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Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Secondary Education

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The Master of Education (M.Ed.) degree program provides options to focus in a variety of fields including science. This advanced professional coursework is designed for educators who already hold teaching credentials for service in PK-12 environments and for educators who do not require formal licensure such as those working in community colleges, informal educational settings such as zoos, nature centers and museums; private schools; or business-based educational enterprises.

The M.Ed. is primarily designed as a non-thesis program but for students who have had prior experience in the design of a research study, a thesis option exists. M.Ed. students will take an additional 6 credits of education courses in the College of Education and Health Professions or science content courses from the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences.

Presently, all students – including those with interests in elementary and postsecondary education – should apply for the M.Ed. in Secondary Education (SEED) and note an interest in science education on the application.

We are now developing a unified M.Ed. with a focus in curriculum and instruction and hope to have this in place very soon. We anticipate that the new program will follow the plan outlined below (this plan is acceptable even now within the M.Ed. in Secondary Education).

Proposed New M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction (33 hours minimum)

Required Core Courses (18 credits)

Concentration in Science Education (9 credits)

Electives: The M.Ed. must include at least 33 graduate credits. Once core and concentration classes have been selected, students may, in consultation with their advisor, select classes from other concentrations or from outside the department to develop a supporting cognate area within the M.Ed. degree.

Transfer Credits: The UA Graduate School and the Department of Curriculum and Instruction will accept limited transfers of graduate courses from other accredited institutions, but please keep the following in mind. First, there is no guarantee that any course takes elsewhere will transfer. Second, no more than 6 credits may be considered for transfer. Third, courses considered for transfer must have been completed within the past 5-7 years.

Completion of the M.Ed. will enable educators to:

Page last updated: 12/19/2008 9:25

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