Graduate Certificate in Teaching Students with Moderate Disabilities (PreK–8)

The Boston University Wheelock College of Education & Human Development offers a Graduate Certificate program for qualified post-baccalaureate students who are interested in receiving an Initial Licensure as a Teacher of Students with Moderate Disabilities, Grades PreK–8. Students who are successful in completing this program will develop the knowledge and skills necessary as a beginning Teacher of Students with Moderate Disabilities, Grades PreK–8. Specifically, the learning outcomes are as follows.

Students will:

  • Plan, implement, and evaluate individualized and data-based instruction for students with disabilities using the principles of explicit instruction, school-wide positive behavior supports, and other evidence-based practices.
  • Demonstrate knowledge of typical child development and learning, characteristics of common disabilities, and tenets of special education policy and practice; and describe how they impact students’ experiences in schools.
  • Demonstrate a disposition, and articulate a teaching philosophy, that promotes equity, includes collaboration with families, and reflects the principles of inclusive education for students with disabilities.
  • Engage in a professional manner with colleagues, students, and families.
  • Use data to inform decisionmaking in their classroom, as well as use existing data and current research to guide their practice.

For those students successful in completing all the courses and the practicum in this certificate program, the Wheelock College of Education & Human Development provides a recommendation for licensure to the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) Office of Educator Licensure. Students must also apply directly to the DESE and are required to take additional tests (Massachusetts Test for Educator Licensure [MTELs]) to secure licenses.

Requirements for licensure as Teacher of Students with Moderate Disabilities, Grades PreK–8 are listed below. Please note, prior coursework may be submitted for review to determine equivalency. If determined to be equivalent, required courses listed may be waived as a part of the certificate program.

To be eligible for the student-teaching practicum in the Special Education Program, graduate students must have:

  • earned a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.0 in all BU coursework;
  • obtained a grade of B or higher in the required pre-practicum Special Education course; and
  • passed the Gateway Assessments.

Additionally, students must have:

  • maintained a record of having consistently demonstrated professional behavior in person and in written communication;
  • provided documentation of having met school district CORI/SORI and fingerprinting requirements; and
  • gained approval for student-teaching by their academic advisor, placement coordinator, and the program director.

Total Units: 46

  • WED LR 551 Reading Development, Assessment, and Instruction (4 units)
  • WED LS 560 Introduction to Language and Language Acquisition (4 units)
  • WED ME 503 Mathematical Reasoning in the Elementary Grades: Number and Operations (4 units)
  • WED ME 504 Mathematical Reasoning in the Elementary Grades: Algebra, Geometry, and Statistics (4 units)
  • WED SE 534 Classroom and Behavior Management (2 units)
  • WED SE 580 Methods and Materials in Special Ed (4 units)
  • WED SE 593 Practicum: Moderate Disabilities, PreK–8 (8 units)
  • WED SE 613 Fieldwork in Special Education: Moderate Disabilities (2 units)
  • WED SE 706 Introduction to Special Education (4 units)
  • WED SE 751 Assessment in Special Education: Procedures (4 units)
  • WED SE 760 Cognition, Learning & Behavior (2 units)
  • WED TL 520 Teaching English Language Learners (4 units)