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Current Course Information
Summer 2008
Archived Course Information
Summer 2003 |
Fall 2003 |
Winter 2004 |
Spring 2004 |
Summer 2004 - Cohort I
Summer 2004 - Cohort II |
Fall 2004 - Cohort I |
Fall 2004 - Cohort II
Winter 2005 - Cohort I |
Winter 2005 - Cohort II |
Spring 2005 - Cohort I
Spring 2005 - Cohort II |
Summer 2005 |
Fall 2005 |
Winter 2006 |
Spring 2006 |
Summer 2006 |
Fall 2006 |
Winter 2007 |
Spring 2007 |
Summer 2007 |
Fall 2008 |
Winter 2008 |
Spring 2008
Summer 2006
Cohort I
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ED 299: Dissertation Research
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ED 298: Individual Study
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Cohort II
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ED 281: Evaluation of Educational Programs
This course introduces students to several methods in quantitative
research, including correlation, ordinary least squares regression
(OLS), and analysis of variance (ANOVA). Students learn how to
analyze experimental data and observational data through a
combination of class lectures, discussion of primary research, and
data analytic activities. In the data analytic activities, students
learn how to articulate clear questions stemming from prior
theoretical and empirical research, conduct exploratory data analyses
to observe emerging relationships between key dependent and
independent variables, implement an appropriate methodological
strategy, undertake inferential tests to test formal hypotheses,
check the assumptions underlying these of the methods, and
communicate the technical findings with accuracy and clarity.
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ED 299: Dissertation Research
Students receive faculty guidance in dissertation research.
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ED 294: Third Year Seminar: Dissertation Planning and Design
This course assists students in writing an outstanding dissertation
proposal. The course is organized as a writing workshop, with ongoing
collaborative study of the dissertation proposal genre and writing
and discussion of drafts of portions of student proposals under
development.
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Cohort III
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ED 278B: Studies of Diversity and Inequality in Education
This seminar provides a critical understanding of diversity and
inequality in education in relationship to larger social
stratification. The aim of this course is to unravel the processes of
social and economic reproduction and resistance in American
schooling. Students explore the unique ways in which culture and
power intersect within schools and schooling systems to reproduce and
resist educational inequality. In addition, students examine how
structures of domination and subordination are reproduced and
resisted through the "cultural practices" and experiences of
marginalized student populations. Special attention is given to the
transformative practices that enable students to circumvent
reproduction and struggle for a more democratic society. Particular
attention will be given to "race," "class," and "gender" frames for
understanding youth and their schooling experiences.
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ED 284: Research Epistemologies and Methodologies
Education 284 is the middle course in a quantitative core sequence
offered to students in the CSU/UCI Joint Ed. D. program. Topics
covered include: measurement, correlations, reliability and validity,
causation and correlation, population sampling, item properties, and
item design.
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ED 293: Second Year Seminar: Advanced Academic Writing
This second year seminar focuses on the development and refinement of
the student's qualifying paper that will serve as partial fulfillment
of requirements related to advancement to candidacy within the
CSU/UCI Ed.D. program. The qualifying paper takes the form of a
review of the scholarly literature related to a significant
educational issue/topic/problem of the student's choice. The
qualifying paper provides the program faculty with a substantive
example of student work directly related to the ability of the
student to continue in the program and to eventually produce a
quality dissertation. The content of this seminar is organized around
the assessment criteria that faculty reviewers use to evaluate the
qualifying papers.
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Cohort IV
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ED 222: Research Epistemologies and Methodologies
Research Epistemologies and Methodologies Part I
Part I of ED 222 introduces the quantitative research core to new
students in the CSU-UCI Joint Ed.D. Program. Topics covered include:
measures of central tendency and variability, efect sizes, hypothesis
testing, chi square, correlation, and regression.
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ED 222: Research Epistemologies and Methodologies
Research Epistemologies and Methodologies Part II
This course introduces students to the epistemological underpinnings
of educational research and to a range of research methodologies in
education. Students examine quantitative and qualitative studies by
reading and analyzing contemporary research. They critique selected
research studies pertinent to educational practice and policy.
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ED 259A: Perspectives on Learning and Cognition
This course provides an introduction to conceptual foundations of
learning and cognition. Topics include behaviorism, cognitive
architecture, complex cognition, motivation and volition, the brain
and cognition, expertise, psychometrics, and intelligence. Through
examining these topics, students explore such foundations for
doctoral study as the nature of inquiry in educational research,
standards of evidence, scholarly writing, and participation in a
field of scholarship.
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ED 292: Scholarship Tools and Information and Communication
Technologies for Doctoral Students
The goal of this course is to familiarize students with graduate
scholarship tools, particularly electronic tools and resources, that
can enhance their success as doctoral candidates. This goal is be
implemented through structured workshops, both collaborative and
independent student work, and practicing and applying the study tools
and resources introduced in the workshops. Doctoral study tools that
are explored include computer applications, multimedia presentation
technologies, digital libraries and electronic search techniques,
graduate study resources on the World Wide Web, bibliographic
software, and collaborative online communities and listserves.
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Copyright 2003 The Regents of the University of California
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