Course Description
Designed for educators who spend hours of their own time supplementing their curriculum with motivating and engaging activities, this course provides the opportunity to earn graduate-level professional development credit for developing new learning activities to enhance your curriculum. Whether you develop completely new activities or transform familiar ones with a new approach (e.g., capitalizing on the way the electronic generation learns), you can earn up to 3 graduate-level semester units of credit for work completed outside regular work hours. For every five new learning activities you develop and introduce in your classroom, you can earn one unit of credit, with the possibility of 3 units of professional development credit for 15 activities you complete or may have already completed! To earn credit, you only have to submit samples of the completed activities, a time log documenting the time spent developing your activities (outside of professionally paid hours), and proof of implementation of your activities in the classroom.
About University of the Pacific
University of the Pacific, established in 1851, is California’s oldest private chartered university and is fully accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC).
The credits offered are post-baccalaureate, graded, graduate-level semester units of credit, provided directly through University of the Pacific, Benerd College. They are specifically designed to meet the needs of educators for Salary Advancement and Recertification. The credits/units are acceptable where local districts approve and applicable to state licensing where authorized. We always encourage you to check with your employer for acceptability of these credits/units. Course participants are responsible to determine acceptability of these credits for their intended use. Each graduate-level semester credit is equivalent to 15 hours of academic involvement.
Course Objectives
Upon successful mastery of this course, you will be able to:
- Identify areas of the curriculum that will benefit most from new activities to provide scaffolding and extra support.
- Create a new activity to supplement your curriculum and enhance student learning and mastery of the course objectives.
- Integrate the new activities (a minimum of five) into your classroom learning process.
- Reflect on the effectiveness of the activities relative to your students’ learnings.
- Reflect on the impact of the new activities on your professional growth.