About Children, Families, & Schools PhD
Contact
For questions about the program, contact the Concentration Coordinator: sally [at] educ [dot] umass [dot] edu (Dr. Campbell Pirie)
NAEYC Competencies and Course Requirements
1. Promoting Child Development and Learning
Candidates' demonstrations of competence may include using effective methodologies to generate new knowledge about development and the conditions that promote it, as well as using effective teaching strategies to make current child development knowledge meaningful and powerful for future teachers or other community practitioners.
2. Building Family and Community Relationships
Candidates show skill in using sound methodologies to generate new knowledge about families of young children, or they may devise more effective ways to help future teachers and community practitioners understand, engage, and support families.
3. Observing, Documenting and Assessing
Candidates work to develop and validate assessment tools and are able to analyze the effects of various assessment approaches in improving child and program outcomes. Candidates show evidence of knowledge, skills, and professional dispositions related to the study and promotion of sound assessment practices.
4. Teaching and Learning
Candidates should identify significant research questions, critique current research, and design worthwhile studies utilizing in-depth knowledge of qualitative and quantitative methodologies. Those candidates who will be preparing future teachers in higher education or community programs will learn and demonstrate research-based approaches to building others’ skills in curriculum development and teaching strategies.
At least two qualitative methods and two quantitative methods courses at the 600 level or higher are required for all doctoral candidates.
Depending on the research methods to be used in the dissertation, doctoral students are recommended to take additional courses in related methodologies and research competencies. Some example courses:
Educational Planning and Evaluation (EDUC 862)
Writing Ethnography (ANTHRO 697CC)
5. Growing as a Professional
Candidates should know and use effective, sound methodology to develop and conduct studies of the profession. To be effective, their work requires them to engage collaboratively with others both within and outside academia. And researcher candidates require special competence in understanding and using ethical guidelines for the protection of human subjects, especially when those research subjects are vulnerable young children.
This requirement is experiential. The specifics may be negotiated with the guidance committee members and will be explicitly documented in detail as part of the candidate's degree plan and qualification and as a pre-requisite for beginning preparation for comprehensive examinations. Competencies may be met by some or all of the following:
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Attending and presenting at local, national or international conferences in the field
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Writing a research or theoretical paper for a practitioner audience, or as part of comprehensive examinations
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Being a mentored research or teaching assistant in the concentration
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Completing the CITI training for human research subject use through the UMass research office (required)