The Foundations of
Education
Concentration
The Foundations of
Education
Concentration is one of four
specializations open to PPE
majors. It consists of
five courses that focus
on aspects of education.
This concentration is intended
for students who may wish to
pursue careers in teaching,
school administration, or
educational policy. It is
not, however, a
teacher-training program.
Students who take the
Foundations of Education Concentration
do not receive teacher
certification. Instead, they
receive intensive
preparation in important
ideas and skills that most
teacher training in the
United States neglects. The
students who take this
concentration acquire the
intellectual foundation they
need to become the next
generation of leaders in
American education.
The King’s College
recognizes that the vocation
of teaching requires years
of preparation. In most
states, public school
teachers must earn a
master’s degree to receive
permanent certification.
While many colleges and
universities offer
full-scale undergraduate
degree programs in education
leading to temporary teacher
certification, King’s has
chosen a different approach.
We believe the best
undergraduate preparation
for teaching is a solid
grasp of the politics,
philosophy, and economics of
education, as seen through
the lens of historical
analysis.
The
core curriculum
and the general
PPE
program introduce
students to the way schools
shape values and foster
citizenship. State-based
educational systems carry
out public policies that
reflect political and
economic realities. For most
of our history in the United
States, education was almost
exclusively a local and
state concern, but recently
the federal government has
assumed a much larger role.
The Foundations of Education
Concentration equips
students to analyze
government policies at all
levels and to assess the
practical constraints as
well as the philosophical
ideals of the educational
enterprise.
The first course in
the Foundations of Education
Concentration focuses on our
national experience,
identifying distinctive
features of a nearly
400-year history of American
education—from the
Mayflower Compact to
No Child Left Behind.
The next two courses
examine the history and
philosophy of education,
surveying the longstanding
tradition of classical
education—from which we
derive the Western concept
of “the liberal arts.” It
begins in ancient Greece;
travels through the Augustan
age of Roman oratory; dwells
on the formation of
Christian education in the
medieval period; surveys the
work of Renaissance and
Reformation thinkers;
considers the influence of
Enlightenment attitudes; and
brings students up-to-date
in the modern, even
postmodern world. The
fourth course surveys
education policy.
The fifth course
explores the challenges of
the teaching career. Those
who aspire to become
teachers must develop both
intellectual and
psychological strategies to
deal with unmotivated and
distracted students,
administrative
straight-jackets, union
politics, and numerous other
obstacles. The
teacher trained in
foundations of education knows how to
navigate this iceberg-laden
sea. |
|
|
|
Course |
Year |
Term |
Title |
Credits |
|
YEAR 1 |
|
|
|
|
CREDITS |
| POL |
110 |
1 |
Fall |
Introduction to Politics*
|
3 |
| ENG |
110 |
1 |
Fall |
College Writing I
|
3 |
| HIS |
111 |
1 |
Fall |
Western Civilization I
|
3 |
| REL |
111 |
1 |
Fall |
Introduction to New Testament Literature
|
3 |
| PHL |
110 |
1 |
Fall |
Logic*
|
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Fall Total |
15 |
| MAT |
140 |
1 |
Spring |
Mathematical Ideas and Practices*, or Pre-Calc, or Calc
(placement) |
3 |
| ENG |
120 |
1 |
Spring |
College Writing II
(ENG 110) |
3 |
| HIS |
112 |
1 |
Spring |
Western Civilization II
(HIS 111) |
3 |
| REL |
112 |
1 |
Spring |
Introduction to Old Testament Literature
(REL 111) |
3 |
| ECO |
112 |
1 |
Spring |
Macroeconomics*
|
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Spring Total |
15 |
| |
|
|
|
YEAR 1 CREDITS |
30 |
| |
|
YEAR 2 |
|
|
|
|
CREDITS |
| PHL |
211 |
2 |
Fall |
Plato and Aristotle
(POL 110) |
3 |
| HIS |
211 |
2 |
Fall |
American Civilization I
(HIS 112) |
3 |
| ECO |
211 |
2 |
Fall |
Microeconomics*
((MAT 140 or MAT 150) and ECO 112) |
3 |
| POL |
213 |
2 |
Fall |
American Political Thought and Practice*
(POL 110) |
3 |
| ELEC |
|
2 |
Fall |
Elective
|
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Fall Total |
15 |
| POL |
212 |
2 |
Spring |
Enlightenment and Liberal Democracy
(PHL 211and HIS 112) |
3 |
| HIS |
212 |
2 |
Spring |
American Civilization II
(HIS 211) |
3 |
| REL |
212 |
2 |
Spring |
Foundations of Judeo-Christian Thought*
(REL 112) |
3 |
| ENG |
252 |
2 |
Spring |
Rhetoric*
(ENG 120) |
3 |
| EDU |
251 |
2 |
Spring |
History of American Education
|
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Spring Total |
15 |
| |
|
|
|
YEAR 2 CREDITS |
30 |
| |
|
YEAR 3 |
|
|
|
|
CREDITS |
| PHL |
351 |
3 |
Fall |
Culture and Aesthetics
(ENG 252) |
3 |
| PHL |
361 |
3 |
Fall |
Ethics
|
3 |
| POL |
351 |
3 |
Fall |
Constitutional Law
(POL 213 and HIS 212) |
3 |
| ECO |
311 |
3 |
Fall |
History of Economic Thought
|
3 |
| EDU |
351 |
3 |
Fall |
History and Philosophy of Education I
|
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Fall Total |
15 |
| PHL |
312 |
3 |
Spring |
Philosophical Apologetics
(REL 212 and PHL 110) |
3 |
| MAT |
352 |
3 |
Spring |
Statistics
(MAT 140 or MAT 150) |
3 |
| POL |
352 |
3 |
Spring |
Public Policy
(ENG 252 and POL 212) |
3 |
| EDU |
352 |
3 |
Spring |
History and Philosophy of Education II
(EDU 351) |
3 |
| ELEC |
|
3 |
Spring |
Elective
|
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Spring Total |
15 |
| |
|
|
|
YEAR 3 CREDITS |
30 |
| |
|
YEAR 4 |
|
|
|
|
CREDITS |
| ECO |
451 |
4 |
Fall |
Public Choice
(ECO 211) |
3 |
| POL |
451 |
4 |
Fall |
Civil Rights
(POL 212 and POL 351) |
3 |
| PPE |
451 |
4 |
Fall |
Senior Thesis*
(Senior Status) |
3 |
| EDU |
451 |
4 |
Fall |
Education Policy
(EDU 251 and EDU 352) |
3 |
| ELEC |
|
4 |
Fall |
Elective
|
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Fall Total |
15 |
| ECO |
452 |
4 |
Spring |
Political Economy
(ECO 112) |
3 |
| POL |
452 |
4 |
Spring |
Statesmanship
(POL 212) |
3 |
| POL |
454 |
4 |
Spring |
American Foreign Policy
(HIS 212 and POL 213) |
3 |
| PHL |
412 |
4 |
Spring |
Theories of Human Nature
(REL 212) |
3 |
| EDU |
452 |
4 |
Spring |
The Teaching Career
(EDU 251 and EDU 352) |
3 |
| |
|
|
|
Spring Total |
15 |
| |
|
|
|
YEAR 4 CREDITS |
30 |
| |
|
|
|
TOTAL FOR DEGREE |
120 |
* These courses are offered
in both the Fall and the Spring,
students may take them in either
semester.|** Courses in bold
(POL 110 and ENG 120) must be
taken at King's. No
transfer credit accepted.
While completing this course
of study, the following
requirements must be met:
While the Bachelor of Arts in
Politics, Philosophy, and
Economics program may be started
at the beginning of any
semester, students should be
aware that not all courses will
be offered each semester.