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EACS Welcome

Educational Administration, Curriculum, and Supervision (EACS)

Welcome to the Educational Administration, Curriculum, and Supervision (EACS) homepage.

The mission of EACS is to promote critical inquiry that addresses important issues relating to teaching, learning, and leadership in order that service and collaboration among colleagues and the professional communities may be enhanced.

The EACS Program offers a master's (M.Ed.), certification (principal and superintendent) and doctoral programs (Ed.D. and Ph.D.) to provide graduate level preparation for leadership positions in elementary and secondary school systems, district-level positions, administrative roles in government, researcher roles in policy and advocacy centers, and scholarly positions in colleges and universities. Program offerings are located on both the Norman and Tulsa (cohort) campuses. 

The EACS faculty is comprised of scholars and practitioners who have experience and understand issues facing schools and districts, and are committed to providing an enriched curriculum to equip educational leaders with the habits of mind, habits of hand, and habits of heart that are needed to develop stewards of the discipline (as termed by the Carnegie Foundation).

The Beliefs and Goals of the EACS Program Area

THE GOALS OF THE EACS PROGRAM AREA ARE TO:

  • prepare educators for leadership roles in educational institutions;
  • produce, disseminate and consume research that informs leadership practices;
  • provide service to the professional, scholarly, and University communities;
  • promote the increased use and integration of technology into the program; and,
  • provide more extensive mentoring, to include Master's level students and practicing professionals.

THE BELIEFS OF THE EACS PROGRAM AREA INCLUDE:

  • continuous, formative assessment of our program through critical inquiry;
  • shared decision making that includes input from the communities we serve; and,
  • valuing the expertise of colleagues and their collaborative contributions to the program.

The EACS Conceptual Framework - click for more information

The Educational Administration, Curriculum and Supervision (EACS) area believes that PK-12 schools are complex organizations that need leaders who understand: 1) the theoretical and conceptual aspects of schools, their people, and programs for both children and adults who are constantly learning from the context of the organization; 2) the technical knowledge of the content areas and areas of specialization found within the EACS knowledge bases; 3) the integration of theory, research, and practice as a means of grounding new best practices.  

The EACS curriculum is under girded by a dynamic knowledge base that reflects current and recommended practices as examined through basic and applied research. The EACS graduate should be able to transfer theory and research into practice and to analyze practice through theory and research. To this end, theory, research, and practice are viewed as reciprocal and equal in developing and refining program area offerings. The curriculum is vertically and horizontally articulated, allowing students the opportunity to study both the broader area of leadership and an area of emphasis as they become proficient in understanding, applying, and conducting research - both formally, as scholar leaders, and informally, as informed practitioners through action research. The curriculum provides the conceptual and philosophical bases of continuing education as students develop specified competencies.

The EACS faculty recognizes the unique learning needs of our adult students. Accordingly, the faculty encourages learning through the utilization of a variety of instructional approaches (e.g., lecture, discussion, large and small group work, computer and non-computer simulation, site visitations, and interactions with practitioners in order to properly engage students in learning).

Further, the faculty of EACS recognizes that as an outgrowth of its conceptual framework there are knowledge bases accepted by learned societies such as UCEA and The National Standards Board. Within these accepted but evolving knowledge bases there are competencies and skills that may also be applied in regulated field experiences such as internships and practica. The competencies and skills evolve (broadly) around the following:

  1. societal and cultural influences on schooling; 
  2. teaching and learning processes that are responsive to individual differences among students, teachers, administrators, and families; 
  3. theories of organizations and organizational change; 
  4. policy analysis and studies (e.g., legal and economic); 
  5. leadership and professional development; 
  6. moral and ethical dimensions of schooling in a pluralistic society;
  7. instructional and administrative technologies available to support effective school leadership and decision making.



Contact Information
Collings Hall
820 Van Vleet Oval, Room 227
Norman, Oklahoma 73019-2041
Phone:(405) 325-4202
Fax:(405) 325-2403
Email
OU-Tulsa
Schusterman Center
4502 E. 41st Street
Tulsa, OK 74135
Phone: (918) 660-3987
Email
OU-Tulsa Home Page

This page last updated: Dec 22, 2008


The mission of the Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education is to promote inquiry and practices that foster democratic life and that are fundamental to the interrelated activities of teaching, research and practice in the multi-disciplinary field of education.


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