| Code Number | Hours | Name of the Course |
|---|---|---|
| EDCURINS 382 | 3 | Introduction to Environmental Education for Sustainable Development (ENVIRON 382)
As a result of this course, students learn how to educate a citizenry able and willing to work towards environmental and sustainability goals, as well as how to develop, implement, and evaluate their own education efforts. Student will teach in local formal and non-formal settings and have the option to become certified in popular national environmental education programs. |
| EDUC 301 | 3-12 | Directed Teaching in the Elementary Grades
Prerequisites: EDUC 307(6), 391, 392, 401, 403, 406, 411, 421, 431. Develops the special knowledge and competencies required of nursery and elementary school teachers through observation and teaching in elementary school classrooms under the joint supervision of University and public school personnel. Requires a daily uninterrupted block of four to seven hours during the school day. Open only to seniors, special students, and graduate students who have been admitted to the teacher education program. |
| EDUC 302 | 6-12 | Directed Teaching in the Secondary School
Prerequisites: EDUC 307, 391, 392, and appropriate methods course. Guides observation and teaching in secondary school classrooms, as well as involvement in other roles of the secondary school teacher, under the joint supervision of University and public school personnel. Requires a daily uninterrupted block of four to seven hours during the school day. Open only to seniors, special students, and graduate students who have been admitted to the teacher education program. |
| EDUC 303 | 2 | Problems and Principles of Elementary Education
Prerequisites: Must be elected concurrently with EDUC 301. |
| EDUC 304 | 1-4 | Problems and Principles of Secondary Education
Prerequisites: Must be elected concurrently with EDUC 302. |
| EDUC 307 | 1-7 | Practicum
Prerequisites: Permission of instructor. May only be elected concurrently with an elementary field-based block or concurrently with a secondary methods course. Provides students with supervised opportunities to integrate theory and practice by working with teachers in classrooms or other field settings. |
| EDUC 308 | 3 | Creating Arts Access in Community
This course prepares students to effectively share the arts and artistic practice with the public. Through partnerships with UMMA and local arts organizations, students develop practical skills for leading workshops, tours, and residencies with diverse audiences. The course builds confidence in facilitation and teaching approaches centered on equity and access for all communities. Includes observations, practice teaching, and networking with professional teaching artists. Ideal for students in visual arts, music, theatre, dance, creative writing, and related fields. |
| EDUC 309 | 3 | Science for Sustainable Communities
This course explores how environmental justice intersects with earth systems, development, and land use in both urban and rural communities. Students examine scientific principles of soil, air, and water while engaging with community voices and stakeholders to understand political, social, and ecological impacts. Incorporating both traditional and Indigenous scientific approaches, the course highlights how policy, community contributions, urban gardens, and systemic inequalities shape environmental outcomes. |
| EDUC 310 | 1-6 | Independent Study
Comprises supervised reading, research, or other inquiry regarding education. Undergraduate students who wish to register with a Marsal School professor in an independent study are required to submit an Undergraduate Independent Study Agreement form. |
| EDUC 311 | 3 | Educational Policy, Inquiry, and Advocacy
This course aims to support students in becoming critical consumers of educational policy issues in both media and educational research. We examine ideologies and levers used in past and current educational reform efforts that reflect multiple views on the purpose of schools, the role of educators, and the functions of policies and policy makers. |
| EDUC 312 | The History of College Athletics
|
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| EDUC 313 | 3 | Detroit Vs. Everybody: Stories, Culture, and Making the Motor City
This seminar will provide a deep understanding of the complexity of race, ethnicity, and culture within the stories of historic and contemporary Detroit. Emphasis will be on skills for critical analysis, creativity, and communication, place-based literacies and learning, and learning from and advocating for the city and its people. In this course, we will explore:
Students will engage in a number of high-interest activities throughout the course of the semester, including several field trips and visits with guest speakers, building toward a final project rooted in one of the areas above. This course meets with EDUC 513. |
| EDUC 314 | 1-2 | Directed Teaching Seminar: Physical Education
Prerequisites: PHYSED 444. Drawing on the directed teaching experience, this seminar is designed to explore the theory and practice of physical education as students apply them in their directed teaching environments. |
| EDUC 315 | 3 | Equity and Empowerment for Coaching and Leading
This course will explore how institutions of Sport, Education and Business serve as key spaces to build and uphold transformative systems to center equity and empower individuals. The course will highlight key moments where these institutions have promoted equity and fostered empowerment resulting in greater diversity, inclusion, justice and belonging. Case studies of teams and leaders/coaches that disrupt inequity in sport, education and business will be critically analyzed and explored at personal, interpersonal, institutional and systemic levels. As we examine leaders who work for more just institutions we will identify systems that also create, maintain, and promote inequity in the United States. Students will confront practices of inequity within Systems of Oppression along the lines of race, class, gender, sexual orientation, ability/disability, and body type. Students will be challenged and guided to become more action-oriented in their current spheres of influence to be catalysts to disrupt inequity and advance justice in rapidly evolving and complex social structures. Students will learn and practice leadership skills to promote equity and empowerment in their future professions and play a key role in leveraging their power to advance justice. |
| EDUC 316 | 3 | Sport, Education and Social Justice: Leading and Coaching for Transformation
As a microcosm of society, sport has both challenged and reinforced inequality. This dynamic, project-based course explores the historical and contemporary intersection of sport and society, with a focus on sport’s role in education, public pedagogy, and social transformation. Students will examine how athletes, coaches, and teams have used their platforms to advance social justice and activism, while also critically analyzing how sport functions as a form of public pedagogy, shaping what people learn about equity, access, participation, and rights both inside and beyond the classroom. |
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