TSU College of Education Hosts 200 Teachers for Two-Week Program

TSU College of Education Hosts 200 Teachers for Two-Week Program

For the next two weeks, Tennessee elementary and middle school teachers will be receiving additional instruction as a means of  better equipping their students with the math skills necessary to excel in the classroom.

The College of Education is hosting 150 to 200 Metro-Nashville Public School (MNPS) teachers at the Avon Williams Campus in downtown Nashville through the Strengthening Instruction in Tennessee Elementary Schools: Focus on Mathematics (SITES-M) project.

This federally funded professional development opportunity is designed for teachers of elementary and middle schools to help them improve student performance. The project is coordinated by Tennessee State University and the Educational Testing Service. Project participants include Fisk University, LeMoyne-Owen College, Lane College and Knoxville College.

“The teachers that have come to the program will work with TSU professors as well as external consultants to increase their own knowledge of mathematics and bolster their skills at teaching math to their students,” said Dr. Peter Millet, dean of the College of Education.

Objectives of the SITES-M project are based on results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).  The 2009 NAEP Mathematics Assessment shows that African-Americans lag far behind their white counterparts, and that the gap–which begins early–only grows wider as they progress along the educational continuum.  To break this cycle of under prepared African-American students, evidence suggests that society must look to teachers for help.

The program, which is directed by Associate Professor Dr. Trinetia Respress, will also use the connections generated by participating teachers to recruit more students for the College of Education.

“We want to encourage the teachers coming here to further their education with graduate degrees from Tennessee State University,” Millet said.

This archived post was written by:

admin - who has written 193 posts on Tennessee State University Newsroom.


Contact the author

Leave a Reply

Nashville Weather

Today:Clear 64°F Clear
Sun Sunny
82/56
Mon Sunny
88/64
Tue Partly Cloudy
92/70

TSU Photos on flickr

TSU Quick Facts

Motto: Think, Work, Serve
Established: June 19, 1912
Type: Public, HBCU
Endowment: $28,926,133
Chancellor: Charles W. Manning
President: Melvin N. Johnson
Faculty: 431
Undergraduates: 6,827
Postgraduates: 1,997
Location: Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Campus: Urban, 500 acres (2 km²)
Former names: Tennessee A&I State Normal School for Negroes (1912); Tennessee A&I State Normal College (1925); Tennessee A&I State University (1951); Tennessee State University (1968)
Colors: Reflex Blue and White
Nickname: Tigers
Athletics: National Collegiate Athletic Association
Affiliations: Ohio Valley Conference
Web site: www.tnstate.edu

Tennessee State University

Tennessee State University, Nashville’s only public university, is the second most productive research institution in the Board of Regents system in terms of funded research, and the only public, Carnegie-classified doctoral/research university in middle Tennessee.

TSU’s research funding dollars currently exceed $40 million within the Tennessee Board of Regents system, which consists of 45 colleges, universities and technology centers.

The university has been listed for the past thirteen years in the U.S. News & World Report "Guide to America's Best Colleges."
Lower Main Cap Image