Campus News

COE prof receives $1.23 million grant for teacher prep program

College of Education professor Cynthia Vail received a $1.23 million U.S. Department of Education grant to continue and expand the Birth through Five teacher preparation program she has pioneered during the past five years.

Research shows that high quality early learning and development programs lay the foundation for social and academic skills that facilitate children’s success in school. There also is mounting evidence that close relationships between teachers and children are an important part of creating high quality care environments and positive child outcomes, said Vail, an associate professor and director of special education programs.

Vail developed the undergraduate Birth through Five program at UGA with an initial $790,597 DOE grant in 2008 in response to a critical need in Georgia to prepare highly qualified personnel to work with infants, toddlers and young children, both normally developing and those with disabilities.

“The purpose of this project is to support a newly revised undergraduate program and to develop a new graduate emphasis area,” Vail said. “These programs will prepare responsive, early education and care providers for a relatively new Georgia teaching certification in Birth through Five. We promote an inclusion model in which teachers are prepared to meet the individual needs of all children in their classrooms and programs.”

The Responsive Early Education for Diversity program is a joint effort among the college’s department of communication sciences and special education, the Clarke County School’s Office of Early Learning (high-need urban) and Madison County School’s preschool special education ­program (high-need rural).

During the course of the five-year ­funding, 47 professionals will be prepared to work with high-need infants, toddlers and young children and their families. These graduates will be eligible for Georgia’s Birth through Five and Preschool Special Education certification that is based on standards set forth by both the Division for Early Childhood and the National Association for Education of Young Children, said Vail.

Along with the new Birth through Five personnel preparation curriculum, the project also will target such focus areas as meeting the needs of young learners and families who live in poverty, including English language learners, and specifically, the growing Latino population; early literacy for diverse learners; early social emotional development and positive behavior support; and, coaching.

Grant funds will support students who commit to provide two to four years of teaching service to programs that include infants, toddlers or preschoolers with disabilities.