|
4/25/06 Contact:
Roy Summerford, 334/844-9999 (summero@auburn.edu)
David M. Granger, 334/844-9999 (grangdm@auburn.edu)
AU, TUSKEGEE
UNIVERSITY GRAD STUDENTS TO HELP MATH, SCIENCE TEACHERS IN LEE, MACON
SCHOOLS
AUBURN - Auburn University and Tuskegee University will send 13 graduate
students into classrooms in five Lee and Macon county schools this fall
to assist science and mathematics teachers.
The two universities will send the students into East Alabama schools
through a partnership with Lee County Schools and Macon County Schools
with support from a three-year, $2 million grant by the National Science
Foundation.
Working with grades 9-12, the GK-12 Fellows in Science and Mathematics
for Schools in East Alabama program will focus on Beauregard, Beulah and
Loachapoka schools in Lee County and Booker T. Washington and Notasulga
schools in Macon County.
The letters GK-12 refer to graduate students, called Fellows,
on the NSF fellowships and participating teachers in K-12 (kindergarten
through 12th grade) school systems. GK-12 Fellows will take a course in
pedagogy in the AU College of Education the summer before entering the
classroom, and GK-12 Teachers will attend a two-week professional development
workshop.
Jack Feminella and Anotida Madzvamuse at Auburn and Mohammed Qazi and
Roberta Troy at Tuskegee University are co-principal investigators on
the project. In AUs College of Sciences and Mathematics, Feminella
is an associate professor of biological sciences, and Madzvamuse is an
assistant professor of mathematics and statistics.
Supervised by teachers at the participating Macon County and Lee County
schools, the AU and Tuskegee graduate students will assist in laboratories,
develop curriculum modules and design research activities and demonstrations.
Overtoun Jenda, AU associate provost for diversity and multicultural affairs,
said the graduate students will bring their scientific research experience
to the schools, explain concepts to individual students, participate in
after-school enrichment activities, serve as mentors and role models for
students and assist teachers with related duties.
Many times teachers have heavy teaching loads and cannot provide
as much individual attention to each student as they would like during
a problem-solving session, said Jenda, the GK-12 project director.
The GK-12 Program will give teachers a rare opportunity to provide
individual attention to each student and present the opportunity for students
in general to receive more high-quality, one-on-one instruction. Teachers
will now have much-needed help in utilizing more challenging science and
mathematics instructional strategies.
Jenda said the graduate students will gain teaching experience to complement
their research, and the participating teachers will learn more about the
subject matter as they participate in workshops and work with the graduate
fellows.
Students in the participating Macon and Lee County schools will be the
programs primary beneficiaries, Jenda said.
Benefits to the students will include better knowledge of subject
matter and, hence, better academic performance on ACT, SAT and high school
graduation exams in sciences and mathematics.
Auburn University is a preeminent land-grant and comprehensive research
institution with more than 23,000 students and 6,500 faculty and staff.
Ranked among the top 50 public universities nationally, Auburn is Alabamas
largest educational institution, offering more than 230 undergraduate,
graduate and doctoral degree programs.
(Contributed by Roy Summerford.)
# # #
apr06:AU-nsfgk-12fellowsgrant
|