Kansas State University

search

K-State College of Education

Author: Patrice Scott

College focuses on needs of military-connected students

Faculty tour an elementary school on post.

K-State’s College of Education was one of the first 100 Universities to join Operation Educate the Educator, an initiative that is part of Joining Forces developed by First Lady Michelle Obama and Jill Biden.

Operation Educate the Educator is a nationwide initiative to better support military families by including military-connected students in the definition of diverse populations.

Sandy Risberg, instructor in the department of curriculum and instruction and subject matter expert as a military spouse and parent, explained the benefits. “By including the military child as a diverse population, the faculty will have a better opportunity to train preservice teachers about the military child’s lifestyle and address their unique needs,” Risberg said. “This will also enhance the faculty member’s ability to teach the preservice teachers in the course who are also military-connected. It’s a win-win situation.”

Last semester, Risberg arranged a visit to Fort Riley for curriculum and instruction faculty, including a tour of a model home, elementary school and middle school teen center. “Our faculty needs to have a good concept and connection with the culture and lifestyle of the military-connected student to educate future teachers.”

Risberg is conducting professional development sessions such as “The Military-Connected Child in the Classroom” at area schools. It provides teachers with a glimpse into the culture of the military child and family, the social-emotional cycle that mirrors the deployment cycle, and strategies that can be used with students in the classroom to build resiliency.

Faculty on a field trip!

Project EXCELL fulfills land-grant institution’s purpose

Volunteer assists Project EXCELL student.

A College of Education program designed to give special needs adults an authentic collegiate experience is changing lives and receiving recognition.

Warren White, professor of special education, counseling and student affairs, founded Project EXCELL, an acronym for Extending College Education for Lifelong Learning, in 2009. Classes are held on Saturday mornings in the K-State Student Union, and courses are grouped into two five-week sessions per academic semester.

“In my opinion, this is a great example of how well K-State, as a land-grant institution, serves all residents of Kansas,” White said. “These ‘students’ are people who have never had an opportunity to attend college, and it has positively affected them, their families, the University and College of Education students. It has truly changed many lives.”

Since 2010, Project EXCELL received the Celebration of Excellence Award for “Innovative Programs-Non-Credit,” given at the University Professionals in Continuing Education Association Central Region meeting, as a program that addresses issues of social diversity in education. The program was also nominated for the 2011 national C. Peter Magrath University Engagement Award and the regional W.K. Kellogg Foundation Engagement Award. It has also been recognized nationally and in Kansas by “Think College,” an initiative to provide an inclusive post-secondary education for students with developmental and other disabilities.

Griffin ushers in changes as Center director

The professionals in the CSPS office.

The Center for Student and Professional Services, or CSPS, the all-inclusive information hub for College of Education students, has undergone a series of improvements since Assistant Dean David Griffin was named director this summer.

When you visit the refurbished office, you will be greeted by both new and familiar faces. Even more exciting is the news that the Center plans to launch an internal e-Newsletter for faculty very soon.

To contact the professionals in CSPS, call 785.532.5524, email csps@ksu.edu or visit them in 013 Bluemont Hall.