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Conceptual Framework:"Preparing The Future-Ready Educator" |
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CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK: “PREPARING THE FUTURE-READY
EDUCATOR”
In the summer of 2009, The Department of Education adopted a
new conceptual framework in order to emphasize 21st century
skills and to align our program with the State Board of Education mission
that “every public school
student will graduate from high school, globally competitive for work and
postsecondary education and prepared for life in the 21st
Century.” Thus, in developing
a new conceptual framework for the Teacher Education Program at Davidson
College, the Department of Education—in collaboration with the Teacher
Education Committee and carefully selected public school personnel—chose
to focus on the State Board of Education goal that North Carolina public
schools will be led by 21st century professionals. As enumerated by the Partnership
for 21st Century Skills, such professionals must be critical
thinkers, problem solvers, innovators, effective communicators, effective
collaborators, and self-directed learners, who are information and media
literate, globally aware, civically engaged, and financially and
economically literate. These characteristics are embedded in the North Carolina Professional Teaching
Standards, approved by the State Board of Education on June 7, 2007
and represented in the Teacher
Candidate Evaluation Rubric.
By demonstrating proficiency in the areas of Leadership, Diversity,
Content Knowledge, Facilitation, and Reflection, teacher education
candidates who graduate from Davidson College will be models of the
“Future-Ready Educator.” This
conceptual framework is illustrated graphically
below. Characteristics of a “Future-Ready
Educator” Teacher Education candidates will provide evidence that they
have achieved proficiency in each of the following. A detailed listing of these five
characteristics and the method for providing evidence are found here.
"Abandon
the notion of subject-matter as something fixed and ready-made in
itself, outside the child's experience; cease thinking of the child's
experience as also something hard and fast; see it as something
fluent, embryonic, vital ...." |
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