Tuesday, December 4, 2012

D’Youville creates new five-year program

            D’Youville College has developed a new Liberal Studies for Education   major, which was designed to allow students to graduate with both  bachelor’s and master’s degrees in just five years.
            The program, which is in its first year, immerses students in elementary teacher education from the start of their collegiate career.
            “Our students are really enjoying the program,” said Dr. Hilary Lochte, chair of the education department.
             “They can take three upper-level classes right from the start while taking undergraduate education courses as well,” Lochte said.
            Lochte noted that the setup is especially beneficial for students because it allows them to familiarize themselves with staff members of the education department while still taking general undergraduate requirements.
            According to Rob Dannecker, the college’s director of marketing, students enrolled in the program begin graduate work in their fourth year but pay undergraduate tuition for all five years.
            “You don’t have to make out master’s applications,” Dannecker said. “It’s a significant cost if you’re looking at applying to master’s-level programs, and you save cost here.”
            While Dannecker said he doesn’t believe that dual-degree programs will become commonplace in higher education across the country, Lochte disagrees.
             “I think it will become the norm because it’s a better way to prepare teachers,” Lochte said. “When there is a better way to start developing teachers, other schools pay attention because they don’t want their school to fall behind.”
            Dannecker said he recognized that the five-year program might not be best for everyone.
             “Students have to look at all of the different options and then take what they can use personally and fit it into their scheme of things,” Dannecker said. “We want to help them as much as we possibly can to get to their goal, but we know it’s not for everybody.” By Tom Gallagher and Mike Straw