Introducing Teachers College
Letter from the President
As both an alumna of Teachers College and its new president, I welcome you to the nation's oldest and largest graduate school of education -- a place whose founding vision was to bring educational opportunities to all members of society, and whose faculty and students, time and again during more than a century of leadership, have demonstrated the power of ideas to change the world.
Our legacy is the work of a long list of thinkers and doers that includes James Russell and John Dewey; Lawrence Cremin and Maxine Greene; Edmund Gordon and Isabel Maitland Stewart; Mary Swartz Rose and Morton Deutsch; Arthur Wesley Dow and William Heard Kilpatrick.
These are people who created fields of inquiry. At Teachers College today, our work is about living up to their legacy by ensuring that we not only build knowledge, but enhance its impact by engaging directly with the policymakers and practitioners who will put it to use. Because of our preeminence, it is both our privilege and our obligation to focus our coursework and our research on the questions of the day in each of the fields we serve. To that end, we favor no ideology or single methodology, but instead seek answers that meet the genuine needs of teachers and other practitioners, and the children they ultimately serve.
Whether you plan to teach, conduct research, serve as an administrator, or pursue a career in health or psychology -- or even if you are already active in one of these fields -- at Teachers College, you are undertaking a journey that will change your life and the lives of others by unlocking the wonders of human potential.
As you explore this catalogue, I urge you to remember that the education you will receive at Teachers College is as much about the people you will meet -- your professors and your fellow students -- as it is about the knowledge you will find in books. So as you join with us in our work, open your hearts as well as your minds. Only then will you truly be able to say -- as I proudly do -- that you have learned everything you needed to know at Teachers College.
Susan Fuhrman,
President
Teachers College, Columbia University
Hard Truths About Our Schools
A close-up study, conducted for The Long Island Index by Columbia University's Teachers College, examined one wealthy, almost all-white district; one poor, minority district; and three districts with greater diversity. What the researchers found was vast inequity in education systems: in terms of teachers, academic programs, student support, and more. Published: 11/6/2009
Nine Leading Research Teams Selected to Study How Digital Games Improve Players' Health
Researchers seek to discover how interactive video games can be designed to improve physical activity, prevention behaviors and self-management of chronic conditions Published: 11/6/2009
Quitting smoking isn't child's play. Or is it?
Columbia University's Teachers College received a $150,000 grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, through the foundation's Health Games Research national program to develop a smart phone app that emulates the physiological responses smokers get from smoking. Published: 11/6/2009
"Standards Aren't Enough," President Fuhrman Writes in EdWeek
Commentary in Education Week co-authored by TC President Susan Fuhrman says draft national standards are only the first step in improving education. "Curricula, tests, textbooks, lesson plans, and teachers' on-the-job training will all have to be revised to reinforce the standards," the authors write. Published: 10/8/2009
Voice of America Profiles TC's Maxine Greene
Voice of America, the US-government radio and multimedia outlet, profiled Maxine Greene, TC's legendary education philosopher, on its "American Profiles" show. Greene has taught philosophy and education at TC since 1965 and continues to teach, packing classes every semester. "I'm a believer in unanswerable questions," she says, "the really hard ones." Published: 9/28/2009
YouTube, Facebook memorials may help mourners cope
George Bonnano, professor of education and psychology "we lead a high-stress, compartmentalized lifestyle, so when people produce memorials online, it makes them feel connected." Published: 6/29/2009