Courses

The listing of a course description here does not guarantee a course’s being offered in a particular term. Please refer to the published schedule of classes on the MyBU Student Portal for confirmation a class is actually being taught and for specific course meeting dates and times.

  • WED ED 140: An Interdisciplinary Approach for Professions in Education and Human Development
    Introduces theoretical frameworks and explores systemic issues in Education and Human Development. Focuses on Teaching and Learning, Deaf Studies, Educational Design for Transformative Social Futures, Child and Adolescent Mental Health, Youth Development and Justice, and Child Life and Family-Centered Care.
  • WED ED 200: Introduction to Justice-Based Education
    Undergraduate Prerequisites: First-Year Writing Seminar (WR 120 or equivalent) - This exploratory course introduces students to a critical history of schooling in America and the extent to which various philosophies of education can work (and have worked) in service of or in opposition to democratic and justice- oriented ends. Students will begin to cultivate a critically reflective stance toward classroom experiences, educational policies, their identities, and the intersection among them. This course requires 4 hours of field-based experience. Effective Fall 2022, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Writing-Intensive Course, The Individual in Community, Philosophical Inquiry and Life's Meanings.
    • The Individual in Community
    • Philosophical Inquiry and Life's Meanings
    • Writing-Intensive Course
  • WED ED 201: Tutoring Struggling Readers and Writers
    This course is intended for those who are outside the profession of education (e.g. parents, community workers, non-SED students) to support children and adults who find learning to read and write difficult. The course will provide an introduction to the types of texts and teaching strategies that make a difference. 2 cr.
  • WED ED 205: Designing Learning Experiences
    This course focuses on the application of research and theories of teaching and learning to plan learning experiences across a variety of settings. Through a teaching for justice lens, students will develop and apply knowledge of approaches to learning.
  • WED ED 206: Family & Community Engagement
    Students will be invited to explore their own positionality towards and definitions of engagement, community, schools, and family, and learn how to best sustain and affirm the families and communities that they endeavor to serve. Effective Fall 2022, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Ethical Reasoning, Global Citizenship and Intercultural Literacy.
    • Ethical Reasoning
    • Global Citizenship and Intercultural Literacy
  • WED ED 213: Approaches to Learning
    Examines research and theories of learning and their application to teaching and other education practices. Pays special attention to factors that influence learning, such as socio-cultural and linguistic. Provides opportunities for students to apply learning principles and theories to practice.
  • WED ED 220: Theme-Based Approaches to Studying Complex Issues of Language in Education and Human Development
    Undergraduate Prerequisites: First Year Writing Seminar (WR120) - Prerequisite for this course: First Year Writing Seminar (WR120). Effective Spring 2023, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Writing-Intensive Course, Ethical Reasoning, Critical Thinking.
    • Critical Thinking
    • Ethical Reasoning
    • Writing-Intensive Course
  • WED ED 225: Project Citizen: Promoting Civic Engagement
    The course examines how a model of citizen action (Project Citizen) can be used to promote active and informed citizenship among youth and adults. Students apply that model to analyze and influence a current public policy of their choice. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in the following BU Hub area: The Individual in Community.
    • The Individual in Community
  • WED ED 230: Introduction to Design as Educational Inquiry
    Students will learn how creating learning designs can facilitate understandings of participant learning. They will explore how a variety of learning settings have been designed and think critically about how to design future ones for care, dignity, and justice. Effective Spring 2026, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Creativity/Innovation, Digital/Multimedia Expression.
    • Creativity/Innovation
    • Digital/Multimedia Expression
  • WED ED 231: Tutoring Readers and Writers
    This course is intended for those who are outside the profession of education (e.g. parents, community workers, non-SED students) to support children and adults who find learning to read and write difficult. The course will provide an introduction to the types of texts and teaching strategies that make a difference. 2 cr.
  • WED ED 245: Theory and Practice of Peer Counseling
    Examines the theory of peer counseling and the development of specific counseling skills. Students enrolled in this class will serve as peer advisors in the CAS First Year Seminar course. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in the following BU Hub area: Oral and/or Signed Communication.
    • Oral and/or Signed Communication
  • WED ED 246: Practicum in Peer Leadership and Mentoring
    Provides advanced mentoring training and leadership experience for selected students who have completed ED 245 (Theory and Practice or Peer Counseling). Students will mentor the students serving as peer mentors in FY101 (First Year Seminar) and enrolled in ED245. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in the following BU Hub area: Teamwork/Collaboration.
    • Teamwork/Collaboration
  • WED ED 260: Teaching Children's Literature Critically
    This course explores children's literature as an active and engaging part of education. We will focus on aesthetics in reading, multi-modal narratives, book design, and representation of marginalized communities. Effective Spring 2025, this course fulfills a single unit in the following BU Hub area: Creativity/Innovation.
    • Creativity/Innovation
  • WED ED 300: Learning as a Cultural Process
    This course examines theoretical foundations of research on learning as a cultural process, including language as a central focus, and their implications for how we think about the design of forms of education that center justice, dignity and mutual flourishing.
  • WED ED 310: Critical Making/Creative Inquiry
    Critical Making/Creative Inquiry refers to the ways in which we ask questions about the world and disrupt inequitable relations of power through the creation of artifacts. We will learn to use some crafting and digital fabrication tools. Prerequisites include enrollment in the Educational Design for Transformative Social Futures specialization.
  • WED ED 315: Gamifying Learning
    GAMIFY LEARNING
  • WED ED 320: Critical Media Literacy
    The course will advance critical media literacy through exploration of critical pedagogy, film, critical race, queer, and feminist theories and practices to better understand and produce works in the new technology and media environment in which we live.
  • WED ED 350: Sense-making in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics
    This course will deepen students' understanding of "sense-making" in science, mathematics, and engineering. Students analyze the opportunities they have had to make sense of concepts, explore new phenomena and ideas, attend to others' sensemaking, and connect sense-making to social justice.
  • WED ED 413: Practicum 1
    This practicum will guide students in developing community engagement practices critical for co-designing educational environments that aim to disrupt inequitable, unjust systems and to create alternative models of learning as lived arguments for the possible.
  • WED ED 414: Seminar 1
    This seminar will guide students in developing community engagement practices critical for co-designing educational environments that aim to disrupt inequitable, unjust systems and to create alternative models of learning as lived arguments for the possible.