Passion, Purpose and Good Fortune
Cassidy Klock was almost certain she wanted to become a teacher. A fortune cookie and support from Duquesne’s School of Education sealed the deal.
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Teachers, school counselors, child psychologists and educational leaders play a crucial role in shaping the minds and futures of students. They have the ability to inspire and motivate their students to reach their full potential. Faculty, alum, students and staff in our School of Education are dedicated to providing the highest quality education to future generations. Their hard work and dedication impact anywhere…
Welcome to the School of Education at Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ! It is my honor to serve as Dean of the School of Education. We proudly prepare classroom educators, educational administrators, school counselors, mental health professionals and school psychologists.
Our guiding principles of justice, equity, and academic excellence inspire our work to increase student access and opportunities.
The Duquesne mission to serve God by serving students is embedded in all our programs. We work every day to enhance the needs of our professional disciplines and to make people aware of our disciplines' profound impact on our communities' overall well-being. We offer a bachelor’s degree, numerous master’s degrees and three doctoral degree programs in three departments. Our departments include the Department of Counseling Education and School Psychology; the Department of Instruction and Leadership in Education; and the Department of Educational Foundations and Leadership. In each department, we work to inspire and empower our graduates to make a positive impact on the world through teaching, research, leadership and service.
We believe in the transformative power of education. Together, our faculty, staff, students and alumni explore new ideas, challenge assumptions, and develop the skills and knowledge needed to lead in an ever-changing educational landscape. I invite you to learn more about the School of Education.
-Gretchen Givens Generett, Ph.D. | Dean and Professor, School of Education
Ed.D. Educational Leadership graduate student and founder of The Sisters Lifting As
We Climb Network has been named a Pittsburgh Magazine 40 Under 40 Honoree. Sharnay
Hearn Davis reflects, “As a woman of faith, being neighborly is in my DNA...This means
going beyond who lives next door and being interested and invested in someone reaching
their full potential.â€Graduate Student Named a Pittsburgh Magazine 40 Under 40 Honoree
Dean Gretchen Givens Generett discussed the role women play in education & the opportunities in education with colleagues Dr. Tina Chekan, Propel Schools’ CEO/Superintendent, and Dr. Alicia Harvey-Smith on, Pittsburgh Technical College’s President, on KDKA's Intersections.
Our students visited the Tohaali Community School which serves a Navajo population in rural New Mexico. They shared experiences of learning together alongside the middle school students.
Maggie Burke shared the obstacles she overcame as a young student and how she will take that insight and her preparation in our B.S.Ed. Early Childhood Education and M.S.Ed. Reading & Literacy Education program to make an impact in the lives of young learners as a reading specialist.
Zoe Brunick, an Early Childhood Education/PreK-4 student, asks elementary through high school students to imagine a life without teachers. The students also tell her about their favorite teachers, qualities that make a good teacher, their advice for teachers and more.
Cassidy Klock was almost certain she wanted to become a teacher. A fortune cookie and support from Duquesne’s School of Education sealed the deal.
Kenzie Bole can’t wait to join the ranks of the many outstanding educators who came before her, namely her mother. As the Peters Township, Pa., native pursues bigger goals in the School of Education, she remains mindful of the many ways teachers have been instrumental in her life—and how she’d like to return the favor for future generations.
Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ President Ken Gormley announced that total gifts and pledges to the University’s IGNITE comprehensive campaign have met and surpassed its history-making goal of $333,333,333—one third of a billion dollars.
Dr. Gretchen Givens Generett, Dean of our School of Education, weighs in on the launch
of the $10M student teacher stipend program just unveiled and available to college
education students in the Pittsburgh region. School of Education Early Childhood Education
student Zoe Brunick shares her excitement. From shipping donated books before arriving in Kenya to resourcing WhatsApp to spread
digital lesson content amongst students with limited access, Dr. Rachel Ayieko's determination
and her students' tenacity brought effective mathematics education to their classroom
in Jaramongi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology. After returning to
Duquesne and sharing this experience, Dr. Ayieko's students offered technological
resources to improve access to learning. All were inspired and impacted through Dr.
Ayieko's work as Carnegie African Diaspora Fellow. "The thing I’m most proud of is being a servant in all aspects of my life—public service,
education, and not just as mayor or mom or wife or community member. We all don’t
get the opportunity to serve and connect or make a difference, so it’s important to
show up when you do.†- Dr. Kenya Johns, Ph.D.'21 | Mayor of Beaver Falls “As a Secondary Education English major, I learned quickly that it was important to
me to teach empathy, creativity, and identity through the performing arts. Being able
to apply myself to creating an authentic research-based performance in Medea reaffirms
my passions as an English educator, and helps to keep me on my toes when I’m teaching
in my classroom. If I can wake up and teach my students each day, and get up on that
stage and perform each night, there’s nothing I can’t do.†- Susie Betten | B.S.Ed.
Secondary Education, English '24 Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ's Reading & Literacy Education professor and Reading Clinic Director
Dr. Carla Meyer shared on 90.5 WESA regarding new literacy standards and how reading
instruction is adapting! Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ's School of Education is ensuring our
curriculum aligns with statewide standards based on the science of reading. Fulbright Scholar and Ph.D. School Psychology student, Clyniece Hodge is preparing
to make an impact in the lives of children and families. She looks to expand on how
underdeveloped and developing countries can implement a process for identifying or
diagnosing disabilities in students and adopt evidence-based interventions that are
culturally and socially responsive in their education system.Featured content
$10M Student Teacher Stipend Program for PA
Solving Classroom Challenges with Creativity
It's Important to Show Up
Taking Literature and Learning to the Stage
Dr. Meyer Leading in Reading Education
Fulbright Scholar Preparing to Make an Impact
Information sourced from Zippia, the Pew Research Center, American Counseling Association, American School Counselor Association, Learn.org, Psychology Today and Duquesne's Graduate Outcomes Survey
96% of our graduates reported that their career position was related to their major. They are making an impact in the fields of K-12 education, higher education, healthcare and many other settings as educators, teachers, counselors & school psychologists, administrators, and more. 82% of our graduates who reported they will be attending graduate school, indicated that they will attend Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµ. This information is from the most recent graduate-reported outcomes data for our School of Education.
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