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  • Fleming Building
    Have you heard the School of Education is moving to a new campus home and renovated building in 2020? What’s the timeline for the big move? What will the spaces look like? In this brief FAQ, we cover some of your pressing questions about the Fleming building renovation as we prepare for the move and newly reimagined spaces.
  • Dance and tech do a pas de deux on NSF-funded project
    One goal is to increase the diversity of STEM fields by emphasizing that ‘we need to stop trying to get girls to act like boys in order to be part of the math world’. A cross-disciplinary collaboration with Ben Shapiro, assistant professor of computer science, Michelle Ellsworth, professor in the Department of Theatre and Dance, Edd Taylor, assistant professor in STEM education, and Mary West, doctoral student in computer science.
  •  Elena Sandoval-Lucero and Johanna Maes
    When friends and colleagues Johanna Maes and Elena Sandoval-Lucero could not find an intersectional teaching tool to aid in grappling with often painful situations that affect marginalized people in higher education, they launched a book project to fill the gap. There are two opportunities to learn more about, “Case Studies in Equity, Diversity & Inclusion in Higher Education: An Intersectional Perspective."
  • digital literacy lab
    How can you make an old fable such as the "Ant and the Grasshopper," Aesop’s classic tale about the value of hard work, come alive? For one student at Lafayette Elementary School, the answer was simple: Just add sound. The student participated in an after-school program and partnership called the Literacy and Media Lab, between the School of Education and Boulder Valley School District.
  • Girl with alphabet toy
    In a first-of-its-kind study, researchers working in a school district near Denver have examined the impacts of enrolling children in full- versus half-day preschool programs. The research team, led by Assistant Professor Allison Atteberry, found that the extra school hours improved how children performed in assessments of vocabulary, literacy, math and more.
  • Scholarship Ceremony
    The annual School of Education Scholarship Awards Ceremony united and honored more than 180 scholarship and fellowship recipients and supporters on Friday, Sept. 20. The ceremony celebrated student accomplishments and recognized the generosity of supporters.
  • School of Ed logo
    As faculty, staff, and students in the School of Education, we stand in solidarity with the members of the Black Student Alliance who see this as a critical moment to make structural changes to address racism on this campus.
  • Best should teach thumbnail
    With a theme focused on what it takes to truly know and love students, ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ celebrated excellence in education by recognizing five faculty members — including Wendy Glenn, professor of education — K-12 teachers, and graduate students with Best Should Teach Awards in September.
  • Educational Opportunity Project database graphic
    For the first time ever, a new online resource will give journalists, educators, parents and policymakers the chance to search through data on the academic performance, district-level racial and socioeconomic composition, segregation patterns and other educational conditions of schools nationwide. Assistant Professor Benjamin Shear helped to develop the statistical methods underlying the new resource.
  • In a new book, education researcher Elizabeth Dutro lays out a road map for teachers to bring the difficult life experiences of their students into everyday classwork.
    In a new book, School of Education professor Elizabeth Dutro lays out a road map for how educators can begin to incorporate the difficult life experiences of their students into day-to-day school activities—from essay prompts to lessons on poetry.
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