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Tag: University of Arkansas at Little Rock

  • University Recognized for Preparing Future Teachers in the Science of Reading

    University Recognized for Preparing Future Teachers in the Science of Reading

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    Newswise — The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has been recognized by the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) for its excellent preparation of future teachers in how to teach reading.

    UA Little Rock earned an A grade in NCTQ’s new report, “Teacher Prep Review: Strengthening Elementary Reading Instruction.”

    UA Little Rock is among just 23 percent nationwide to earn an A from NCTQ for meeting standards set by literacy experts for coverage of the most effective methods of reading instruction—often called the “science of reading.”

    The new NCTQ analysis of teacher preparation programs’ coverage of the science of reading was developed over the course of two years, involving teams of literacy experts, researchers, teacher preparation leaders, and educators. NCTQ evaluated 693 traditional undergraduate and graduate programs across the country, including 13 in Arkansas. Overall, just 112 programs earned an A and 48 earned an A+.

    “We are thankful to NCTQ for this recognition,” said Dr. Sarah Beth Estes, dean of the College of Humanities, Arts, Education, and Social Sciences. “This rating reflects UA Little Rock’s dedication to ensuring Arkansas children experience effective literacy instruction.”

    To evaluate the quality of preparation being provided, a team of experts at NCTQ analyzed syllabi, including lecture schedules and topics, background reading materials, class assessments, assignments, and opportunities to practice instruction in required literacy courses for undergraduate elementary teacher candidates at UA Little Rock.

    To earn an A, programs needed to meet NCTQ’s targets for coverage of the five core components of scientifically based reading instruction—phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension—and not teach more than three instructional methods that are unsupported by the research on effective reading instruction.

    While some portion of children will learn to read naturally, over five decades of research have established the components of explicit, scientifically based reading instruction that help most students become successful readers. Research suggests that over 90 percent of children could learn to read if their teachers used instructional methods grounded in the science of reading.

    The Elementary Education K-6 program at UA Little Rock provides a strong foundation for students who want to teach Kindergarten through sixth grade. Graduates are provided with a comprehensive understanding of teaching young learners and of the need for a learning environment that is responsive to students’ developmental needs.

    The UA Little Rock School of Education believes in fostering and enhancing the lives of children, with the ultimate goal of nurturing competent future citizens. To that end, the School of Education is making continuous improvements to the Bachelor of Science in Education degree programs.

    “In fall 2022, the BSE in Elementary Education was revised to include stronger alignment to the Science of Reading across all literacy courses,” said Dr. Kent Layton, interim director of the School of Education. “An additional math course was added to ensure candidates possess sufficient content knowledge. In addition to our expanded math and science methods courses to cover K-6 strategies, we added a one-hour math/science course that focuses on STEM integration. Course work for the last two years has been reorganized to include a Praxis semester and a Literacy semester so that candidates are well prepared to pass their required Praxis subtests and Literacy test prior to their one-year internship in the schools.”

    UA Little Rock is proud to be recognized among the programs ensuring that future elementary teachers enter the classroom equipped with the knowledge and skills they need to help students become strong readers.

    “UA Little Rock has worked diligently to evaluate its literacy curriculum to ensure teacher candidates receive evidence-based approaches and strategies that align with Science of Reading,” said Dr. Leslie Sharp, assistant professor of elementary education. “We were ecstatic to receive an A for our hard work and commitment. As a result of our curriculum updates and continued professional development evolving around Science of Reading over the past two years, our pass rates across all programs have increased to 88-92 percent on the required national test, Foundations of Reading Exam.”

    NCTQ is a nonpartisan research and policy organization on mission to ensure every child has access to an effective teacher and every teacher has the opportunity to be effective.

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  • College Students Win Harold E. Eisenberg Foundation’s Annual Real Estate Challenge

    College Students Win Harold E. Eisenberg Foundation’s Annual Real Estate Challenge

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    BYLINE: Angelita Faller

    Newswise — A group of University of Arkansas at Little Rock students won a national Real Estate Challenge in Chicago, winning a $5,000 scholarship that will be used to support finance/real estate students at UA Little Rock.

    UA Little Rock was the Undergraduate Division Winner of the Harold E. Eisenberg Foundation’s Annual Real Estate Challenge, which matches teams from selected universities in a competition focusing on a high-profile development/redevelopment project in the Chicago Metropolitan area.

    UA Little Rock was one of a dozen teams competing in the high-profile competition, including Georgia State, Tulane, Loyola, Marquette, Michigan State, Ohio State, and the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.

    “When they said our name, I was in total disbelief that we had actually won,” said Lamar Townsend, a junior double major in finance-real estate and political science from Maumelle. “We were up against some very elite and highly resourced schools, so I thought our chances of winning were slim. However, I am honored and humbled that the Eisenberg Foundation gave us the opportunity to participate in this opportunity. It was truly a great experience.”

    Each team is assigned the same case site and provided the same essential information and assumptions about the property. The students’ development plan must constitute a comprehensive analysis and conclusion of how to maximize the potential of the property from both a quantitative (financial) and qualitative (feasibility) standpoint. 

    “We decided to place an entertainment venue with retail and restaurants at the waterfront and then an office building and learning center on the interior of the island,” said Adison Cummings, a junior double majoring in architectural engineering and civil engineering from Texarkana. “We wanted to make that area a bustling hub to help bring back life into Goose Island.”

    The award-winning students were all a part of the Real Estate Development course taught by Elizabeth Small, director of business networks and instructor of real estate development.

    The winning students include Adison Cummings, Paige Goodale, David Lopez, Victoria Temples, and Lamar Townsend. Presenting teams were limited to five students, but UA Little Rock students Jake Anderson and Mika Berry were also members of the real estate class who worked on the project. In Chicago, the team was assisted by industry mentors Jenna Goebig and Siteng Ma.

    “We had a wonderful teacher and mentors, coaching us through the process. They provided us with the connections we needed, as well as helping us to present,” said Paige Goodale, a senior double majoring in business finance and real estate. “I learned so much about development that I never expected to learn, like how to create a letter of intent, targeting a market audience, eliminating ideas that don’t work, contacting business owners, creating connections, the process of creating comps, and how financing and construction costs are created.”

    Small added that her students went above and beyond on this project, letting nothing, not even a tornado, stand in their way.

    “The students’ project paper was actually due at 4 p.m. March 31, the day the tornado struck Little Rock and Central Arkansas,” Small said. “While our Zoom meetings kept getting interrupted for students to take shelter, the paper got turned in with eight minutes to spare. One student, Jake Anderson, had to leave to check on his grandmother’s house in Little Rock, but his first question that evening was whether the paper got turned in on time. I’ve never seen such a dedicated group of students.”

    The students traveled to Chicago on April 14 and got to tour Goose Island, the site of the redevelopment project for the Eisenberg Foundation’s Annual Real Estate Challenge, with Goebig. Their second industry mentor, Ma, is in China, but met with the group virtually to give them tips for their presentation. Remarkably, Ma is a graduate of Little Rock Central High School, and his parents have both worked at UA Little Rock in the past, leading to his desire to serve as a mentor to UA Little Rock’s team.

    The team made their presentation to the Eisenberg Foundation on April 15, with four out of five students sporting business outfits they picked from UA Little Rock’s Trojan Career Closet. The students proposed what to build on a three-acre empty waterfront lot and a six-story abandoned storage building. They decided on a multi-use office building called “The Cove,” with space for an LA Fitness on the top floor, a STEM innovation hub, an art gallery, WeWork space, and rooftop green space for the abandoned building.

    “We wanted to renovate the building with an adaptive reuse technique for sustainability reasons,” Townsend said. “The other waterfront site would be called ‘The Boatyard,’ and this was planned to be a destination entertainment venue with a 125,000 square-foot building with multiple vendors including Keg Grove Brewery and a space for a bowling/ arcade area. We also wanted a lot of green space along the waterfront, a water taxi stop, and space for an outdoor stage.”

    Victoria Temples, a senior real estate and finance major from Little Rock, added that the two proposed mixed-use buildings would create a bustling community hub that would complement the area developing around it.

    “A new casino, a nearly 3,000-unit apartment complex, and expansive river trail system are currently underway, so our developments greatly enhance the surrounding area,” Temples said. “Because we had a varied mix of uses, our development can be utilized 24/7, which is very important for the Chicago area.”

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  • UA Little Rock Receives $150,000 NSA Grant to Host Cybersecurity Educational Program Across Arkansas

    UA Little Rock Receives $150,000 NSA Grant to Host Cybersecurity Educational Program Across Arkansas

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    Newswise — The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has received a nearly $150,000 grant from the National Security Agency to hold a year’s worth of free cybersecurity educational events for junior high and high school students in Arkansas.

    UA Little Rock will partner with Philander Smith College to host the 2nd Arkansas GenCyber Strength Training camp in Arkansas, which will support the state’s long-term investment in secondary school cybersecurity education.

    The grant will fund a free two-week cybersecurity summer camp at UA Little Rock in July 2023. In addition to the summer camp, UA Little Rock will host a series of quarterly education events designed as escape rooms with cybersecurity challenges to get Arkansas students excited about cybersecurity education.

    Those working on the grant include Dr. Philip Huff, assistant professor of cybersecurity at UA Little Rock, Sandra Leiterman, managing director of the UA Little Rock Cyber Arena, and Dr. Suzan Anwar, a UA Little Rock graduate, assistant professor, and department chair of computer science at Philander Smith College.

    The Arkansas GenCyber Strength Training program will be offered at no cost to up to 100 rising 7th-12th grade students in Arkansas. There will be both a virtual and in-person camp option so that students from across the state can participate even if they are unable to travel to Little Rock.

    Students will also participate in hands-on activities in cyber attacks and defense provided through UA Little Rock’s Cyber Arena, which already provides cloud-based cybersecurity labs to more than 500 virtual students in Arkansas.

    “Students will learn how to think like a hacker and stop cyber criminals in their tracks,” Leiterman said. “Each day will feature a world-renowned expert speaker in cybersecurity and the top hands-on cybersecurity training in the region. We will bring partners from industry, academia, and professional development organizations to provide multiple pathways to a cybersecurity career.”

    This two-week camp focuses on the GenCyber Cybersecurity Concepts. Participants will hear from industry experts about career opportunities and will learn about cybersecurity with state-of-the art hands-on activities that allows the students to experience cyberattacks from both the victim and adversary side.

    “I will teach portions of the camp, provide assistance to the teachers teaching the camp, assist in content and curriculum development to ensure it is relevant and unbiased to the target audience,” Anwar said. “Philander Smith College undergraduate student researchers will assist with camp preparation and develop cybersecurity labs and the GenCyber escape room used for outreach activities.”

    Those interested in the GenCyber programming should fill out this online form for more information.

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