Points of Pride - Teacher Education Program

Here are some of the points of pride related to this program -- all good reasons why prospective high school physics teachers should seriously consider attending Illinois State University.

Illinois State University's Physics Teacher Education Program:

People:

  • Ken Wester, our program coordinator, is a NBPTS Board Certified master high school physics teachers of 25 years experience, a Presidential Award Winner, and an AAPT Physics Teaching Resource Agent (PTRA).
  • Carl Wenning, retired program coordinator, was recognized by the ISU College of Arts and Science as 2008 Outstanding College Teacher Award.
  • Tom Holbrook at University High School and with whom all PTE majors first teach was named the 2008 Presidential Award Winner for science in the state of Illinois. Tom traveled to Washington, DC, to receive the award from the President of the USA along with a $10,000 award in recognition of his exemplary service. Tom is also an AAPT Physics Teaching Resource Agent (PTRA).
  • Amy Erxleben, a PTE major, was named the 2008 Outstanding Teaching Assistant by the ISU Physics Department.
  • Shane Hanson, 2008 PTE graduate, was named the 2008 Outstanding Graduating Senior by the ISU Physics Department.
  • Gary Shepard, 2004 PTE graduate, was named 2006-2007 Teacher of the Year by the Osceola School District in Osceola, Florida.
  • Rebecca Wenning, 2007 PTE graduate, was named the ISU Physics Department's 2007 Outstanding Graduating Senior on April 17, 2007.
  • Charles Adamovic, 1977 PTE graduate, was named the 2007 Outstanding High School Physics Teacher of Illinois by the Illinois Section of the American Association of Physics Teachers on April 13, 2007.
  • Carl Wenning received the third in a series of grant awards to fund the Chicago ITQ Science Project. The Project has received over $400,000 in funds from the U.S. Department of Education since 2005, and more than $500,000 since 2001.
  • Rebecca Wenning, PTE major, was named a Robert G. Bone Scholar during autumn 2006. The title "Bone Scholar" is the highest academic accolade awarded by ISU to undergraduates and recognizes exemplary scholarship, leadership, and service.
  • Rebecca Wenning, PTE major, was awarded the inaugural Laurine B. Reiske Scholarship on March 1, 2006, by the College of Arts & Sciences. This is the largest cash award given to undergraduate majors within the college.
  • Carl Wenning, program coordinator, received the first ever Outstanding University Teacher Award - Category II - Administrative/Professional during the 1999-2000 academic year "in recognition of exemplary achievements in teaching."
  • Carl Wenning received the first ever A/P Service Award from the College of Arts & Sciences during February 2005.
  • Carl Wenning was named one of three initial PTRA Rural Coordinators by the American Association of Physics Teachers in 2000. He has subsequently been funded by the AAPT to host 5 summer PTRA Rural Institutes from 2001-2005.
  • From 2005-2007 Carl Wenning received $400,000 in grant funding to operate the Chicago ITQ Project through which 62 in-service high school physics teachers learned the Modeling Method of Instruction.
  • During the 2004-2005 academic year Carl Wenning received nearly $250,000 in funds to support three workshops/projects. Support was provided by the NASA-Space Telescope Science Institute, the Illinois Board of Higher Education, and the American Association of Physics Teachers.
  • Carl Wenning is editor-in-chief of the Journal of Physics Teacher Education Online, a publication with an international following started in June 2002.
  • Carl Wenning heads the Illinois Pipeline Project dealing with high school physics teacher candidate recruitment, preparation, and retention.
  • Rebecca Wenning, PTE major, received the only 2004 Barbara Lotze National Scholarship conferred by the American Association of Physics Teachers. The award recognized her is the top Physics Teacher Education candidate in the U.S.

Additional aspects:

  • has over 85% of its program graduates from 1995-2008 currently teaching. This compares quite favorably with a national drop out rate of 50% after only five years.
  • has interfaced with about 25% of all Illinois high school physics teachers through their professional development programs since 2001.
  • is one of 27 Physics Education degree granting institutions in Illinois, and yet it has graduated 15%-20% to all majors in the field over the past five years.
  • has had a 800% rise in the number of students enrolled in its physics teacher education program over the past ten years making it the largest such program in the nation.
  • is by far the largest such program in the state of Illinois with 40+ Physics Teacher Education majors; the state average is less than five with most programs having zero to two.
  • is large enough to provide the most extensive high school physics teacher preparation of any program in the nation.
  • has a well-thought-out teacher preparation philosophy and plan of study
  • has innovative clinical experiences such a the Service Learning Project (PHY 209) and Social Context Project (PHY 353)
  • has on-line physics teacher education course content
  • has an on-line student advisement manual
  • provides many opportunities for teacher candidates to teach and grade laboratory work and get involve in physics research.