesis or special project is also an option in this program.

Art Education Content Requirements


In addition to the graduate courses listed above, this program requires either an undergraduate degree in any visual art major or a degree in another area with 30 hours of coursework in art history, criticism, and studio, drawing, painting, sculpture, photography, film, or computer graphics. content. Typically, a 3.0 average in these courses is required.

It is expected that students will enter the program with most of these requirements completed. Students who do not complete all of the requirements cannot be recommended for certification.

Also Required:

Workshops in violence prevention, child abuse and abduction, substance abuse, the Dignity for All Students Act (DASA), and school and fire safety.

As a culminating experience, students complete a portfolio demonstrating evidence of professional competence.

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: School of Education