Educational Culture, Policy and Society (ECPS)

The Educational Culture, Policy and Society (ECPS) program at the University at Buffalo focuses on the role that education, including but not limited to P – 16+, plays in the larger society. We pay special attention to institutions, policies and practices that facilitate individuals’ well-being and social and economic outcomes, as well as those that […]

The Educational Culture, Policy and Society (ECPS) program at the University at Buffalo focuses on the role that education, including but not limited to P – 16+, plays in the larger society. We pay special attention to institutions, policies and practices that facilitate individuals’ well-being and social and economic outcomes, as well as those that limit them. We focus on the links between educational institutions and broader social, cultural, political and economic forces.

Our faculty members have expertise in areas including the social psychology and sociology of education, global studies, and policy studies. We focus much of our research on underserved populations, including historically marginalized racial/ethnic groups in the United States such as African Americans, and Latino/a, and others who may not be proficient in English. We additionally direct our attention towards gender disparities in educational, social and economic opportunities, as well as among populations with limited financial resources.

ECPS additionally focuses on cross-national comparisons of educational policies and practices central to policymakers and school leaders around the world. These include reforms related to the teaching profession, teaching and learning, as well as key policy issues such as accountability, high-stakes testing, school choice, government support of education, and access to higher education for underrepresented groups.

Who is this program for?

ECPS is for anyone who is interested in the relationship between schooling (P – 16+) and social and economic forces and consequences in national and global context. Specific areas of focus include, but are not limited to:

  • Differentiated curricula for students related to socioeconomic status, race/ethnicity, second language, gender, or national origin.
    • Academic tracking that leads to differential access to knowledge and subsequent opportunities among student groups;
    • Differential access to rigorous course content, especially in the areas of mathematics and science;
    • Grade retention;
  • Dropout and push-out patterns in secondary school that contribute to pipeline constriction;
  • Discipline practices, accompanied by security measures in schools, that exclude student groups disproportionately, beyond that explained by students’ misbehavior or threat to others;
  • Popular culture, youth culture, and schooling;
  • Academic achievement, academic attainment, and school opportunity structures for varying groups in the population;
  • Educational policies, practice and outcomes in cross-national perspective;
  • Transitions from high school to college, including matriculation, persistence and graduation rates;
  • Schooling and socioeconomic structures in new global circumstances.

I.  ADMISSIONS
Admission decisions regarding the Ph.D. program are made twice per year (March 1st and November 1st). In addition to the completed online application, applicants must submit:

  1. Transcripts from any undergraduate and graduate institutions attended (Unofficial transcripts uploaded to your application are preferred)
  2. Graduate Record Exam (GRE) or Miller Analogies Test (MAT) scores
  3. Statement of career goals and objectives
  4. Writing sample
  5. Three academic letters of recommendation
  6. Admission interview upon department request
  7. $50.00 non-refundable application fee

II. CURRICULUM

All classes are chosen in consultation with the student’s advisor. A minimum of 72 hours is required to complete the PhD program, 12 of which can be dissertation credits.

The following courses are required, unless specifically waived by the advisor:

ELP 585 Sociological Bases in Education (3 credits)
ELP 544 Sociology of School Knowledge (3 credits)
ELP 593 Qualitative Research Methods (full year course; 6 credits)
ELP 589 Education and Socialization (3 credits)
ELP 566 Comparative and Global Studies in Education (3 credits)
ELP 590 Education and Social Stratification (3 credits)
ELP 599 Proposal Writing (3 credits)

A minimum of 6 credits quantitative/statistical methods (one full year). This requirement may be met through a combination of the below listed courses, pending advisor approval.

CEP 500 Fundamentals of Educational Research (3 credits) (This can be coupled with CEP
522 or CEP 532 to meet the full year requirement)
CEP 532 Understanding Statistical Research (3 credits)
CEP 522-523 Statistical Methods: Inference I and II (4 credits each course)
CEP 528 Hierarchical Linear Modeling: Multilevel and Longitudinal Data Analysis (3 credits)
CEP 527 Large Database Analysis

Recommended Electives:

ELP 592 American Education for International Students (3 credits) (as appropriate)
ELP 575 Education and Globalization (3 credits)
ELP 511 Comparative Higher Education (3 credits)
CEP 533 Doctoral Seminar: Topics in Education Policy (3 credits)
ELP 450 Language, Culture and Education in a Global Context (3 credits)
ELP 586 Educational Transitions P-20 (3 credits)
ELP 510 College Access and Choice in US (3 credits)
ELP 543 Economics of Education (3 credits)

III. QUALIFYING EXAMINATION
All students in ECPS must take a qualifying examination either December 15 (due January 15) or August 15 (due September 15). All coursework must be completed before the examination may be taken, and students may not sign up for dissertation credit hours until they have passed the exam. The qualifying examination is generally taken after completing the equivalent of two and one half full years of course work.

IV. ADVANCEMENT TO CANDIDACY
Upon completion of most of the course work, students will file a Ph.D. Application to Candidacy. The adviser, tentative dissertation committee, and the department chair must approve the application.

V. DISSERTATION RESEARCH
A minimum of 9 credit hours of ELP702 Dissertation Guidance is required.

FACULTY

Dr. Greg Dimitriadis (Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign) is Professor of Educational Culture, Policy and Society and is interested in new ways of thinking about urban education and policies that serve urban youth. More specifically, he is interested in the potential value and importance of non-traditional educational curricula (e.g., popular culture), programs (e.g., arts-based initiatives), and institutions (e.g., community centers) in the lives of disenfranchised young people. His most recent work has dealt with the contemporary complexities of qualitative inquiry, including its history and philosophical and theoretical underpinnings, as well as the ways “theory” generated outside of the field of education can be brought to bear on the questions and concerns facing educational researchers and practitioners. His work has appeared in numerous journals, including Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Anthropology and Education Quarterly, British Journal of Sociology of Education, Journal of Education Policy, and Teachers College Record, among others. He is the author of Performing Identity/Performing Culture: Hip Hop as Text, Pedagogy, and Lived Practice (Peter Lang), and Friendship, Cliques, and Gangs: Young Black Men Coming of Age in Urban America (Teachers College Press, Columbia University). Dimitriadis’s Critical Dispositions: Evidence and Expertise in Education was awarded a Division B Outstanding Book Award, AERA, 2013. He has held visiting appointments at York University, The CUNY Graduate Center, Cardiff University, and Monash University.

Dr. Jeremy D. Finn (Ph.D., The University of Chicago) is a member of the program in Educational Culture, Policy and Society and Director of Programs in Educational Psychology and Quantitative Methods. He has been a Visiting Professor at Stanford University and the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, held fellowships with the National Research Council, Educational Testing Service, National Center for Education Statistics, and the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement in Stockholm. Jeremy Finn’s research spans a number of policy areas. He was lead evaluator for Project STAR, the four-year study of the effects of class-size reduction in the elementary grades (K-3), and continues to analyze STAR data to understand the impact of small classes on students through young adulthood. Other areas in which he has made major contributions include the study of gender differences in educational outcomes, academic resilience among students at risk, school discipline and security measures, and student engagement and dropping out. His work on engagement and dropping out began with publication of the now-classic paper “Withdrawing from School” (Review of Educational Research, 1989). The article explains how dropping out and other forms of withdrawal from school have their roots in the earliest grades and result from myriad interactions between students and their schools. His papers have been published in a wide array of venues, including Journal of Applied Psychology, Harvard Educational Review, the 2006 government report “The Adult Lives of At-Risk Students: The Roles of Attainment and Engagement in High School”), and the Handbook of Research on Student Engagement. He was a member of the six-person panel to produce the recent U.S. Department of Education’s Dropout Prevention, and has received research grants from the U.S. Department of Education, the Spencer Foundation, and the William T. Grant Foundation.

Dr. Seong Won Han (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison) is an Assistant Professor of Educational Culture, Policy and Society. Her research interests include international and comparative education, gender inequalities in STEM, educational policy, and teacher quality. Using large-scale international surveys and student achievement data, her current project focuses on cross-national differences in occupational expectations for STEM careers among students in a wide range of nations. She also investigates the factors that support improvement of instruction and student outcomes in urban public schools in the United States, with specific focus on how comprehensive school reform efforts can support instructional change among teachers, and how educational leaders can support teachers’ improvement efforts. Her research has been published in the Review of Higher Education, Teachers College Record, and as part of an edited collection on leadership and instructional change. Seong Won Han’s research has been supported by a dissertation grant from the American Education Research Association.

Dr. Jaekyung Lee (Ph.D., University of Chicago) is Dean of the Graduate School of Education and a member of the program in Educational Culture, Policy and Society as well as the program in Educational Psychology and Quantitative Methods. Jaekyung Lee’s research focuses on issues of educational equity and accountability, including high-stakes testing and achievement gaps among racial and socioeconomic groups. He specializes in educational policy analysis and program evaluation using large-scale national databases. He also conducts research in the area of international and comparative education, with focus on the comparison of American vs. Asian education systems. His primary research interests focus on addressing pressing social issues in the areas of educational accountability and equity, high-stakes testing, and educational achievement gaps. His work has been supported by grants from the American Educational Research Association, the U.S. Department of Education, and the National Science Foundation, and has been published in numerous journals. He also is the author of the book “The Testing Gap: Scientific Trials of Test-Driven School Accountability Systems for Excellence and Equity.” Jaekyung Lee is an AERA Fellow, a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University and a Fellow of the National Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado-Boulder. He is the recipient of the 2007 AERA Early Career Award.

Dr. Lois Weis (Ph.D., Educational Policy Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison) is State University of New York Distinguished Professor and a member of the program in Educational Culture, Policy and Society. She has written extensively about the current predicament of White, African-American, and Latino/a working class and poor youth and young adults, and the complex role gender and race play in their lives in light of contemporary dynamics associated with the global knowledge economy, new patterns of emigration, and the movement of cultural and economic capital across national boundaries. She is the author and/or editor of numerous books and articles relating race, class, gender, education and the economy, including her most recent book, Class Warfare: Class, race, and college admissions in top-tier secondary schools (with Kristin Cipollone and Heather Jenkins, University of Chicago Press) and Education and Social Class: Global Perspectives (with Nadine Dolby). Her articles appear in a wide range of journals, including American Educational Research Journal, Review of Educational Research, Harvard Educational Review, Signs, and Anthropology and Education Quarterly, among others. She is a winner of the outstanding book award from the Gustavus Meyers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights in North America, and past Editor of the American Educational Research Journal-Social and Institutional Analysis section. Lois Weis is member of the National Academy of Education (NAEd), and an Honorary Fellow of the American Educational Research Association. She has received grants from the Spencer Foundation, Carnegie Foundation, National Science Foundation, and Association for Institutional Research.


Educational Administration

Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) with a major in Educational Administration Admission to the Ph.D. program requires a master’s degree. Students who have completed UB’s master’s program in Educational Administration will need to complete at least an additional 43 credit hours. Students who have completed an approved master’s degree, or postmaster’s certification, elsewhere will need to […]

Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) with a major in Educational Administration

Admission to the Ph.D. program requires a master’s degree. Students who have completed UB’s master’s program in Educational Administration will need to complete at least an additional 43 credit hours. Students who have completed an approved master’s degree, or postmaster’s certification, elsewhere will need to complete at least an additional 52 hours. Transfer hours up to 24 credits will be awarded on a course-by-course basis and should be requested soon after admission to the program. A special justification must be made in writing to the Graduate School for transferring any courses that were completed over 10 years ago. A minimum of 76 credit hours are required for graduation. These requirements for the Ph.D. degree must be met within seven years from matriculation, one year of which must be full-time residency.

Degree requirements are as follows:

A. Educational Administration                                                        A minimum of 24 cr.

Students select courses in order to obtain both a breadth of understanding across the field of Educational Administration (e.g., instructional, managerial and political areas) and a depth of understanding or specialization within a particular area of interest to the student (e.g., business administration, curriculum and instructional leadership, economics and finance, organizations, personnel, school reform, staff development, urban education).

B. Cognates                                                                                            A minimum of 18 cr.

Students are expected to develop two cognates (with a minimum of 9 credits in each): (A) a cognate in at least two areas of educational foundations (such as sociology of education, philosophy of education, educational psychology, and history of education); and (B) a cognate in a discipline or field outside of educational administration (e.g., any of the educational foundations areas listed in (a), comparative education, counseling, English as a second language, economics, cognitive psychology, law, political science, management, sociology).

C. Research                                                                                           A minimum of 15 cr.

At least one quantitative methods course and at least one qualitative methods course with at least one advanced course in either quantitative or qualitative methods. No more than one introductory course can be taken in any particular research method.

D. Dissertation                                                                                   10 – 12 crs.

Total Required Credits                                                                                                  76 cr.


Undergraduate Courses

Language, Culture, and Education in a Global Society (ELP 450C) Are you interested in learning more about multilingualism and muticulturalism in education? We, ourselves from diverse backgrounds of everywhere in the global world as well as the United States, interact with ever-increasingly diverse people in our daily context and through the media. Then, how competent […]

Language, Culture, and Education in a Global Society (ELP 450C)

Are you interested in learning more about multilingualism and muticulturalism in education?

We, ourselves from diverse backgrounds of everywhere in the global world as well as the United States, interact with ever-increasingly diverse people in our daily context and through the media. Then, how competent are we as global citizens in our understanding, communicating, and interacting with our fellow diverse members of local, regional, national, and transnational communities?

To address the critical need for developing and fostering global leadership with improved knowledge, skills, and disposition, you are invited to participate in this hybrid course–with face-to-face classroom meetings and online participation combined. Through on-going discussions on scholarly literature, interviews, and popular cultural films, interactive lectures, presentations, group discussion leads, and empirical research projects, students will gain a deeper understanding of languages and cultures with their powerful relevance to and impact on education and beyond.

This course is appropriate for students in a range of majors interested in multilingualism and multiculturalism in a global, educational context.

ELP450C Course Flyer for Spring 2014

 


Graduate Courses

American Education for International Students (ELP 592) A person seeking to developing a better understanding of the United States could probably find no better place to begin than to study American education. Scholars in the U.S. both shape and are shaped by the communities they serve, and by American society at-large. Public schools in particular […]

American Education for International Students (ELP 592)

A person seeking to developing a better understanding of the United States could probably find no better place to begin than to study American education. Scholars in the U.S. both shape and are shaped by the communities they serve, and by American society at-large. Public schools in particular provide the foundation for America’s democracy and are perceived by many to be the gateway to the “American Dream”.

This course is intended to help international students develop a better understanding of America’s education system through readings, group discussions and projects and visits to area schools. In this course, students will examine American education’s philosophical underpinnings as well as its policy-making and governance structures. Students will then be asked to compare and contrast these policies and practices with those in their home countries.

Topics to be covered include: the history and goals of public education; the profession of teaching; equality of educational opportunity; multicultural and multilingual education; local control, choice, home schooling and charter schools, power and control at the state and nation levels; textbooks, curriculum and instruction, e-learning and cyber bullying; and the courts and the schools.

ELP592 Multilingual Course Brochure for Fall 2013
ELP592 Course Flyer for Fall 2013

Comparative and Global Studies in Education (ELP 566)

We are pleased to offer this important, new, graduate-level course in Comparative and Global Education. This is a great opportunity for our students to gain in-depth exposure to key educational issues in global context.

This course provides an overview of research paradigms, methods, and current trends in comparative education. The course exposes students to different theoretical lenses, research paradigms and strategies that are being used to study education in comparative perspective (e.g., sociology, economics, and policy analysis). Special emphasis is placed on large-scale international surveys of educational achievement studies (e.g., TIMSS, PISA, TALIS) and their implications for national education policy making and education research in the United States and other countries.

The topics and issues to be explored in the fall 2013 include: IEA-/OECD-type Cross-National Comparative Policy Studies; School Accountability, Autonomy, and Choice; Teacher Education, Teacher Quality, and Teacher Policies; and Educational Inequality in International Context.

ELP566 Course Flyer for Fall 2013

Comparative Higher Education (ELP 511)

This course is an introduction to the study of higher education from an international comparative perspective. All GSE students, both U.S. and international, in the programs of higher education, educational administration, educational culture, policy and society, foreign and second language education, and bilingual education who want to develop the comparative perspective are welcome to join to further their international perspective in higher education. It is designed especially for master’s and doctoral students who may be interested in:

  • Examining higher education from an international, comparative global perspective to better understand US colleges and universities;
  • Preparing for administrative positions in colleges and universities that may require an understanding of international students (e.g., admissions or student affairs);
  • Preparing to return to a university in a home country to take either an administrative or a faculty position and who who wish to know more about how colleges and universities operate worldwide;
  • Understanding what we in the US may learn from higher education in the UK, France, Germany, China, Korea, Latin America, the Middle East, or Africa;
  • And many other gems that GSE students should know!

ELP511 Course Flyer for Spring 2013

Cultural Diversity in Higher Education (ELP 513)

This course is the first in a series of courses designed to explore cultural diversity in educational settings. The cultural diversity series is intended to help students to develop an awareness and deeper understanding of cultural diversity issues. The series also challenges students to understand themselves, other people, and institutional structures in increasingly complex and dynamic ways. The first course, Cultural Diversity in Higher Education (ELP513), is designed for all students regardless of prior course work or training in cultural diversity issues. ELP513 will explore cultural diversity specially in relation to gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, ableism, and social class. The course will use developmental and sociological concepts to analyze social identity formation, social group differences, inter- and intra-group differences and relations. Concurrently, this course will explore models for implementing successful diversity management initiatives.

Economics of Education (ELP 543)

The economics of education is a field within the subject of Economics that draws upon many areas of economic specialization. This particular course is a survey course at the introductory level. It assumes that the student has at least some willingness to gain a general background in economics, enough to apply basic microeconomic concepts to a variety of educational policy issues. The course will emphasize the development of analytic skills in using economic tools for educational policy. Although the course will require familiarity with algebra and basic statistics, it will not require calculus.

It will be useful to students interested in educational administration, educational planning and policy, and those with interest in pursuing further studies in the economics of education proper.

The course readings will be made of canonical articles; though not necessarily the most recent in the literature, they will be examples of formative contributions in the overall debates. Reading examples for a variety of policy topics will be drawn from such field journals as Economics of Education Review, Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, and Journal of Policy Analysis and Management.

ELP543 Course Flyer for Fall 2013

Education and Social Stratification (ELP 590)

Education (K-16+) is a major contributor to processes of social stratification, where it is well established that wide variation exists in academic achievement, course taking patterns, and academic attainment at the K-12 level for varying groups in the population. Similarly, notable variation exists in patterns of college matriculation, persistence and graduation, as well as linked graduate/professional school experiences and later socioeconomic outcomes.

ELP590 explores the relationship between education and social stratification processes in American society. This course will review sociological theories and empirical research that have been concerned with the connections between family of origin and educational outcomes, and between educational attainments and labor market outcomes. The course will pay close attention to multiple bases of stratification in American society, such as social class, gender, and race/ethnicity. Although literature is drawn primarily from the United States, some cross-national material will be employed. The topics and issues to be explored in Spring 2014 include: theories of stratification; status attainment models and social mobility; mechanisms of stratification, specially as linked to schools; transitions from school to work; vertical and horizontal gender stratification; educational expansion and persistent inequality; and institutional arrangements of education systems and social stratification.

This course will provide a venue for students to think critically about the role of K-16+ institutions in explaining both educational and occupational attainment processes as well as launch their own research project on a topic of interest. The course will be valuable for those whose own work is centrally located in issues of stratification as well as those who wish to become more informed as to the ways in which educational institutions serve as “sorting machines” for the broader society.

ELP590 Course Flyer for Spring 2014

Education in a Global Economy (ELP 525)

Education is critical to our future prosperity.

In the emerging logic of global comparative and competitive advantage, education is viewed as the lynchpin for economic development. Education will be called upon to respond to current needs and for future opportunities.

This course provides an introductory survey of the links between education and economic development with examples from around the world. We start by surveying differences in educational attainment and schooling investments in various regions of the world in recent years. The course then moves to explore the factors that influence primary and secondary school enrollment and success in developing countries, the role played by higher education on economic growth, and the nature of inequities in educational outcomes on the basis of income, gender, race, and ethnicity–among other things.

Throughout the course there is a focus on key policy issues in education and economic development, such as the gender gap in schooling, child labor force participation, adult literacy programs, the role of international organizations (such as the World Bank), and the relative impact of public versus private spending on primary, secondary and tertiary education.

No previous background in economics is required; the course is theory driven, not math based. It is thus suitable for MA and PhD students interested in global issues and policy matters.

ELP525 Course Flyer for Spring 2014

Media, Globalization, and Education (ELP 687)

The so-called Arab Spring highlighted for many the role that new technology like Facebook and Twitter can play in generating new social formations and promoting social change. Information can now circulate around the world instantaneously and in ways that cannot always be controlled or contained by governments and nation states. The rapid, world-wide proliferation of new technologies and media forms has opened up important questions about the status of culture and knowledge today. New and emergent poular cultures are developing around the world, blurring the line between “consumer” and “producer” as never before. More and more information is now available across more and more kinds of media platforms, in ways unimaginable even a generation ago. While education has never been more important, core ideas about culture and knowledge and expertise and authority are now being challenged in new ways. In this course, we will explore these issues–the new challenges that education faces as it negotiates this now inextricably global landscape. Students will acquire a critical perspective on globalization and related phenomena–a set of processes that often seem natural, immutable, and beyond the control of individuals.

This course will be appropriate for all GSE students as well as students across the university interested in these concerns. It will be especially appropriate for those interested in:

  • Exploring the ways “official knowledge” is being challenged or opened up by digital communications, including “open access” venues and MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses), and the implications for education;
  • Examining the ways stable notions of “culture” have been challenged by young people around the world who are participating in new kinds of “subcultures” and other emergent cultural formations;
  • Thinking about pursuing research related to globalization and education (This includes doctoral and master’s students);
  • And gaining a better understanding of the range of global forces that are now permeating the everyday lives of all students (This includes teachers and administrators).

ELP687 Course Flyer for Spring 2013

Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice (ELP 582) [Hybrid Course]

 Are you a multicultural educator?
How multicultural are you?

We, aspiring or in-service K-20 education leaders–whether classroom teachers, school administrators, or policy makers, at various levels and local, regional, national, and international contexts–live with and work with and for the ever-increasingly diverse population in this multicultural society with the hopes and goals that we serve the mission of education for all. Then, how active and transformative are we, in our personal and professional philosophy and educational practices, to realize our mission to help each one of our diverse students to learn in a better, equitable educational environment?

This hybrid course–the seminar with face-to-face classroom meetings and online participation combined–is designed to create and engage in the dialogic, reflective venues through which we discuss such critical issues of multicultural education as language, gender, ethnicity, race, class, disability, and sexual orientation in not only the U.S. but also other countries. Through on-going discussion with reading, viewing, evaluating, and reflecting on relevant scholarly literature, films, lectures, interviews, and empirical case studies and ethnography, and doing a case study as a class project, students will gain a deeper understanding of and sensitivity to the dynamic conditions of multiculturalism and their influence on the construction and re-construction of personal, communal, and social identities.

ELP582 Course Flyer for Spring 2014


Resources

Center for Excellence in Writing http://writing.buffalo.edu Center of Excellence on Human Capital, Technology Transfer, & Economic Growth and Development http://www.head.buffalo.edu Confucius Institute http://www.confuciusinstitute.buffalo.edu College of Arts and Sciences http://www.cas.buffalo.edu Department of Economics http://economics.buffalo.edu Department of Educational Leadership and Policy http://gse.buffalo.edu/elp Department of English http://english.buffalo.edu Department of Learning and Instruction http://gse.buffalo.edu/lai Department of Transnational Studies http://www.transnationalstudies.buffalo.edu […]

Center for Excellence in Writing
http://writing.buffalo.edu

Center of Excellence on Human Capital, Technology Transfer, & Economic Growth and Development
http://www.head.buffalo.edu

Confucius Institute
http://www.confuciusinstitute.buffalo.edu

College of Arts and Sciences
http://www.cas.buffalo.edu

Department of Economics
http://economics.buffalo.edu

Department of Educational Leadership and Policy
http://gse.buffalo.edu/elp

Department of English
http://english.buffalo.edu

Department of Learning and Instruction
http://gse.buffalo.edu/lai

Department of Transnational Studies http://www.transnationalstudies.buffalo.edu

English Language Institute
http://wings.buffalo.edu/eli

Graduate School of Education
http://www.gse.buffalo.edu

Graduate School of Education Office of Graduate Admissions and Student Services
http://gse.buffalo.edu/admissions

International Comparative Higher Education Finance and Accessibility Project
http://gse.buffalo.edu/org/IntHigherEdFinance

International Students Scholars Services & Immigration Services
http://wings.buffalo.edu/intlservices

Office of International Education
http://wings.buffalo.edu/intled

Office of the Provost
http://www.buffalo.edu/provost

School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
http://www.eng.buffalo.edu

Study Abroad
http://wings.buffalo.edu/studyabroad

University at Buffalo
http://www.buffalo.edu


Comparative and Global Education (CGE)

Description Students who select this concentration will receive the Master’s of Education (Ed.M.) degree in Education Studies. The concentration in Comparative and Global Education (CGE) is noted on the diploma. The CGE concentration is designed for students who are interested in studying education in broad-based social, cultural, and linguistic contexts. Students in this concentration seek […]

Description

Students who select this concentration will receive the Master’s of Education (Ed.M.) degree in Education Studies. The concentration in Comparative and Global Education (CGE) is noted on the diploma.

The CGE concentration is designed for students who are interested in studying education in broad-based social, cultural, and linguistic contexts. Students in this concentration seek to understand the global issues that affect educational practices and outcomes in schools, communities, and educational systems on local and global levels. The CGE concentration prepares students with both foundational and advanced knowledge, skills, and dispositions to become global educational leaders. Students in this concentration will be prepared to contribute to the most current and pressing discussions around educational policy as they are happening around the world.

Degree Concentration

Prospective Students

Format

Comparative and Global Education

(CGE)

Anyone interested in the study of education in global contexts including those aspiring to be a successful professional or academic in educational leadership. Careers include but are not limited to the following:

·         Faculty and researchers of comparative education or related fields in higher education;

·        Teachers and administrators in K-12 schools;

·        Policy makers and analysts in government and non-governmental agencies.

Hybrid

 

Successful graduates typically take jobs in:

  • Colleges/Universities–as faculty/scholars of comparative and global education or administrators in international (e.g., study abroad) programs;
  • Schools–as supervisors or school administrators;
  • Ministries–as policy makers and analysts;
  • International development or human service agencies–as analysts, program officers, or administrators;
  • Non-governmental agencies–as researchers, analysts, program officers, or administrators.


Program of Study

The strength of the CGE concentration program of study lies in the maximum flexibility in designing the program according to the dynamic needs and interests of the student. Individualized programs are built and optimized in continuous consultation with and guidance from their academic advisors.

Consider the program guide below as a guiding reference, instead of a pre-determined program universal to all students (see Course Descriptions online at: http://gse.buffalo.edu/admissions/course-descriptions).

I.    Core courses (Take a minimum of 12 credit hours from the courses below.)

  • Nature of Inquiry (ELP500)
  • Comparative Higher Education (ELP511)
  • Structure and Reform of Education (ELP530)
  • Economics of Education (ELP543)
  • Comparative and Global Studies in Education (ELP566)
  • Education and Globalization (ELP575)

II. Breadth courses (Select from University-wide course offerings. See select GSE courses below.)

  • Cultural Diversity in Higher Education (ELP513)
  • Education in a Global Economy (ELP525)
  • Culture and Schools (ELP540)
  • Foundations of Education (ELP548)
  • Women in Educational Comparative Perspective (ELP571)
  • Education in Asia (ELP574)
  • Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice (ELP582)
  • Gender and Education (ELP583)
  • Sociological Bases of Education (ELP585)
  • Education and Socialization (ELP589)
  • American Education for International Students (ELP592)
  • Qualitative Research Methods in Education (ELP593)
  • Applied Social Research (ELP685)
  • Independent Study (ELP703)

III. Culminating event (Select one of the 3 options below.)

  • Comprehensive exam (1 credit hour; twice a year, in January and May; can take up to twice)
  • Master’s Project (ELP700: 1-3 credit hours)
  • Master’s Thesis (ELP701: 1-3 credit hours)

Program Procedure

A. Initial Program

  • Upon admission to the CGE concentration program, the student designs his or her initial program using CGE Concentration Program Planner in consultation with the initial advisor and begins coursework.
  • Transfer courses, if any, should be approved by the initial advisor and the department before the end of the 2nd semester. A maximum of 6 graduate-level credit hours may be transferred into the CGE concentration program with the advisor’s approval.

B. Application to Candidacy

  • Application to Candidacy (ATC) for the Ed.M. in Education Studies agreed and signed by the permanent advisor should be filed with the department for submission to the GSE Graduate Studies Committee after completion of 12 credit hours and prior to completion of 24 credit hours.

Admissions Requirements

The CGE concentration program welcomes applications to the program on a rolling basis. All applicants are required to fulfill the following to complete their application to the CGE concentration program.

1.     Academic background

a.  A baccalaureate degree from an accredited institution prior to enrolling

2.  Application fee

a.  $50, non-refundable, paid electronically or by check

3.  Transcripts

a.  Official transcripts from all colleges/universities attended. Applicants who are
currently at UB or have studied at or graduated from UB do not need to request an official UB transcript. GSE’s Office of Admissions can download and print the transcript.

b.  Please be sure to provide us with your former/maiden name if you have one. When requesting transcripts, please ask the sending institution to indicate both your current name and former/maiden name.

4.  Two recommendation letters (either from an academic or a professional reference)

5.  A sample of academic writing (approximately 5 pages long)

6.  Online application with all supporting documents (http://gse.buffalo.edu/apply).

a.  According to new policies and procedures regarding the application process effective fall 2013, all supporting documents must be uploaded and attached to your online application. This includes unofficial copies of your transcripts, recommendation letters, and any other documents required for review.

7.  English language proficiency (for international students)

a.  All applicants, including those who are transferring from or who have completed degree programs at other U.S. colleges or universities, must have their score in the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) reported directly to the University. The score report must be dated within 2 years of intended enrollment at UB.

8.  Financial documentation (for international students)

a.  Complete and return the Foreign Applicant Financial Statement along with supporting documentation as outlined in the instructions.

Financial Assistance Opportunities

The Department, the Graduate School of Education, and the University offer a wide range of financial assistance opportunities to incoming and continuing students. Students should apply through a special application form to the Department. The University offers a number of competitive fellowships for which students should apply. The Graduate School provides information concerning the nature, availability, and qualifications of these fellowships. Other opportunities for financial assistance become available from time to time, and students are encouraged to keep in touch with the Department on a regular basis if financial aid is required.

Faculty

William Barba, Clinical Professor of Higher Education. Research interests include educational leadership and policy. Courses include Foundations of Higher Education, Historical Bases of Higher Education, Critical Issues in Higher Education, Higher Education in U.S., Intercollegiate Athletics in Higher Education, Supervised Professional Experience, and Law & Education.

Janina Brutt-Griffler, Professor of Foreign Language Education, ELP Department Chair, and Director of the Center for Comparative and Global Studies in Education. Research interests include the understanding of language use in society, educational and language policy, and higher education. Courses include Doctoral Seminar in Sociolinguistics, Principles of First and Second Language Acquisition, and Linguistics for Second Language Education.

Nathan Daun-Barnett, Assistant Professor of Higher Education. Research interests include college access and choice in U.S. higher education and public policy in higher education. Courses include  Financing Higher Education, Program Evaluation and Assessment, Organization and Governance in Higher Education, and College Choice and Access in U.S.

Greg Dimitriadis, Professor of Educational Culture, Policy and Society and GSE Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. Research interests include qualitative methods, urban education, educational policy, and popular culture. Courses include Sociological Bases of Education, Qualitative Research Methods, Sociology of School Knowledge, and Education and Globalization.

Seong Won Han, Assistant Professor of Educational Culture, Policy and Society. Research interests include international and comparative education, gender inequality in STEM, educational policy, and teacher quality. Courses include Comparative and Global Studies in Education, Education and Social Stratification, and Foundations of Education.

Megan Holland, Assistant Professor of Higher Education and Educational Administration. Research interests include sociology of education K-20, educational transition, college access, and racial and ethnic diversity. Courses include Higher Education in U.S., Changing Social Contexts for Education Leaders, Organization and Governance in Higher Education, and Educational Transitions P-20.

Stephen L. Jacobson, UB Distinguished Professor of Educational Administration. Research interests include effective principal leadership in challenging, high needs schools, the reform of school leadership preparation and practice, and teacher compensation and labor market behavior. Courses include American Education for International Students, Reforming Teacher Compensation, and School & District Capacity Building.

D. Bruce Johnstone, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor of Higher and Comparative Education Emeritus and Director of the International Comparative Higher Education Finance and Accessibility Project. Research interests include higher education finance, higher education governance, and international comparative higher education. Courses include Comparative Higher Education and International Comparative Education Finance.

Namsook Kim, Clinical Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership and Policy and Assistant Director of the Center for Comparative and Global Studies in Education. Research interests include transformative education in a multilingual, multicultural, global society. Courses include Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice, Cultural Diversity in Higher Education, Language, Culture, and Education in a Global Society, Principles of First and Second Language Acquisition, and Linguistics for Second Language Education.

Raechele Pope, Associate Professor of Higher Education and Student Affairs. Research interests include multicultural competence, psychosocial development of students of color, multicultural organization development, and transformative leadership. Courses include The American College Student, Cultural Diversity in Higher Education, New Futures for Higher Education, Student Development, and Practicum in Higher Education Research.

Thomas M. Ramming, Clinical Associate Professor of Educational Administration. Research interests include leadership in schools. Courses include Collective Bargaining, Clinical Seminar Interns, Leading and Effective School District, and School Business Administration.

Margaret Sallee, Assistant Professor of Higher Education. Research interests include faculty work, graduate student socialization, work/life balance, and gender and masculinities. Courses include Historical Bases of Higher Education, Student Affairs Administration, The College Professoriate, and Organization and Governance in Higher Education.

Steven Simpson, Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership and Policy. Research interests include economics of education. Courses include Economics of Education, Financing Higher Education, Education in a Global Economy, and Critical Issues in Higher Education.

Corrie Stone-Johnson, Assistant Professor of Educational Administration. Research interests include educational change, educational leadership, teacher cultures, and micropolitics. Courses include Nature of Inquiry, Curriculum & Instruction Leadership, and Problems & Paradigms in Educational Administration.

Lois Weis, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Educational Culture, Policy and Society. Research interests include race, class, and gender in American schools. Courses include Qualitative Research Methods in Education, Education and Socialization, and Writing Dissertation Proposals.

Contacts

  • For questions regarding admissions:
    Mr. Ryan Taughrin
    Office of Graduate Admissions and Student Services
    Graduate School of Education
    University at Buffalo
    366 Baldy Hall
    Buffalo, NY 14260
    Phone: (716) 645-2110
    Email: ryantaug@buffalo.edu
  • For questions regarding CGSE concentration program:     Dr. Namsook Kim
    Department of Educational Leadership and Policy
    Graduate School of Education
    University at Buffalo
    475 Baldy Hall
    Buffalo, NY 14260
    Phone: (716) 645-1094
    Email: nkim3@buffalo.eduDownload CGE Concentration Program Guide & Planner. The hard copy is also available in the Center for Comparative and Global Studies in Education (CCGSE) (475 Baldy Hall) and the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy (ELP) office (468 Baldy Hall).

     


 


Comparative and Global Education

Description Students who select this focus area in Comparative and Global Education (CGE) will receive the Master’s of Education (Ed.M.) degree in Education Studies. The CGE is designed for students who are interested in studying education in broad-based social, cultural, and linguistic contexts. Students in this focus area seek to understand the global issues that […]

Description

Students who select this focus area in Comparative and Global Education (CGE) will receive the Master’s of Education (Ed.M.) degree in Education Studies.

The CGE is designed for students who are interested in studying education in broad-based social, cultural, and linguistic contexts. Students in this focus area seek to understand the global issues that affect educational practices and outcomes in schools, communities, and educational systems on local and global levels. The CGE prepares students with both foundational and advanced knowledge, skills, and dispositions to become global educational leaders. Students in this focus area will be prepared to contribute to the most current and pressing discussions around educational policy as they are happening around the world.

Degree Focus Area

Prospective Students

Format

Comparative and Global Education

(CGE)

Anyone interested in the study of education in global contexts including those aspiring to be a successful professional or academic in educational leadership. Careers include but are not limited to the following:

·         Faculty and researchers of comparative education or related fields in higher education;

·        Teachers and administrators in K-12 schools;

·        Policy makers and analysts in government and non-governmental agencies.

Hybrid

 

Successful graduates typically take jobs in:

  • Colleges/Universities–as faculty/scholars of comparative and global education or administrators in international (e.g., study abroad) programs;
  • Schools–as supervisors or school administrators;
  • Ministries–as policy makers and analysts;
  • International development or human service agencies–as analysts, program officers, or administrators;
  • Non-governmental agencies–as researchers, analysts, program officers, or administrators.


Program of Study

The strength of the CGE program of study lies in the maximum flexibility in designing the program according to the dynamic needs and interests of the student. Individualized programs are built and optimized in continuous consultation with and guidance from their academic advisors.

Consider the program guide below as a guiding reference, instead of a pre-determined program universal to all students (see Course Descriptions online at: http://gse.buffalo.edu/admissions/course-descriptions).

I.    Core courses (Take a minimum of 12 credit hours from the courses below.)

  • Nature of Inquiry (ELP500)
  • Comparative Higher Education (ELP511)
  • Structure and Reform of Education (ELP530)
  • Economics of Education (ELP543)
  • Comparative and Global Studies in Education (ELP566)
  • Education and Globalization (ELP575)

 

II. Breadth courses (Select from University-wide course offerings. See select GSE courses below.)

  • Cultural Diversity in Higher Education (ELP513)
  • Education in a Global Economy (ELP525)
  • Culture and Schools (ELP540)
  • Foundations of Education (ELP548)
  • Women in Educational Comparative Perspective (ELP571)
  • Education in Asia (ELP574)
  • Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice (ELP582)
  • Gender and Education (ELP583)
  • Sociological Bases of Education (ELP585)
  • Education and Socialization (ELP589)
  • American Education for International Students (ELP592)
  • Qualitative Research Methods in Education (ELP593)
  • Applied Social Research (ELP685)
  • Independent Study (ELP703)

 

III. Culminating event (Select one of the 3 options below.)

  • Comprehensive exam (1 credit hour; twice a year, in January and May; can take up to twice)
  • Master’s Project (ELP700: 1-3 credit hours)
  • Master’s Thesis (ELP701: 1-3 credit hours)

 

Program Procedure

A. Initial Program

  • Upon admission to the CGE focus area, the student designs his or her initial program using CGE Focus Area Program Planner in consultation with the initial advisor and begins coursework.
  • Transfer courses, if any, should be approved by the initial advisor and the department before the end of the 2nd semester. A maximum of 6 graduate-level credit hours may be transferred into the CGE focus area program with the advisor’s approval.

 

B. Application to Candidacy

  • Application to Candidacy (ATC) for the Ed.M. in Education Studies agreed and signed by the permanent advisor should be filed with the department for submission to the GSE Graduate Studies Committee after completion of 12 credit hours and prior to completion of 24 credit hours.

 

Admissions Requirements

The CGE welcomes applications to the program on a rolling basis. All applicants are required to fulfill the following to complete their application to the Education Studies/CGE focus area.

1.     Academic background

a.  A baccalaureate degree from an accredited institution prior to enrolling

2.  Application fee

a.  $50, non-refundable, paid electronically or by check

3.  Transcripts

a.  Official transcripts from all colleges/universities attended. Applicants who are
currently at UB or have studied at or graduated from UB do not need to request an official UB transcript. GSE’s Office of Admissions can download and print the transcript.

b.  Please be sure to provide us with your former/maiden name if you have one. When requesting transcripts, please ask the sending institution to indicate both your current name and former/maiden name.

4.  Two recommendation letters (either from an academic or a professional reference)

5.  A sample of academic writing (approximately 5 pages long)

6.  Online application with all supporting documents (http://gse.buffalo.edu/apply).

a.  According to new policies and procedures regarding the application process effective fall 2013, all supporting documents must be uploaded and attached to your online application. This includes unofficial copies of your transcripts, recommendation letters, and any other documents required for review.

7.  English language proficiency (for international students)

a.  All applicants, including those who are transferring from or who have completed degree programs at other U.S. colleges or universities, must have their score in the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), the International English Language Testing System (IELTS), Pearson Test of English (PTE) Academic, Cambridge English Advanced (CAE), or Cambridge English Proficiency (CPE) reported directly to the University. The score report must be dated within 2 years of intended enrollment at UB.

8.  Financial documentation (for international students)

a.  Complete and return the Foreign Applicant Financial Statement along with supporting documentation as outlined in the instructions.

Financial Assistance Opportunities

The University offers some fellowships incoming and continuing students can apply.  Students are encouraged to seek information concerning the nature, availability, and qualifications of these fellowships that the Graduate School provides if financial aid is required.

Faculty

William Barba, Clinical Professor of Higher Education. Research interests include educational leadership and policy. Courses include Foundations of Higher Education, Historical Bases of Higher Education, Critical Issues in Higher Education, Higher Education in U.S., Intercollegiate Athletics in Higher Education, Supervised Professional Experience, and Law & Education.

Janina Brutt-Griffler, Professor of Foreign Language Education, ELP Department Chair, and Director of the Center for Comparative and Global Studies in Education. Research interests include the understanding of language use in society, educational and language policy, and higher education. Courses include Doctoral Seminar in Sociolinguistics, Principles of First and Second Language Acquisition, and Linguistics for Second Language Education.

Nathan Daun-Barnett, Associate Professor of Higher Education. Research interests include college access and choice in U.S. higher education and public policy in higher education. Courses include  Financing Higher Education, Program Evaluation and Assessment, Organization and Governance in Higher Education, and College Choice and Access in U.S.

Seong Won Han, Assistant Professor of Educational Culture, Policy and Society. Research interests include international and comparative education, gender inequality in STEM, educational policy, and teacher quality. Courses include Comparative and Global Studies in Education, Education and Social Stratification, and Foundations of Education.

Megan Holland, Assistant Professor of Higher Education and Educational Administration. Research interests include sociology of education K-20, educational transition, college access, and racial and ethnic diversity. Courses include Higher Education in U.S., Changing Social Contexts for Education Leaders, Organization and Governance in Higher Education, and Educational Transitions P-20.

Stephen L. Jacobson, UB Distinguished Professor of Educational Administration. Research interests include effective principal leadership in challenging, high needs schools, the reform of school leadership preparation and practice, and teacher compensation and labor market behavior. Courses include American Education for International Students, Reforming Teacher Compensation, and School & District Capacity Building.

D. Bruce Johnstone, SUNY Distinguished Service Professor of Higher and Comparative Education Emeritus and Director of the International Comparative Higher Education Finance and Accessibility Project. Research interests include higher education finance, higher education governance, and international comparative higher education. Courses include Comparative Higher Education and International Comparative Education Finance.

Namsook Kim, Clinical Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership and Policy and Assistant Director of the Center for Comparative and Global Studies in Education. Research interests include transformative education in a multilingual, multicultural, global society. Courses include Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice, Cultural Diversity in Higher Education, Language, Culture, and Education in a Global Society, Sociology of Education, Principles of First and Second Language Acquisition, and Linguistics for Second Language Education.

Raechele Pope, Associate Professor of Higher Education and Student Affairs. Research interests include multicultural competence, psychosocial development of students of color, multicultural organization development, and transformative leadership. Courses include The American College Student, Cultural Diversity in Higher Education, New Futures for Higher Education, Student Development, and Practicum in Higher Education Research.

Thomas M. Ramming, Clinical Associate Professor of Educational Administration. Research interests include leadership in schools. Courses include Collective Bargaining, Clinical Seminar Interns, Leading and Effective School District, and School Business Administration.

Margaret Sallee, Assistant Professor of Higher Education. Research interests include faculty work, graduate student socialization, work/life balance, and gender and masculinities. Courses include Historical Bases of Higher Education, Student Affairs Administration, The College Professoriate, and Organization and Governance in Higher Education.

Corrie Stone-Johnson, Assistant Professor of Educational Administration. Research interests include educational change, educational leadership, teacher cultures, and micropolitics. Courses include Nature of Inquiry, Curriculum & Instruction Leadership, and Problems & Paradigms in Educational Administration.

Lois Weis, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Educational Culture, Policy and Society. Research interests include race, class, and gender in American schools. Courses include Qualitative Research Methods in Education, Education and Socialization, and Writing Dissertation Proposals.

Contacts

  • For questions regarding admissions:
    Ms. Veronica Kase
    Office of Graduate Admissions and Student Services
    Graduate School of Education
    University at Buffalo
    366 Baldy Hall
    Buffalo, NY 14260-1000
    Phone: (716) 645-2110
    Email: vakase@buffalo.edu
  • For questions regarding CGE focus area:
    Dr. Namsook Kim
    Department of Educational Leadership and Policy
    Graduate School of Education
    University at Buffalo
    475 Baldy Hall
    Buffalo, NY 14260-1000
    Phone: (716) 645-1094
    Email: nkim3@buffalo.edu

 

  • Contact us for CGE Focus Area Program Guide & Planner.
    The hard copy is available in the Center for Comparative and Global Studies in Education (CCGSE) (475 Baldy Hall).


 


Education Studies

The Master’s degree in Education Studies is a graduate degree program designed to meet the interests and needs of graduate students wishing to pursue a degree program tailored to their professional and academic needs. This program of study is targeted to students whose goals are broad, interdisciplinary, and flexible. Graduate students can pursue academic concentrations […]

The Master’s degree in Education Studies is a graduate degree program designed to meet the interests and needs of graduate students wishing to pursue a degree program tailored to their professional and academic needs. This program of study is targeted to students whose goals are broad, interdisciplinary, and flexible. Graduate students can pursue academic concentrations allowing them to take maximum advantage of courses and resources in the Graduate School of Education (GSE). The concentrations are offered in two departments: the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy (ELP) and the Department of Learning and Instruction (LAI).
  • Adult Education (LAI)
  • Comparative and Global Education (ELP)
  • Early Childhood-Foreign Language Education (LAI)
  • Educational Culture, Policy and Society (ELP)
  • Education Informatics (LAI)
  • Leadership in Schools (ELP)
  • Literacy Education (LAI)
  • Educational Technology/New Literacies Advanced Certificate (LAI)

General Degree Requirements

All concentrations in Education Studies Ed.M. degree program require students to fulfill the following requirements for conferral. Each concentration may require concentration-specific requirements in addition to the following program-general requirements. Applicants are encouraged to contact the concentration coordinator for details.

1.     Students are required to maintain continuous registration.
2.     Students are required to complete a minimum of 32 credit hours of graduate study.

a.     Sixteen of the 32 credit hours are required to be taken within the GSE.
b.     A maximum of 6 hours of transfer credit of graduate courses, completed with
grades of “B” or above from an accredited institution, may be included in the student’s program if approved by the advisor and the department.
3.     Students are required to file an Application to Candidacy (ATC) for the Ed.M. degree in
Education Studies with the department for submission to the GSE Graduate Degrees Committee after completion of 12 credit hours and prior to completion of 24 credit hours.
a.     Students’ program of study designed in consultation with the advisor should
represent a coherent academic plan directly linked to the rationale, i.e., the relationship of the program to the student’s educational goals, in the ATC.
b.     If the student takes an informal course, e.g., Independent Study, as a part of the
program, the Informal Course Description form, approved before the student registers for the course, is required to the attached to the ATC.
4.     Students are required to pass a comprehension exam or complete a master’s project
or thesis.
5.     Students are required to complete the program within 5 years.