Contact:
Jill Christian-Lynch, Program Coordinator, 171 Huntington Hall, jclynch@syr.edu
The Early Childhood Special Education program leads to certification in both general early childhood and early childhood special education, birth through grade 2. This program reflects the most up-to-date thinking about teaching infants, preschoolers, and primary-age children (with or without disabilities). The primary goal of the program is to prepare teachers to work effectively with children of a variety of ages and cultural and linguistic abilities, and serve children in a range of home, community, and educational settings. We seek to accomplish this through collaboration and teamwork among professionals of diverse disciplines and in partnership with the families we serve.
The program draws upon the expertise and scholarship of faculty members who are leaders in the fields of child and family studies, early childhood, special and elementary education, literacy, and other related professional disciplines. The program has a long-standing history of providing training that infuses clinical practice with current research. As they study areas such as early assessment and intervention with infants, students work closely with faculty members who have extensive clinical experience. We have developed close ties and strong relationships with community educators and other professionals who serve high-needs populations of young children and families.
This program meets the academic requirements for both New York State early childhood birth-grade 2 and students with disabilities birth-grade 2 teaching certificates. We admit:
- students who have backgrounds or certification in one (but not both) of these areas (early childhood or special education);
- students who have certification in another teacher certification area;
- qualified students who do not have previous education coursework.
Core Liberal Arts Requirements
The requirements of this program include several undergraduate liberal arts content core courses. Each applicant will have undergraduate transcripts reviewed for the liberal arts requirements listed below. Missing coursework does not need to be completed before applying but must be completed before a degree can be granted.
- A liberal arts major or concentration of at least 30 credits, of which at least 9 credits represent upper division courses. (We will work with students who have non-liberal arts majors to build an appropriate liberal arts concentration and identify any additional courses needed.)
- College-level courses of at least 3 credits in each of the areas below, with no grade below a C:
- Two English Language Arts courses: one emphasizing writing instruction; a second course in writing, literature, or speaking
- Two appropriate mathematics courses
- Two appropriate natural science courses
- Two social studies courses including one history course and one social science course that is not psychology