This content was published: August 30, 1999. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
PCC-Cascade Offers Special Program for Education Majors
Photos and story by James Hill
A team of faculty, counselors and administrators at Portland Community College have been working hard over the last year to unveil a new program this fall for students hoping to become teachers – particularly math and science teachers.
To that end, the Cascade Campus is offering a pre-teacher education program. Students in the new program will earn their Associate of Arts Oregon Transfer degree – which guarantees community college students junior status at Oregon universities – but with a focus on special learning experiences that will target their interests and needs in a teaching career.
Students will receive specialized advising and counseling services and information about how their PCC transfer degree articulates with four-year colleges and universities. Also included in the program are career introduction classes that will give students a chance to meet local teachers and attend professional seminars.
John Koroloff, PCC biology instructor, is helping design the science and math curriculum for the pre-teacher program. He is focusing on course activities that will put students in the field, in sites outside of the classroom. "It is important that early in their college studies, science education majors have an understanding of how to teach youngsters by creating practical, hands-on activities that will turn kids on to science,"
said Koroloff.
"By designing science education courses that give them first-hand experience in field research and site-based activities, we can accomplish that goal," he added.
Another Cascade faculty member, Porter Raper, will help place the pre-education students in community service volunteer assignments.
"A teacher education program is an ideal match for service learning," said Raper. "As these future teachers are working on their general education requirements, they will be provided the opportunity, through their service learning at an elementary school, to witness first-hand how the various disciplines they are studying are all alive in the young children.
"At the same time," he continued, "they’ll be reflecting about their own role as community members and future teachers."