The
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga offers a state-approved 18 credit hour
add-on program leading to ESL endorsement certification.
Many applicants have completed one or more of these courses (or similar content) as part of an undergraduate curriculum. Through evaluation of your transcripts and rap sheet, it can be determined if any previous coursework may be applied toward the requirements for the ESL endorsement.
ESL
Course Descriptions
Requirements
are as follows:
Both EDUC 458 &459
In-depth study of
the history of English as a Second Language instruction. This course will
investigate the development and characteristics of various programs used in
teaching English to limited English proficient (LEP) students. Additional study
will focus on articles written by major researchers in this field. The central
purpose of this course is to provide experience in identifying, analyzing, and
discussing significant current issues in the field of English as Second
Language.
Involves the study
and application of second-language theories and cultural knowledge to ESL
teaching methodology and curriculum design. In addition, explores various
approaches, which should benefit second-language learners and presents
techniques of adjusting lessons to suit the needs of second-language learners
and enhance their acquisition and use of English. Concentrates on assisting
educators in the development of
appropriate strategies for teaching speaking, writing, and grammar in ESL
environments.
Choose
one English:
Designed to make
the student aware of language as a field of study; to show the basic
assumptions and methods of linguistics; and to introduce the terminology and
scholarship in the field.
A survey of the
history of the English language, beginning with its Indo-European backgrounds,
tracing the development of Old, Middle, and Modern English through major
changes in vocabulary, sound, word formation, and syntax.
An introduction to
the system phonological, morphological, syntactical of present-day American
English. Emphasis on various recent presentations of this system.
Choose
one Reading:
·
EDUCATION 321 – Teaching of Reading in the
Secondary School
Integrating reading skills and teaching strategies with the teaching of content area subjects.
·
EDUCATION 323 – Teaching Reading (3 hours)
Emphasis on reading as a developmental process and on useful strategies for getting meaning from print; survey of current methods, ways to integrate literature, teaching procedures, assessment techniques, and materials for the teaching of reading. Field component required.
·
EDUCATION 420 – Emergent Literacy (3 hours)
Emphasis on the development of an instructional reading program that meets the needs of young children. Surveys classroom teaching models, assessment procedures, methods, and materials.
·
EDUCATION 561 – Literacy Instruction for
Emergent Learners, Birth to First Grade (3 hours)
This advanced focus in literacy will support teacher knowledge of best practices in classroom instruction aimed at ages of birth through first grade. Participants will learn the major theories of language development and the history of teaching reading in the U.S.; principles of balanced literacy; critical strategies in emergent literacy instruction; methods for creating a literacy environment; and strategies for supporting children's vocabulary development, word identification, and spelling pattern awareness. Current issues will be explored in the topics of phonics instruction, decodable text, literature-based approaches, phonemic awareness, and the competing theories of emergent literacy and “reading readiness.”
·
EDUCATION 562 – Literacy Instruction for
Elementary School Learners, Grade Two Through Five (3 hours)
This
advanced focus in supporting elementary school literacy will support teacher
knowledge of best practices in classroom instruction and assessment.
Participants will examine closely the development of a balanced reading
program, how to prevent and remediate reading difficulties, methods of teaching
word identification/vocabulary/spelling, strategies for supporting
comprehension within a readers’ workshop, developing/maintaining a writers’
workshop, strategies for students’ writing to learn, and how to organize/support
literature circles. Interviews, conferences, self-reports, portfolios,
observations, informal reading inventories, running records, miscue analysis,
and Major Points Interview for Readers will be examined as authentic assessment
processes.
·
EDUCATION 563 Literacy Instruction for
Middle/High School Learners (3 hours)
This advanced focus in adolescent literacy will support teacher knowledge of best practices in classroom instruction. Participants will learn about the role of the cueing systems in student reading and teacher assessment, how to prevent and remediate adolescent reading difficulties, how to create a positive literacy environment in content coursework, methods of teaching word identification/vocabulary/spelling, strategies for supporting comprehension, study strategies, enriching student writing, communicating information to students/parents/administrators, and resources for curriculum development.
Choose
one Diversity:
·
ANTHROPOLOGY 208 – Cultural Anthropology (3 hours)
The comparative
study of culture, social organization, economics, government, education,
religion, language, and arts in various primitive and present societies;
cultural integration and change.
·
ANTHROPOLOGY 210 – Anthropological Linguistics (3 hours)
A first course in
the nature of language and the analysis of linguistic structures with special
reference to non-Western languages.
·
EDUCATION 513 – Administrative and Organizational Theory in Education (3 hours)
Introduction to
theoretical administrative and organizational foundations of management and
leadership of educational programs and institutions.
·
EDUCATION 514 – Advanced Philosophy of Sport (3 hours)
Major philosophical
theories of sport. Carious conceptual, moral, aesthetic, and social-political
issues.
· COMMUNICATIONS
324 – Race, Gender and the Media (3
hours)
Examines the roles of ethnic minorities and women as members and
consumers of the media.
30
hour practicum
* For convenience, the courses are available
in a variety of formats and times. Four courses are currently available online
and many are offered during the summer months, as well as during the day and in
the evening.