The Ed.D. is designed for practitioners whose professional
goal is to improve curriculum and instruction through providing leadership,
expertise, and well-grounded scholarship. Admissions are made once each
year in the spring semester. All materials for admission must be submitted
by February 28, 1997.
I. Rationale
The Ed.D. option is designed for mature educational practitioners
who have achieved a master's degree, who wish to increase their knowledge
base through further education and degree attainment, and whose goal is
to provide leadership in the development of curriculum and in the enhancement
of the quality of instruction offered in educational settings. Participants
might be classroom teachers who want to become "Master" or "Lead" teachers
as described in the Holmes-Carnegie reports. They might also be department
chairs, curriculum supervisors in districts or in state departments of
education. All such candidates hold positions which require that they demonstrate
the most recent knowledge in the field. In contrast to the typical Ph.D.
candidate, their responsibilities do not require them to focus on conducting
research as a major aspect of their employment.
II.Admission
Applicants must demonstrate the following:
Recognized educationalleadershipskills
as documented through such methods as three (3) letters of recommendation
by administrators or other educational leaders certifying outstanding instructional
skills; evidence of serving as a resource for colleagues through inservice
presentations, demonstration teaching, or other means; recognition by colleagues
as an outstanding educator; evidence of an active role in professional
associations; nominations by district or state administrators.
Recognized abilityinappliedprofessionalscholarship, e.g., preparation of grants and/or articles for publication;
presentations at professional meetings; development and/or implementation
of curriculum projects. (Submit copies of manuscripts or curriculum development
projects.)
Abilitytocommunicateeffectively
in an interview situation and in writing. Applicants will prepare a critical
analysis of a current scholarly publication(s) and will produce a writing
sample describing how their professional goals merit their being considered
for the Ed.D. Program.
Recognized scholasticability as documented
through a minimum graduate grade point average of 3.00 in the applicant's
master's program and two (2) letters of recommendation from course instructors
certifying unquestionable ability to engage in scholarship/research at
the doctoral level.
A master'sdegree in a related area from an
accredited institution.
Satisfactoryevidenceofappropriatepreparationandexpertiseintheareaofspecialization. This may be documented, for example, by
a master's degree in the area of specialization. In all cases, faculty
in the area of specialization will determine the appropriateness of the
applicant's preparation.
A limited number of spaces will be available in the program.
The depth of background knowledge in each applicant's area(s) of specialization
will be a factor in selection for admission. Therefore, only applicants
with the strongest records and whose interests and strengths match the
interests and strengths of the College's faculty available for supervision
will be selected for each admission period.
III.Program Requirements: (Total of
54 credits in the program)*
A. Required Core Courses (24 credits)*
Curriculum and Instruction
EDDV 860, Curriculum: Research, Theory, and Development
or
EDDV 897, Curriculum Inquiry EDDV 861, Curriculum Planning
and Practice
EDST 829, Research on Teaching
Research and Evaluation
EDST 861, Introduction to Statistical Inference
or
EDST 665, Elementary Statistics
EDDV 850, Qualitative Research and Evaluation Design
in Educational Settings
and two of the following:
EDST 862, Principles in Experimental Research Design
EDST 845, Regression Models in Education
EDDV 851, Practicum in Qualitative Methods
EDST 863, Principles of Program Evaluation
EDDV 891, Management Applications of Research
Leadership
EDST 875, Introduction to Educational Policy
or
EDDV 895, School Improvement Strategy
* See letter of admission for specific date by which the
degree must be completed.
** If appropriate, core course substitutions can be made
with the approval of area faculty and the Department Chair.
B. Specialization (18 credits)
Candidates must identify their area of interest at the time
of their request for entry into the program. They could select such specializations
as math, science, social studies, literacy (reading/language), educational
technology curriculum development, occupational education, or instructional
theory. Candidates will be assigned to a faculty member with similar specialization
interests; normally this faculty member will serve as the candidate's mentor
throughout the program. However, later in the program, a candidate might
be assigned to a different mentor if it is determined that the student's
interests would be better served.
C. Executive Position Paper (EPP) (12 credits)
The intent of the Executive Position Paper, or EPP, is to
provide the candidate with an opportunity for an in-depth analysis of an
issue or problem in his/her specialization area. Appropriate theoretical
principles must be applied to the issue or problem with the aim of developing
a well-grounded policy position. The EPP must also present an in-depth
review of the relevant literature and appropriate research methodology.
The policy recommendations can have a local, state, regional, or even national
scope if appropriate. Examples of possible EPP investigations include:
the design and/or evaluation of a curriculum project; the design and/or
evaluation of a special program for children; the case study of an instructional
procedure, an historical analysis, a program or policy.
IV. Evaluation Procedures
Acceptance of an applicant into this doctoral program in
Educational Development demonstrates the faculty's commitment to that student's
professional development. Evaluation of student progress will be based
on:
A. Core Course Performance -- Performance in core
courses (Section II.A.) is considered an index of the student's general
capability in education. A GPA of 3.00 must be maintained in the core courses.
B. Yearly Candidate Review -- Toward the end of each
spring semester, the candidate and his/her mentor should meet to review
his/her progress. The goal will be to summarize the student's accomplishments
for the year, course work, etc. Comments and recommendations from the rest
of the faculty may be sought. A written summary of this review will be
conveyed to the Department Chair by the mentor, with a copy to the student,
within two weeks of this meeting.
C. Qualifying Examination Before a student
is admitted to formal candidacy and entitled to submit an EPP proposal,
she/he must satisfy the Program Advisory Committee (Section V.C) through
a qualifying examination (which will be a written examination with an oral
defense) that she/he has acquired a comprehensive grasp of the knowledge
in the core and specialization field areas.
D. EPP Proposal The candidate's EPP Proposal
must be approved at a meeting of the Program Advisory Committee. Each proposal
must provide the following: a clear identification of the problem to be
investigated, a brief review of the pertinent literature, a plan of the
procedures to be followed, and a statement of how the solving of this problem
might contribute to the improvement of educational practice.
E. Defense of the EPP The student's final
evaluation checkpoint is the defense of the EPP. The Program Advisory Committee
conducts and evaluates the student's defense. The defense is open to the
public. The student will present the findings of the EPP and respond to
questions from the Committee and the audience.
F. Overall Course Performance Maintenance
of a minimum grade point average of 3.00 is required.
V. Advisors and Committees
A. Mentor Each entering student is
assigned to a mentor group by the program coordinator upon the recommendation
of the appropriate specialization area faculty or the Department Chair,
whichever is more appropriate. While an attempt is made to match student
and advisor interests, there is no implication that the mentor must eventually
assume responsibility for the student's EPP. The mentor functions as a
counselor and a documentsigner helping the student with
scheduling and other programmatic decisions.
B. EPP Advisor By the end of the third
or fourth semester, students must have decided who, on the Educational
Development faculty, they would like as a EPP Advisor. As soon as this
person agrees, all administrative responsibility for the student is transferred
from the mentor to the EPP Advisor.
C. Program Advisory Committee The Executive
Position Paper Committee shall consist of not less than four and not more
than six members approved through appropriate departmental procedures.
At least two members shall represent the specialization area, one of whom
shall be the Committee's chairperson. One member shall represent the area
of minor study (where appropriate) and at least one member shall be an
external examiner chosen from a different academic unit or from outside
the University of Delaware. The chairperson must have established a record
of publication and/or scholarship in the field of the executive position
paper and shall be a full-time member of the faculty of the University;
the definition of faculty includes professional staff who hold secondary
faculty appointments. Faculty who have retired or resigned from the University
may chair committees of students whose work began under their direction
prior to their retirement or departure from the University. An adviser
who is not employed full time by the University of Delaware may serve as
co-chair of the Committee providing that the other co-chair meets the conditions
stated above. In the case of dissenting votes, the majority opinion rules.
This Committee approves the candidate's course of study and the EPP Proposal
and guides the student through the research and writing of the EPP itself.
The Committee should be constituted as soon as possible after the student
has selected an EPP Advisor. It is intended that the Committee will support
the candidate and that each member will serve as a mentor to the candidate.