The 2018 Outstanding Young Alumni Awards recognized two EduGators who have impacted the lives of many through service in education. Lauren L. May BAE ’08 & MED ‘09 and Christopher M. Mullin BAAED ’99 & Ph.D. ’08 (Higher Ed Amin) have both dedicated their careers to the field of education, creating a significant impact in the lives of students and communities they serve leading us into the future.
https://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.png00labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-04-24 20:02:432019-08-06 13:57:482018 Outstanding Young Alumni - Impacting Others Through Service in Education
To 3D or not to 3D? College instructors in chemistry and other science disciplines are debating whether it’s best to use traditional, two-dimensional renderings of basic structures like organic molecules and crystals, or to adopt new technology that can render images of molecular structures in three dimensions.
labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-04-13 19:14:272019-09-17 15:13:58Acclaimed study adds new dimension to college chemistry instruction
Special Education professor Stephen W. Smith, one of the College’s most prolific researchers and federal grant generators, has been chosen to receive the Distinguished Researcher Award from the Special Education Research special interest group of the American Educational Research Association.
labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-04-12 21:00:582019-08-06 13:58:31AERA honors UF Special Ed professor for impactful research
Shelley Warm, senior lecturer and Site-based Implementation of Teacher Education (SITE) program director, has been honored as Florida’s Outstanding Teacher Educator of the Year by the Florida Association of Teacher Educators (FATE). The Mary L. Collins award recognizes dedication to the field of teacher education and advocate of high-quality education.
Doctoral candidate of Curriculum, Teaching, and Teacher Education Elizabeth Currin has been awarded the Rothman Doctoral Fellowship for her interdisciplinary research as part of her dissertation, “Storied Stance: An Oral History of Long-Term Teacher Researchers in the Age of Accountability.” By focusing on the oral history of teachers during the final years of the 20th century, providing teachers with a platform for their experience during the “Age of Accountability,” Currin hopes her research will benefit future teachers by providing them with historical context.
labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-03-22 00:01:342019-08-06 13:59:35The Historical Perspective Of Being A Teacher
The UF College of Education jumped five spots in the US News annual rankings of America’s Best Graduate Education Schools–placing 14th among public education colleges and 24th overall. Once again, that makes UF the top-ranked education college in the state and among public institutions in the Southeast.
labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-03-20 00:01:192020-03-03 11:09:16UF College of Education jumps five spots in national rankings; still No. 1 in Florida, and best in Southeast among publics
Some of the South’s leading scholars and students in the field of education history will gather in Gainesville March 23-24 when the COE hosts the 2018 annual conference of the Southern History of Education Society.
https://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2018/02/patterson.jpg400600labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-02-26 12:30:322019-09-17 15:15:03Novelist's $3M gift could mean happy ending for struggling readers
Montana Sewell, a third-year M.Ed/Ed.S. student in Counselor Education, has been chosen to receive the 2018 Outstanding Entry Level Student Award from Chi Sigma Iota (CSI), an international honor society for the counseling profession.
labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-02-19 15:47:532019-08-06 14:00:37Counselor Ed student shows early promise in the 'right career path'
https://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.png00labellebrittanyhttps://education.ufl.edu/news/files/2019/07/News-1-300x65.pnglabellebrittany2018-02-09 00:01:272019-08-06 14:01:00UF scholar doubles up on national honors for advancing learning disabilities field
2018 Outstanding Young Alumni – Impacting Others Through Service in Education
The 2018 Outstanding Young Alumni Awards recognized two EduGators who have impacted the lives of many through service in education. Lauren L. May BAE ’08 & MED ‘09 and Christopher M. Mullin BAAED ’99 & Ph.D. ’08 (Higher Ed Amin) have both dedicated their careers to the field of education, creating a significant impact in the lives of students and communities they serve leading us into the future.
Acclaimed study adds new dimension to college chemistry instruction
To 3D or not to 3D? College instructors in chemistry and other science disciplines are debating whether it’s best to use traditional, two-dimensional renderings of basic structures like organic molecules and crystals, or to adopt new technology that can render images of molecular structures in three dimensions.
AERA honors UF Special Ed professor for impactful research
Special Education professor Stephen W. Smith, one of the College’s most prolific researchers and federal grant generators, has been chosen to receive the Distinguished Researcher Award from the Special Education Research special interest group of the American Educational Research Association.
Paying It Forward
Shelley Warm, senior lecturer and Site-based Implementation of Teacher Education (SITE) program director, has been honored as Florida’s Outstanding Teacher Educator of the Year by the Florida Association of Teacher Educators (FATE). The Mary L. Collins award recognizes dedication to the field of teacher education and advocate of high-quality education.
The Historical Perspective Of Being A Teacher
Doctoral candidate of Curriculum, Teaching, and Teacher Education Elizabeth Currin has been awarded the Rothman Doctoral Fellowship for her interdisciplinary research as part of her dissertation, “Storied Stance: An Oral History of Long-Term Teacher Researchers in the Age of Accountability.” By focusing on the oral history of teachers during the final years of the 20th century, providing teachers with a platform for their experience during the “Age of Accountability,” Currin hopes her research will benefit future teachers by providing them with historical context.
UF College of Education jumps five spots in national rankings; still No. 1 in Florida, and best in Southeast among publics
The UF College of Education jumped five spots in the US News annual rankings of America’s Best Graduate Education Schools–placing 14th among public education colleges and 24th overall. Once again, that makes UF the top-ranked education college in the state and among public institutions in the Southeast.
COE-STL host conference of education historians; outsiders welcome
Some of the South’s leading scholars and students in the field of education history will gather in Gainesville March 23-24 when the COE hosts the 2018 annual conference of the Southern History of Education Society.
Novelist’s $3M gift could mean happy ending for struggling readers
Best-selling author James Patterson’s generous donation backs COE’s ‘Literacy Challenge’ to aid Florida’s youngest readers
Counselor Ed student shows early promise in the ‘right career path’
Montana Sewell, a third-year M.Ed/Ed.S. student in Counselor Education, has been chosen to receive the 2018 Outstanding Entry Level Student Award from Chi Sigma Iota (CSI), an international honor society for the counseling profession.
UF scholar doubles up on national honors for advancing learning disabilities field
Prof. Mary Brownell is feted twice for leading reform efforts in Special Education teacher preparation.