Rationale
In an effort to address some of the above issues, College of Education staff from The University of Findlay have met with superintendents, principals and teachers from local districts on several occasions. Through these discussions, we have developed an alternative approach to the current Post-Secondary Options program. This approach meets the challenges of providing seamless education while addressing educational issues faced by participating districts.
The University of Findlay's University-School Articulation (UF-USA) Partnership was conceptualized as a school-university articulation agreement that initially served 10-15 Northwest Ohio secondary schools by offering selected co-taught English, Math, Biology, Chemistry, Political Science, History, and Spanish courses. We intend to expand the course offerings as the needs or interests of the partnership schools change, depending on the availability of cooperating University faculty.
The University provides a Summer Training Institute for the qualified teachers who are recommended and selected to participate in the program. The training is specialized to the specific content area they will be teaching and directed by a University faculty member from that content area. The Institute is offered during the third week of June and varies from two-to-five days, depending on the course and past participation of teachers in the program. Teachers will receive one-to-three graduate credits for participating in the institutes, teaching their courses, and coordinating them with their University mentors.
Each participating school district must contribute $1200 per teacher partnership fee ($600 renewal) to participate in the program. Each high school student will pay $250 per three credit-hour course or $300 for a four credit-hour course. The student fees will be invoiced to the individual students, but the district may contribute all or portions of the student fees.
- Prepares entry-level courses and services related to high school students, with emphasis on university classes taught on high school campuses;
- Offers educators professional opportunities through the sharing of collaborative teaching and learning strategies;
- Encourages creative expansion and assessment of curriculum and instruction;
- Fosters teaching exchanges between high school and university faculty; and
- Provides high school students the opportunity to complete introductory college courses and obtain college credits for successful completion of the courses.