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Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Fast track to STEM teaching in state with federal grants | EdSource Today

Fast track to STEM teaching in state with federal grants | EdSource Today:


Five alternative teacher certification programs in California that won millions in federal grants are on track to train nearly 800 math and science teachers and place them in high-poverty, hard-to-staff schools.
The California Teacher Corps, which represents more than 70 of the state’s alternative certification programs, said the projects, which began with planning grants in 2011-12, will receive a total of about $18 million over five years from Transition to Teaching, a competitive grant program run by the U.S. Department of Education.  Its goal to recruit and train teachers in science, technology, engineering and math (known as STEM fields). The winning projects are based in one school district and four universities.
Cal State Dominguez Hills Transition to Teaching student. (photo: CSU Dominguez Hills). click to enlarge.
  • Cal State Dominguez Hills’ Transition to Teaching Project plans to enroll 225 students over five years who will take online classes while putting those lessons into practice working side by side with master teachers in Saturday and summer laboratory schools for students from more than a dozen southern California districts.
  • Cal State Fullerton is partnering with nine southern