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Curriculum and Course Schedule

Learning Sciences candidates take foundational courses designed to explore educational systems in America and the foundations of Learning Sciences. Students must also take courses in design, sociocultural perspectives, and cognitive perspectives. The professional seminar is a companion course that helps students make connections between classes and prepare for their careers. The program culminates in a master’s project.

Foundations (at least 2.5 units)

LRN_SCI 403-0 Foundations of the Learning Sciences

Cognitive and social science theories of how people learn to understand, reason, and solve problems. Implications for the design of classroom learning environments; learning in real scenarios for investigating central issues in cognitive science. Learning in mathematics, science, reading/writing, and informal reasoning.

MS_ED 402-0 Social, Cultural, and Linguistic Contexts of Education

This course is designed to explore how the ways that we live culturally provide strengths for teaching, learning and design. The course draws from the interdisciplinary study of sociocultural, linguistic, and contextual influences of education, as well as perspectives from learning, teaching, research and policy. Candidates will examine how issues of power and privilege as they pertain to race, ethnicity, language, class, gender, sexuality and identity politics shape and are shaped within our education system. Candidates will be asked to consider their own schooling experiences, and deeply evaluate their beliefs, thoughts and assumptions about the influence of various legal, historical, socio-cultural and linguistic factors on their ideas about teaching, learning, and schooling. Special attention will be given to the major trends that influence contemporary landscapes of PK-12 education and the potential systemic benefits and harms associated with them. Candidates will produce an autoethnography that considers the impact of personal formal and informal learning experiences rooted in racial, cultural and linguistic identity on their life view, as well as how they move through the world as advocates for justice.

This course can be applied towards endorsements in English as a Second Language and Bilingual Education on a Professional Educator License and carries 15 clinical clock hours of experience.

MS_ED 481-1 Navigating US Schools I

MS_ED 481-1 is a 0.5-unit course. 

Have you been in classes or social situations where you don’t quite understand what people are talking about when it comes to schools and the American dream? Were you educated in a non-US school system? This course will explore the foundation and unique nuances of US American schools through Zaretta Hammond’s five suppositions of culturally responsive teaching. Students will build upon their educational backgrounds and experiences to make meaningful connections with what it means to successfully traverse education in the United States.

Only one of 481-1 and 481-2 is required.

MS_ED 481-2 Navigating US Schools II

MS_ED 481-2 is a 0.5-unit course. 

Have you been in classes or social situations where you don’t quite understand what people are talking about when it comes to schools and the American dream? Were you educated in a non-US school system? This course will explore the foundation and unique nuances of US American schools through Zaretta Hammond’s five suppositions of culturally responsive teaching. Students will build upon their educational backgrounds and experiences to make meaningful connections with what it means to successfully traverse education in the United States. 

Only one of 481-1 and 481-2 is required.

Understand Design (at least 2 units)

LRN_SCI 413-0 Tangible Interaction Design & Learning

This course will explore the use of tangible interaction to create innovative learning experiences. It will review both theoretical and technological foundations of the field. Topics include creative expression, embodied interaction, cultural forms, and design frameworks.

LRN_SCI 425-0 Introduction to Design for the Learning Sciences

Building the skills and knowledge necessary to support the design of educational experiences. Exploration of general design principles and learning sciences theoretical perspectives through examination of existing cases of instructional design. A design project involving needs analysis, specifying learning objectives, and designing a new educational experience.

LRN_SCI 429-0 Design of Learning Environments

Issues in designing and studying innovative learning environments. New models of classroom interaction, particularly using technology to enable new cognitive and social roles for students. Topics include simulations, tutors, computer-mediated communication, project-based learning. Theoretical motivations in cognitive and social-interaction learning theories, empirical studies evaluating their effectiveness, and prospects for propagation of such innovations.

LRN_SCI 451-0 Global Histories of Engineering Education

In this course we examine what role engineering education plays, has played historically, and could play in mediating dynamics of power, in(equality), and (in)justice in society across global contexts. A wave of recent scholarship has examined the nefarious impact of new technologies on racial equity (Benjamin, 2019; Noble, 2018), social and economic justice (Eubanks, 2018), teaching and learning processes in schools (Watters, 2021), and on the health and survival of the planet itself (Crawford, 2021). Learning about the politics of technologies, and the technologies of power, is thus emerging as one of the most significant needs in education. Building from Science and Technology Studies (STS) perspectives, in this course we shift our analytic focus to the politics of engineering education institutions (Lucena, 2013; Riley, 2003). What are the historical, cultural, and political forces operating on these institutions? How do they cultivate particular kinds of engineering identities? We will ground these inquiries through case studies of specific engineering education institutions in diverse global contexts (Indonesia, India, Denmark, Iran, Chile, Kenya, and the US). Across the cases, we will carefully examine how themes such as modernization, globalization, nationalism, and militarism have shaped the content, character, and ontology of engineering education. Ultimately, we will work towards a critical, global understanding of the power, responsibility, and possibilities for socially just and ethical engineering education.

LOC 308-0 Redesigning Everyday Organizations

Concepts and methods for understanding and studying cognition and learning and putting these concepts and methods to use in a design/change project.

LRN_SCI 451-0 Topics: Computer Science Education

In this course we will examine the role of computational tools in the design of transformative teaching and learning environments. Grounded in perspectives from the Learning Sciences and Computer Science Education, we will cover topics of equity and inclusion, pedagogy, creative applications of computing, and the integration of computational ideas across multiple disciplines. We have cross-listed the course in Computer Science, Learning Sciences, and Teacher Education in order to foster cross-disciplinary dialogues that consider the affordances of computational ideas for designing learning environments that are asset-based and supportive of multiple routes to understanding various subject-matter. The course will include an optional practicum experience working in a K-12 classroom, informal learning space, or college-level classroom.

Understand Sociocultural Perspectives (at least 1 unit)

MS_ED 401-0 Schooling in America

What is unique about the U.S. approach to teaching and learning? Why are schools organized the way they are? What does the day-to-day school experience look like for students, teachers, and families? This course will explore the development of schools in the United States by understanding the ideologies and decisions (pedagogical and political) that have shaped schools over 200 years. We will use Illinois and Chicago as case studies of the development of schools in urban, suburban, and rural communities, with a particular focus on Chicago, where public, charter, private, independent, and home schools all exist side by side. Students will explore their own schooling experience while also researching current school issues. Guest speakers from Chicagoland schools and virtual visits to some of those schools will ground our work in the realities of American education today.

MS_ED 410-0 Foundations of Learning in a New Language

MS_ED 410-0 Foundations of Learning in a New Language The Foundations of Learning in a New Language course engages pre-service teacher candidates in exploring historical, political, sociocultural, philosophical and educational practices that impact linguistically and culturally diverse learners in American schools. Topics include historical and current federal and state laws regarding the learning of English as a new language, foundations of first and second language acquisition, child development, sociocultural theory, and comparative international language instruction. Research and evidence based instructional models are discussed, with a deepened appreciation for factors contributing to sustained student achievement, including, but not limited to the psychological, cognitive, sociological, and cultural factors that impact student learning.  An emphasis is placed on the standards for initial Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) Pre-K-12 Teacher Preparation Programs and the WIDA Language Development Standards.

This course can be applied towards endorsements in English as a Second Language and Bilingual Education on a Professional Educator License and carries 15 clinical clock hours of experience.

HDSP 451-0 Culture and Development

Contact the department for further information.

LRN_SCI 402-0 Social Dimensions of Teaching & Learning

Students' relationships with one another and with teachers in school and nonschool settings. Implications for classroom instruction of social learning theory, student diversity, classroom climate, cooperative and competitive goal structures, and processes of attribution and achievement motivation.

LRN_SCI 451-0 Culture and Poverty

This course looks closely at the categories, assumptions and frameworks used to analyze educational inequality in the United States from the 1950’s to the present. Our goal is to think carefully about 1) the historical, political and educational consequences of various approaches to analyzing poverty, race, schooling/education and inequality, and 2) critical interventions that emerged from a range of disciplines and the resources they provide for growing a more complex theoretical and ethical vocabulary. The course moves historically and privileges primary texts, focusing on the development and critiques of the “culture of poverty” both as a theoretical idea (Oscar Lewis, 1950’s) and as a framework for key social and educational policies (1960’s and beyond). We will also re-envision an educational system that treats learning not as an individual possession, but as a nuanced barometer of the multi-layered relations between persons and their environments. This requires treating the forms of critique, resistance, educational self-determination and political imagination nurtured and sustained by marginalized communities themselves as our teachers.

Understand Cognitive Perspectives (at least 1 unit)

MS_ED 405-0 Child and Adolescent Development

This course will offer a critical perspective on child and adolescent development as it is shaped and experienced in various social contexts with special application to the world of the school. Psychological, interpersonal, social, cognitive, moral, and physical development will be studied within the contexts of family, peer group, and school. Theoretical perspectives will be explored in relation to empirical research, field studies, first person accounts, and imaginative works. Special emphasis will be given to the individual's subjective experience and to the remembered accounts of our own childhood and adolescence.

HDSP 404-0 Adulthood Development & Aging

Concepts, theories, and research on development and adaptation from early adulthood through aging: age periods, transitions; cognitive, moral, and faith development; psychosocial and ego development; defense mechanisms; death and dying.

HDC 330-0 Adolescent Stress: Sources & Solutions

Why are adolescence and early adulthood stressful periods of life? Are they more stressful now than in the past? How do we best define and measure adolescent and young adult stress? How does stress impact youth wellbeing, and what can we do to reduce stress and its impacts? This course is an advanced, interactive, undergraduate class in which the instructor and students explore the set of above questions together, through readings, discussions, and through qualitative and quantitative coding and analysis of data on adolescent stress.

HDSP 402-0 Child Development & Social Policy

Major theories and current empirical research concerning cognitive and social/emotional development of children. Interaction of internal maturational factors with effects of families, peers, and schools.

HDC 305-0 Identity & Motivation

Examines the connection between conceptions of the self and goal-oriented motivation, with particular attention to the influence of social, structural, and cultural forces.

HDSP 403-0 Adolescent Development

Biological, cognitive, and social development during adolescence. Social institutions and policies that affect the well-being of adolescents.

Master’s Project and Professional Seminars (2.5 units)

MS_ED 407-1 & 2 Research and Analysis in Teaching and Learning I & II

MS_ED 407-1 & 407-2 are two 0.5-unit courses, to be taken sequentially. 

Teaching and education are complex, intellectual, and iterative endeavors. Skilled educators continually take experiences from the field in the form of observations, curiosities, and challenges to inform structured inquiry—with the purpose of improving conceptual and pedagogical understandings for themselves and their students. MSED 407-1 and 407-2 are grounded in a model of action research. In our view, action research is not distinct from the work of teaching and educating, rather when done well it drives the work of teaching and learning. Data we use in action research is precisely that which we encounter in our educational settings on a daily basis—we are responsible for mining and learning from them. As a result of these courses you will not only have designed and conducted action research— your Master’s Project —but more importantly, you will have a set of stances and tools to embark on a career as an educator scholar who continues to notice various aspects of teaching and learning, ask important questions, and engage in meaningful, guided examinations of practice to evolve learning.   

The goal of MSED 407-1 and 407-2 is to help you become informed educators who are able to turn curiosities and challenges from your settings into potential areas of structured reflection and research. The basis of the course is the model of action research — of studying our own settings around questions we are passionate about, for the purpose of improving our students and colleagues learning as well as our own practice. Action research is not distinct from the work of teaching, rather the data we use in action research is precisely that which we encounter in our educational settings daily. As a result of these courses you will not only have conducted action research— your Master’s Project —more importantly, you will have the tools to embark on a career as an educator scholar who continues to ask important questions and embark on meaningful, systematic examinations of teaching and learning in your selected setting. 

During MSED 407-1, you chose a question that was of personal importance to you. You reviewed relevant literature related to this question, you identified different types of classroom data to investigate this question. During MSED 407-2, we will focus on techniques for analyzing the data that you have collected, revisit the literature surrounding our project, and consider how the work will influence your teaching and learning moving forward. In addition to meeting as a whole class, a central component of the 407-1 and 407-2 course sequence is working in coaching groups.

MS_ED 482-1 Proseminar in Education Studies and Learning Sciences I

MS_ED 482-1 is a 0.5-unit course. 

The MSED ProSeminar in Educational Studies and the Learning Sciences serves as a companion to program courses with the goal of helping students to bring together the threads from across their coursework and program experiences. In particular, this course emphasizes and makes explicit key ideas that connect to the MSED Guiding Commitments.    

MSED 482-1 will support the understanding and development of mutually beneficial, community-engaged partnerships as students explore and onboard to a practicum site.  A professional and career development component will focus on self-assessment, career exploration, and connecting to Northwestern resources that will support this work. 

MS_ED 482-2 Proseminar in Education Studies and Learning Sciences II

MS_ED 482-2 is a 0.5-unit course. 

MSED 482-2 is designed to support the connection between the practicum site and initial development of the Master’s Project. The course will help students understand how to work with, and support, their practicum sites, while developing their research question, engaging important site-specific protocols that govern research, and identifying appropriate sources of data that are available to investigate the research question. A professional and career development component will focus on deepening understanding of possible career paths, building professional networks, and connecting to Northwestern resources that will support this work.

Elective Coursework (3 units)

Additional courses selected from relevant fields to bring the total number of units to 12.

Course Schedule

Course schedule table for the Fall of 2023.
Catalog No.  Course Title Instructor Days/Time
MS_ED 401-0 Schooling in America Wallace Tue 2:00PM - 4:50PM
MS_ED 402-0 Social, Cultural, and Linguistic Contexts of Education Shulman, Campbell Tue 6:00PM - 8:50PM
LRN_SCI 403 Foundations of the Learning Sciences Bang, Reiser Thu 2:00PM - 4:50PM
MS_ED 407-1 Research and Analysis in Teaching and Learning I: Discussion and Question Development Matsko Tue 6:00PM - 7:20PM
MS_ED 410-0 Foundations of Learning in a New Language Fadda-Ginski Thu 6:00PM - 8:50PM
LRN_SCI 425-0 Introduction to Design for the Learning Sciences Horn Wed 1:00PM - 3:50PM
MS_ED 481-1 Navigating US Schools I Wallace Wed 2:00PM-4:50PM
MS_ED 481-2 Navigating US Schools II Wallace Wed 2:00PM-4:50PM
MS_ED 482-1 Proseminar in Education Studies & Learning Sciences I Glodek Mon 2:00PM – 3:20PM

 

Course schedule table for the Winter of 2024.
Catalog No. Course Title Instructor Days/Time
MS_ED 402-0 Social, Cultural, & Linguistic Contexts of Education Wallace, Hayes Mon 6:00PM - 8:50PM
MS_ED 405-0 Child and Adolescent Development Owens Thu 6:00PM - 8:50PM
MS_ED 407-1 Research and Analysis in Teaching & Learning I Matsko, Woodward Tue 6:00PM - 7:20PM
LRN_SCI 451 Computer Science Education: Transformative Teaching and Learning with Computational Tools and Ideas Horn, Hooper
MS_ED 482-2 Proseminar in Education Studies & Learning Sciences II Glodek Mon 2:00PM - 3:20PM
Course schedule table for the Spring of 2024.
Catalog No. Course Title Instructor Days/Time
LRN_SCI 402 Social Dimensions of Teaching and Learning Lam Thu 2:00PM - 4:50PM
MS_ED 407-2 Research and Analysis in Teaching and Learning II Woodward Tue 6:00PM - 7:30PM
LRN_SCI 413-0 Tangible Interaction Design & Learning Horn Mon, Wed 3:30PM - 4:50PM
MS_ED 482-3 Proseminar in Education Studies & Learning Sciences II Glodek Wed 5:00PM – 6:20PM
Course schedule table for the Summer of 2024.
Catalog No. Course Title Instructor Days/Time
MS_ED 410-0 Foundations of Learning in a New Language Goebel Fri 1:00PM - 4:50PM
MS_ED 427-0 Educating Exceptional Children Morgan Tue 1:00PM-4:50PM
MS_ED 431-0 Instructional Coaching Matsko, Vahey Mon 9:00AM - 1:00PM
MS_ED 452-0 School Leadership Roloff Mon, Wed 5:00PM -7:20PM
MS_ED 463-0 Leading for Equity Campbell Tue 5:00PM - 8:50PM