Applying to a doctorate program part 1

With the amount of schools that offer doctorate programs, which school should you be applying to for the Ph.D?

Do you know what degree to pursue and will the degree actually help you get the job you want?

As I venture through the many Ph.D school options, for profit and not-for-profit, I was wondering who else has had questions about which school and which program should be chosen. If I want to work in higher education either as a Professor or at the administration level, then I assume I would need to apply to a Ed.D program which focuses on higher education. But honestly there is no college program which can guarantee that I will get a job which my degree is in. I also don’t want to make a mistake and spend 3-7 years completing my degree where my degree from XYZ school will be looked at as a joke. (Yes all these questions do cross my mind.)

How long is the program to achieve the graduate degree? Is it a 2 year, 3 year or 7 year Ph.D program? Is it a distance study, self-motivated program, all in-person classroom, or online classrooms with a few weeks of in-person residency plus video conferencing?

So once the school is decided upon, now the application process. From filing the FAFSA forms, potential grants to the application and then the entrance essay which is needed. Many applications charge a fee plus having to get your transcripts sent to the potential graduate school. Some colleges even charge to have your official transcripts sent!

What is the next step? You made the decision to apply which you thought was hard.

How do you get motivated to write a 5 page college entrance essay?

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How did you pay for college?

There are many different ways people pay for college. From parents setting up a 529 plan or a savings account when they are in childhood to scholarships, grants, student loans, credit cards or just good old cash.

How did you pay for college education?

During my undergraduate studies, I paid my schooling through student loans or FAFSA. I actually got a grant for a few semesters as well but most of my college schooling was paid through federally funded loans. My parents did not have a college savings plan for me; they never intended on helping me pay for my higher education studies. I also ran a private tutoring service, was a nanny and taught part time which helped paid for school items which the student loans didn’t support like books.

When I decided to study for my Masters degree, I found out that the State of NJ offered tuition waivers and this is how I paid for my two years of graduate school. It was like found money which allowed me to go to graduate school and complete my first graduate degree without worrying about paying back any loan money.

Does your state currently offer a tuition waiver program? Have you ever checked?

Did your parents put money aside for your college years to help pay for your higher educational learning?

Were you able to qualify for scholarships or grants?

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Red Fez, Austin, Texas

While attending South by Southwest 2011, we spent a Friday night downtown at the Red Fez in Austin, Texas and had an awesome time! I mean, a really great, old skool time.

Besides the cool atmosphere of a middle eastern themed bar, the staff rocked, DJ Daze was just great! He knew what to play and when to play it to get the crowd dancing and continue dancing for 4 hours straight. The music was a mix of Top 40, reggaeton, old skool hip-hop & some latin and indian flavor mixed in. For a graduate student who hasn’t been out dancing in a while, the mix was perfect for my taste.

Their premium sheshah selection of Hookah was smooth and quite enjoyable. Try the Blueberry, I highly recommend it. :)

During my next trip to Austin, I will definitely stop in again at the Red Fez on a Friday night. Festivities begin around 10:30pm and go till 2am.  I went to 4 different places on the next night and they all sucked. The music, the culture, everything! Some girl whipped out a huge jump rope and started jumping rope at the last place we ended up after going to the hyped up Copyblogger party (yeah, it sucked).

Red Fez on a Friday night was where it was at during SXSW 2011! Till next year!

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Is the Adult Student the New ‘Traditional’ Student?

As written on HigherEdJobs.com: There are many varying definitions of the terms adult learner and non-traditional student. A fact that can be agreed on, however, is that the number of students falling into these categories has been on the rise over the past several years and at most institutions, this demographic outweighs the number of traditional students who enter directly after high school. Are colleges and universities recognizing this change, and what are staff and faculty doing to help adult learners and all students succeed with the increasing pressures of balancing personal and academic lives?

Luckily I have had the pleasure of teaching both in traditional, face to face college classrooms as well as teaching online for a variety of different colleges and university sizes. With the ever changing job market, this also has changed the time of when most students would attend college, usually right after high school. I have seen a change in the student’s ages over the past 10 years. When I started teaching at the higher ed level, most of my students were fresh out of high school. Today, most of my students are older, have families and many have even raised their families and are attending college with their children! It is so wonderful to see but I never thought I would be teaching a mother and child the same course!

For graduate students, many of us are adult students and learners so we juggle our many roles of life. But are we now considered traditional students? Have we put our other life goals and making money first before continuing our educational studies?

Join the conversation! Do you consider yourself an adult student or a traditional student?

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Is an MAT Right for You?

For many post-bachelor graduates, after working in corporate land they may have a desire to do more with their lives. Usually after the choices of becoming a doctor, lawyer and florist; teacher seems to be the logical one. With an MAT (Master of Arts in Teaching) graduate program, now you can not only earn your Masters degree but a teaching certification in elementary education.

The pros of getting your MAT, you spend 2 years working hard to gain a graduate degree which is looked at as a Masters degree. You hold a Masters degree and can use it for certain teaching circumstances like higher education if you desire to teach college.

The cons are you are told that an MAT will increase your chances of getting an elementary school teaching position when you graduate and then find out the reality after you spent 2 years of your life, sleepless nights and weekends to earn the degree that when you apply for a job, many times your application is overlooked.

Why? In many school districts, when you begin with a graduate degree, it means you begin at a higher pay scale. Starting at a higher pay scale means more money spent on teacher salaries which means in the long term if you decide to go for more graduate schooling, now they have to pay you an even higher salary.

If you were the hiring manager for a school and a candidate that you can pay $3-$5K less per year vs the candidate with a graduate degree applied, who would you choose? Always budget conscious, the less pay always wins.

BUT WAIT! When school districts pay tuition for graduate school for their employees, have they figured out the amount of money they pay out for tuition and then the added salary step to that teacher’s present salary equals to what a MAT candidate would be paid from day 1?

What are your thoughts? Is an MAT degree right for you?

Going for the Ph.D!

Once you achieve the bachelor’s degree, you tell yourself, I am done with SCHOOL forever! Then about a year after you graduate, you get an inkling for learning so you start looking and researching online for graduate programs but you are not quite sure you are ready to take that leap.

Another 2-7 years of studying to get another piece of paper in your hand… I know, believe me I know.

So a year after I graduated with my Bachelors in English Writing, I went back to get my Masters in Teaching. Before I graduated, I was asked to teach college level English courses. I accepted and became an Adjunct at 2 different schools. From that point on I decided I wanted to be a College Professor.

Fast forward 7 years later and I am still Adjuncting, what happened??? I started researching schools, I made two cross country moves, I grew my freelancing business into an actual small business and then I became a mother. Throughout all these life changes, I still continued to teach and I teach online at 3 different colleges as an English Professor though my ultimate goal is to be a full time English or Education Professor at 1 school.

To acheive this, I must go for the Ph.D to even be considered in many of the schools I would like to apply to a job to. I can have 7 years of college teaching experience in-class and online but the credits and degree is what colleges want. Yes, I could also publish and become an author or researcher but in 7 years, I haven’t figured out what to write about related to either subject.

If you want to know how to grow a business from nothing into a full time income, well then yes, that’s the book I can write for you! If you want to know about how online content publishing can achieve your wbesite high rankings in the SERP’s, then give me a call! increasing a corporations monthly profit of $500K? Will that count as publishings to get me an offer to teach college full time?

I’ll be waiting for that answer, meanwhile, back to the drawing board and studying for those graduate exams….

Till next time…

The Knowledge Gap

When Chip Kimball took over as the chief technology officer in Washington state’s Lake Washington school district more than a decade ago, he quickly realized that his boss, the superintendent, knew little about technology.

That knowledge gap, says Kimball, meant the district was buying very expensive hardware, like Ethernet switches, when less-expensive technology would have worked. “The tech team was overspecifying switches,” asking for all kinds of capabilities that weren’t really necessary, he says. “Had [the superintendent] known the right questions to ask, he probably could have gotten an indicator of that.”

Now that Kimball himself is the superintendent of the 23,500-student Lake Washington School District No. 414, in Redmond, Wash., the home of the Microsoft Corp., he sees firsthand how important it is for district leaders to understand technology.

“Many superintendents say, ‘I don’t do technology, and that’s why I hire somebody.’ But they get led down the primrose path, and that’s why it blows up on them,” says Kimball, who became the superintendent in June of 2007.

Kimball is one of what appears to be only a handful of district superintendents who have experience as chief technology officers. Most technology experts say superintendents, in general, are sorely lacking in both the basics of using technology and its applications in the classroom and throughout the district.

“The people who are in charge of facilitating schools’ transition to the digital global economy—superintendents and principals—are typically the least knowledgeable about the digital global economy,” says Scott McLeod, the founding director of the Center for Advanced Study of Technology Leadership in Education, or CASTLE, and the coordinator of the educational administration program at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. “It’s scary.”

‘Ask the Right Questions’

But superintendents don’t need to know the details about bits and bytes, experts say. That’s the role of a chief technology officer. What they do need to know is enough about technology to ask the right questions and be able to understand the instructional value of technology—something many technology directors aren’t trained to do.

“They don’t need to know the nuts and bolts, but they have to know when it makes more sense to go to a technology solution instead of a people solution,” McLeod says of superintendents. “They need to know what questions to ask about the school network, but they don’t need to know how it runs.”

“The people who are in charge of facilitating schools’ transition to the digital global economy—
superintendents and principals—are typically the least knowledgeable about the digital global economy. It’s scary.”

Scott McLeod

Founding Director, Center for the Advanced Study of Technology Leadership in Education

A technology survey of 125 superintendents and administrators in five Southern states done last year by Robert J. Hancock, an assistant professor of educational leadership and technology at Southeastern Louisiana University, found that school leaders are lacking in technology training. More than 96 percent of those surveyed said they were unaware of national, state, or local technology standards, and 88 percent said they had not attended a technology-training session for administrators in the past three years.

“With the superintendent as the chief decisionmaker, they’re going to rely on the expertise of the technology director, but often that person is not trained in administration,” says Hancock, who is working to launch the International Center for Technology in Administrative Practice, based at the university, in Hammond, La. “Optimal decisionmaking does not occur, because you might have a superintendent who doesn’t even know how to operate a PalmPilot handing over decisionmaking to an IT person who wouldn’t understand instructional concerns.”

Using technology to a district’s best advantage is an issue that spans every department—and superintendents need to consider that scope, says William R. Thomas, the director of educational technology for the Atlanta-based Southern Regional Education Board. Superintendents, he says, should always “ask the question: How can technology play a role in this? How can it improve student performance, help a teacher do their job more effectively and efficiently?”

Above all, superintendents need to have a vision for how technology improves district operations on every level, says Kimball. “If a superintendent doesn’t understand enough about the tools to articulate and create the vision, they’ll never be able to move the system along and prepare kids for the 21st century.”

‘Develop a Skill’

But where should superintendents get their training?

Few administrator-training programs include courses on using technology effectively, and national professional organizations have lagged in tackling the matter, says Don Knezek, the chief executive officer of the Washington-based International Society for Technology in Education, or ISTE, which has educational technology standards for administrators.

Technology Tips

To improve their knowledge of educational technology, school leaders should:

1: Check with national professional organizations to see what types of ed. tech. professional-development programs are offered and how they might fit into a busy schedule.

2: Contact technology-oriented education organizations to determine what type of ed. tech. training they offer.

3: Foster a relationship with a superintendent who has a high level of technology knowledge and skills; share tips and ideas.

4: Develop technology skills around a specific task. Pick a project and use technology to complete it.

5: Use a technology expert within your district as a mentor.

6: Understand how technology fits into your overall vision for your district, and communicate that clearly to administrators and teachers.

“There’s no question that professional organizations need to step up,” Knezek says. ISTE is doing some technology-leadership training but not reaching many superintendents, he says.

In his survey, Hancock of Southeastern Louisiana University found that 98 percent of those questioned said their primary professional organization did not meet their technology-training needs.

Keith R. Krueger, the chief executive officer of the Washington-based Consortium for School Networking, or CoSN, says his group is looking closely at what superintendents need to know about technology now, and will publicly issue its findings later this year, when it will release a technology toolkit. So far, Krueger says, focus groups have found that many superintendents think of technology as “not my responsibility.”

“We need to be articulating a clear vision around school reform, or better yet how to transform our school systems,” he says.

But talking about technology isn’t engaging for many superintendents, Krueger says, so those who care about the subject need to find a way to reach the majority. “We need to make the case that technology links to their mission, which is ultimately about learning,” he says. “What does it enable us to do that we couldn’t do before?”

McLeod of CASTLE says his program offers workshops, seminars, and other training for superintendents.

The problem, says Kimball, the Lake Washington schools chief, is that superintendents often don’t have time to take classes or even take advantage of online professional-development opportunities. He believes superintendents who know they’re lacking in technology training need to put pressure on themselves to “become personally productive with technology.”

His advice is for a superintendent to find somebody within the district to be a mentor, or talk to high-performing fellow superintendents to gather information. Kimball also recommends targeting a project and tackling it using technology. That could mean using a superintendent’s blog to communicate with parents or staff members, doing a financial analysis with an Excel spreadsheet, crafting an effective PowerPoint presentation, or creating podcasts of speeches.

“Develop a skill around a task,” Kimball says.

And when it comes to technology, he says, superintendents must model good technology behavior.

“People watch everything a superintendent does: where they sit, what they do,” he says. “They’re also watching what kind of technology a superintendent uses, and how they manage it.”

Michelle R. Davis is the senior writer for Education Week’s Digital Directions.

Public education and our Nation’s children matter and we must raise our voices!

Marcie Lipsitt
Columnist EdNews.org

The Reverend Martin Luther King once said, “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” Public education and our Nation’s children matter and we must raise our voices, passion, and intensity for their sake and that of America’s future as the leader of all industrialized nations. The presidential candidates and the news media have been eerily silent during the political campaigns about the state of American schools.It is past time for some “straight talk about schools” (USA Today, January 14, 2008).So let’s talk.

In the current crop of presidential candidates no one on either side of the political/ideological aisle stands out as the trailblazer necessary to rebuild public education in America.For example, Mitt Romney is wrong in his belief that closing the achievement gap is “the civil rights issue of our time.”  The deterioration of public education for all of America’s children over the past 50 has been researched and reported by Presidents’ Eisenhower, Kennedy, Reagan and most recently Bush.President Reagan spoke to the crisis in his 1983 stark portrayal of public education, “A Nation at Risk.”Our Nation’s leadership and we the people have ignored 50 years of presidential commissions on education.Public education is the civil rights issue of our time and we now face the greatest threat the United States has known — the extinction of knowledge, literacy, creativity, drive, higher-level thinking skills and our place as the leader of the free world, global economy and workforce. Our children’s civil rights are being violated every day of their school year. It must stop, and today on, and in honor of Martin Luther King’s birthday would not be soon enough.

Like Martin Luther King, “I have a dream” that one of our presidential hopefuls will right now rise to the surface as the savior and warrior for public education in America, and recognize the “fierce urgency of now.”  Our next President and Congress will value our Nation’s children as their greatest obligation and greatest opportunity.  They will have the courage of conviction to put the needs of our children, our future workers, thinkers and leaders in the global workplace and workforce at the very top of their domestic policy agenda.

  • “I have a dream” our next President, Congress and Secretary of Education will establish a national curriculum.  Set a minimum benchmark for standards of academic, emotional and social excellence.  Our children are not competing across 50 states.They are competing with children in countries like Finland, Hong Kong, Canada, and worldwide.
  • “I have a dream” our next President and Congress will establish national teacher standards and certification requirements. Overhaul archaic teacher preparation programs and make clear to NCATE, the NEA and AFT; their role is to collaborate, embrace and implement new teacher methodology and a belief system that children of all socio-economic conditions and disabilities can learn.Teachers will be paid based upon merit, the performance of their students and they will be valued as a profession.
  • “I have a dream”; universal learning for all students and response to interventions will no longer be empty promises to a Nation of children with starving minds.Our children, pre-school through high school and beyond will have a thirst for knowledge and respect for education.
  • “I have a dream” all children will go to federally funded preschool and all eligible children will be enrolled and attend kindergarten.
  • “I have a dream” that 6.

1 million students with disabilities will be provided with meaningful educational benefit and a truly “free and appropriate education.”  Better than 97% will reach grade level proficiency and beyond, and the fewer than 3% born with devastating impairments will reach their individual maximum potential and productivity.  The Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services will be fully integrated into the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education as will the Individuals with Disability Education Act of 2004 into the No Child Left Behind.  All schools will be accountable to all children and will not look for the numerous ways to game the system.  No students will be excluded from accountability standards and the measurement of our schools’ yearly progress.

“I have a dream” this country and our next President will close the achievement gap for students economically disadvantaged, and will provide the tools necessary (including food, clothing, after-school, weekend and summer tutoring, even shelter) to allow every child the opportunity to live and be a part of the American Dream.

  • “I have a dream” not only Title 1 schools will be held accountable to the No Child Left Behind.  There will be an end to the “cost neutral” status for non-Title I schools and no children will be left behind.
  • “I have a dream” our next President and Congress will mandate the elimination of state assessments.  All children will be given expanded versions of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) and Program for International Student Assessment grades 2-11, followed by an exit exam for 12th graders or upon completion of high school.  Our children are not 50 states of children. They are our Nation’s children, and on last year’s Program for International Student Assessment test given to our 15 year olds; their average scores were lower than those of children in 30 industrialized countries.
  • ”I have a dream” Congress will pass and “a” President will sign legislation creating a national scholarship for students that graduate high school.  Vocational training and post-secondary education must become a standard instead of a goal.
  • “I have a dream” our next President will Increase federal funding for public education (including special education) to implement, maintain and further national curriculum and assessments.  The highest bar must be set and the President must lead by example.Public education and the maximum input and output of our children must become our Nation’s mantra; it’s anthem.
  • “I have a dream” illiteracy and high school drop-out rates will be attacked and obliterated as the evil enemy they are, and will become but a bad memory of a distant past and war that has been won.
  • “I have a dream” higher level thinking skills, innovation, leadership and creativity will be promoted and nurtured pre-school through high school.
  • “I have a dream” we will turn every possible child into a taxpayer and source of revenue, production, and pride.Education + Economy = “E” for “American Excellence.”
  • “I have a dream” we will see a President and a nation of people that once again value public education and we will not become the next fall of Rome.
  • “I have a dream” the 9-year-old girl at that recent town hall meeting questioning Mitt Romney about his “stands on education” is one day the person she can and wants to be; our future and just maybe our president.

Marcie Lipsitt

  • Michigan Alliance for Special Education
    (A grassroots volunteer education advocacy organization)
    willowgreen1@ameritech.

Apply Early for Federal Student Aid with the FAFSA

Contact: Jane Glickman or
Stephanie Babyak

The start of the calendar year also marks the beginning of the college financial aid season with the release of the U.S. Department of Education’s 2008-09 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The FAFSA is the qualifying form for all federal grants and loans as well as many state and private student aid programs.

Each year, the U.S. Department of Education disburses more than $80 billion in higher education grants and loans to students attending postsecondary schools, but, to qualify, students must first complete the FAFSA.

“We want to make sure students and families take full advantage of the billions of dollars in federal financial assistance available to them for postsecondary education each year,” Secretary Margaret Spellings said. “Most families are eligible to receive some type of financial aid; they just have to take that first step and complete the application.”

Each year, an estimated 14 million applicants apply, and more than 10 million receive some type of federal grant or loan.

More than 95 percent of FAFSAs are submitted online, and now, with several added features, it is easier than ever to apply online. Students and families can:

  • Request a personal identification number (PIN) and immediately receive it to electronically sign the application.
  • Submit an online FAFSA and immediately receive a confirmation with a preliminary expected family contribution.
  • List up to 10 schools to receive the provided financial aid information.
  • Copy parental information to another FAFSA application for a second or third child.

To determine aid eligibility, students and families should fill out the FAFSA as early as possible after Jan. 1 for the academic year beginning July 1. Many factors contribute to a student’s eligibility for federal financial aid besides income, such as the size of the family and the age of the oldest parent. Completing a FAFSA is the only way students and families can find out how much federal aid they are eligible to receive.

Although completing the FAFSA online is the preferred method for most families, there are other FAFSA filing options available, including downloading the form or ordering a hard copy. Both online and hard copy FAFSAs are available in English and Spanish at the Federal Student Aid Web site, www.federalstudentaid.ed.gov, by clicking FAFSA Filing Options.

Federal Student Aid, an office of the U.S. Department of Education, ensures that all eligible individuals can benefit from federally funded or federally guaranteed financial assistance for education beyond high school. To learn more, visit www.federalstudentaid.ed.gov.

Happy Festivus and Winter Carnival!

I was asked a very logical question last week about, “What do Jews do on Christmas?”

At first I laughed since this is one holiday that many of us actually follow the “stereotype.” Since moving to Arizona, we have not made too many connections with new friends but back in New Jersey, we had friends who were Non-Jews and if they invited us to come and celebrate with them, we would. I mean of course we didn’t eat the Ham but we would usually stop on by around dessert.

So to post the question again, “What do we do on Christmas?”

What do you think we do? We go out to eat some Chinese food and see a movie. Though last year, the Chinese food place we went to was closed and we ended up at a Mexican place, we USUALLY eat Chinese food so we will have to make sure to find a place that will be open tomorrow.

Don’t know what movie we are going to see yet, possibly that Nicholas Cage one, the Treasure something? If you know me on a personal level, I am not a movie buff but my husband is.

HAPPY FESTIVUS and WINTER CARNIVAL!