THE
STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT /
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY
12234 |
TO: |
The Honorable the Members of the Board of Regents |
FROM: |
Johanna Duncan-Poitier |
COMMITTEE: |
Higher Education and Professional Practice |
TITLE OF
ITEM: |
Regents Accreditation of Teacher Education Recommendation of Accreditation Action: St. Joseph’s College, Brooklyn and Suffolk Campuses |
DATE OF
SUBMISSION: |
June 7, 2004 |
PROPOSED
HANDLING: |
Action |
RATIONALE FOR
ITEM: |
St. Joseph’s College relies on the Regents as its accreditation agency for teacher education programs |
STRATEGIC
GOAL(S): |
Goals 1, 2, and 3 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
SUMMARY:
St. Joseph’s College has applied
for accreditation of its teacher education programs by Regents Accreditation of
Teacher Education (RATE). The
attached Summary of the Application for Accreditation of Teacher Education
Programs and Preliminary Recommendation for Accreditation Action lists the
registered programs leading to certification in the classroom teaching service
offered by St. Joseph’s College at its main campus in Brooklyn and its Suffolk
Campus in Patchogue.
The Board of Regents chartered St. Joseph’s
College for Women, Brooklyn, in 1916 and granted it an absolute charter in
1929. Having pioneered in the study
of child development, the College opened a laboratory preschool in 1934. A program to prepare teachers has been
in place since 1941, under the title of Child Study. The College’s charter was amended in
1970 to give it its present name and to enable it to admit men. The College began to offer courses at an
extension site in Suffolk County in 1971; in 1976 the Regents authorized a
branch campus in Suffolk County, and in 1978 it moved to its present site in
Patchogue. As part of one
independent college that sees itself as having a single identity, the two
campuses of St. Joseph’s College share a common mission and goals, similar
curriculum and academic programs, much of their higher-level administration, a
unified financial structure, and integrated academic departments and
faculty. Across both campuses,
Saint Joseph’s had an enrollment of 5,161 students in the fall of 2003,
including 4,791 undergraduate and 370 graduate
students.
St. Joseph’s College’s catalog and self-study
state a clearly defined mission:
“to provide a strong academic and value-oriented education at the
undergraduate and graduate levels, rooted in the liberal arts tradition that
supports provision for career preparation and enhancement.” The goals, purposes, objectives, and
implementation of the teacher education programs are in keeping with this
mission.
Following a review of the institution’s
self-study, a separate team visited each campus of St. Joseph’s College in
September 2003 as part of the accreditation review process. Each team conducted an on-site review of
evidence, and the two teams conferred via videoconferencing technology which the
College uses for meetings and other communications between
campuses.
A draft report of each team’s findings was prepared and transmitted to the College for review and comment. It was the teams’ overall assessment that the College was in compliance with the standards found in Regents Rules, Subpart 4-2. Program strengths and areas for improvement cited by the teams in the report are listed in the attachment. Upon receiving the College’s comments, the Department prepared a final compliance review report for consideration by the Higher Education Subcommittee of the State Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching. Material providing further information on the College’s application and the review process is available in the Regents Office.
The Department’s preliminary recommendation
to the Subcommittee was that the College’s programs be accredited for a period
of seven years. At the
Subcommittee’s meeting in June 2004, it considered this preliminary
recommendation and the self-study and reports underlying that
recommendation. The Subcommittee
voted unanimously to recommend that the Department’s recommendation be adopted
as the Deputy Commissioner’s recommendation. The Subcommittee added that, among the
areas for improvement cited in the compliance review report, the Subcommittee
recommends that the following are the ones for major focus in the College’s
continuing efforts in preparation for its next review for Regents Accreditation
of Teacher Education: the
recruitment and hiring of faculty members who will provide diversity, and the
recruitment of candidates for teacher education from historically
underrepresented groups; the development of a comprehensive system for assessing
graduates’ teaching effectiveness; and better reflection in Adolescence
Education syllabi of how course goals, objectives, and assignments prepare
candidates to teach to the New York State learning
standards.
Recommendation: I recommend that the Regents take the
following action:
VOTED, that
the Board of Regents grant accreditation of the teacher education programs
offered by St. Joseph’s College at its main campus in Brooklyn and its Suffolk
Branch Campus in Patchogue effective June 22, 2004, for a period beginning
immediately and ending on June 21, 2011.
Attachment
STATE PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS AND PRACTICES BOARD FOR TEACHING
Higher Education
Subcommittee
St. Joseph’s College: Brooklyn and Suffolk
Campuses
VOTED, That the Higher Education Subcommittee of the State Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching, meeting on June 3, 2004, following review and discussion of the compliance review report on the teacher education programs offered by St. Joseph’s College at its Brooklyn and Suffolk Campuses, on the basis of the record* before it recommends to the Deputy Commissioner for Higher Education that the Department’s preliminary recommendation for accreditation action be adopted as the Deputy Commissioner’s recommendation. Among the areas for improvement cited in the compliance review report, the Subcommittee recommends that the following are the ones for major focus in the College’s continuing efforts in preparation for its next review for Regents Accreditation of Teacher Education:
Approved unanimously with eight voting
members of the Subcommittee present.
________________________________________
Higher Education Subcommittee
Chair
________________________________________
Date
*Including the Department’s preliminary
recommendation for accreditation action, the institution’s self-study, its
application for accreditation, other documents relevant to the Department’s
preliminary recommendation, and any additional written submissions by the
institution.
Summary of the Application for Accreditation
of Teacher Education Programs and Department’s Preliminary Recommendation on
Accreditation Action
St. Joseph’s College has applied for
accreditation of its programs of study leading to teacher certification, offered
at the College’s Brooklyn and Suffolk campuses, under the Regents Accreditation
of Teacher Education (RATE).
Preliminary Recommendation for Accreditation
Action:
Accreditation for a period of seven years.
Teacher Education Programs to Be
Accredited:
Biology, B.A. and Bachelor of Science (B.S.), leading to initial certification in Biology (grades 7-12)
English, B.A., leading to initial certification in English (grades 7-12)
Mathematics, B.A. and B.S., leading to initial certification in Mathematics (grades 7-12)
History, B.A. leading to initial certification in Social Studies (grades 7-12)
Brooklyn Campus:
Chemistry, B.A. and B.S., leading to initial
certification in Chemistry (grades 7-12)
Spanish, B.A., leading to initial
certification in Spanish (grades 7-12)
Suffolk Campus:
Infant/Toddler Early Childhood Special
Education, Master of Arts (M.A.), leading to initial/professional or
professional certification in Early Childhood Education (birth-grade 2) and
Students with Disabilities (birth-grade 2)
Summary of Findings and Institutional
Response:
The programs at both campuses have the same curricula, and many of the faculty members teach at both campuses. Following a review of the institution’s self-study, a separate team visited each campus of St. Joseph’s College in September 2003 as part of the accreditation review process. Each team conducted an on-site review of evidence, and the two teams conferred via videoconferencing technology which the College uses for meetings and other communications between campuses. It was the teams’ overall assessment that the College was in compliance with the standards found in Regents Rules, Subpart 4-2. The teams cited the following program strengths:
The team, however, did identify some areas
for improvement, including:
In its response, the College has acknowledged
these recommendations.
May
21, 2004