Community and Professional Education / en Course Options for ISBE Hours /academics/our-centers-and-programs/community-and-professional-education/course-options-isbe-hours Course Options for ISBE Hours Christie Miller Mon, 11/23/2020 - 11:33

ONLINE COURSES FOR ISBE CLOCK HOURS


More than 30 high-quality online courses for 30 or 45 ISBE hours. Follow the link to view a list of courses and syllabi.


Cost-effective ISBE hour options that provide 15, 30 or 45 hours in an online course format. Choose from more than 80 courses in a constantly growing menu covering a wide range of educational topics.

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Mon, 23 Nov 2020 17:33:01 +0000 Christie Miller 92351 at
Student Intake Form /student-intake-form Student Intake Form Christie Miller Wed, 08/19/2020 - 11:52   ]]> Wed, 19 Aug 2020 16:52:07 +0000 Christie Miller 91741 at Tutor Application Form /tutor-application-form Tutor Application Form Christie Miller Wed, 08/19/2020 - 11:15   ]]> Wed, 19 Aug 2020 16:15:23 +0000 Christie Miller 91736 at Community Tutoring Program Intake Form /community-tutoring-program-intake-form Community Tutoring Program Intake Form Christie Miller Tue, 08/18/2020 - 08:33

Community and Professional Education (CAPE) Community Tutoring Program

Thank you for submitting your information. The Office of Community and Professional Education can be reached by email at cape@neiu.edu or voice mail at (773)-442-5080.

Community Tutoring Program Page

 

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Tue, 18 Aug 2020 13:33:29 +0000 Christie Miller 91721 at
Tutoring /academics/our-centers-and-programs/community-and-professional-education/tutoring Tutoring Christie Miller Wed, 08/12/2020 - 14:00

Community Tutoring Program for K-12

In person (Fine Arts Building on the Main Campus) on Saturdays from 9:00 a.m. through the afternoon. Forty-minute sessions. Please include a note during the registration questionnaire process if the time frame on Saturdays or the grade level you need is not one of the choices. We will contact our tutors about availability.

  • Group Tutoring (email us)

If you are interested in ACT or SAT tutoring, please email us!

Please contact us at cape@neiu.edu with any questions.
 

Meet our tutors

Ayah Obeidallah

"My name is Ayah Obeidallah. I started my college journey at Triton College and then transferred over to NEIU as an Elementary Education major with a minor in Psychology. I’ve had an interest in education for a long time now and tutoring has helped me to improve my skills as a teacher. I began tutoring with CAPE in Spring 2024 and it was a very fun and insightful learning experience to help various students. I’ll be graduating in Spring 2025 and I speak Arabic. Fun fact: I love to listen to others and help them in the best way I can!" 

Maryam Aziz

"Hi! I am a Maryam Aziz, a student at 91Porn working towards my Early Childhood Education license. This is my second year as a tutor for CAPE, and I have loved every second of it. Tutoring is a great outlet for me to apply the skills that I have learned, both from my college-level courses as well as the skills which I've learned in the field, directly to the students I tutor. Once I graduate, I would like to teach pre-k or kindergarten. I am more than happy to teach any subject, but I am most comfortable with math and reading. In my free time, I love to bake and read. I also speak Urdu and Punjabi."

 

 

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Wed, 12 Aug 2020 19:00:12 +0000 Christie Miller 91701 at
Summer EsCAPE /academics/our-centers-and-programs/community-and-professional-education/summer-escape Summer EsCAPE Christie Miller Tue, 03/24/2020 - 13:30

Summer 2025

Online registration required.

Arts

Art Smart Painting esCAPE (Ages 6-12)
July 14 - July 18
Monday - Friday | 9:00 a.m. - Noon
In Person: Fine Arts Building Room 212 2nd Floor

Art Smart Craft esCAPE (Ages 6-12)
July 21 - July 25
Monday - Friday | 9:00 a.m. - Noon 
In Person: Fine Arts Building Art Room 2nd Floor

Chicago Chamber Music Festival 
July 26 - August 2
10:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Art in Engineering (Ages 11-14)
July 28 - August 1 
Monday - Friday | 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. 
In-Person: Fine Arts Building 

STEM

Adventures in Physics for Rising 6th-8th (Ages 11-14)
August 4-7
Monday - Thursday | 9:00 a.m. - Noon 
In-Person: Fine Arts Building

Adventures in Physics for Rising 6th-8th (Ages 11-14)
August 11-14
Monday - Thursday | 9:00 a.m. - Noon
In-Person: Fine Arts Building 

Digital SAT/PSAT Math (Ages 13-16)
August 11-14
Monday - Thursday | 1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
In-Person: Fine Arts Building

READING

Summer Reading and Math Fun for K-5 (Ages 5-11)
August 4-7
Monday - Thursday | 9:00 a.m. - Noon
In-Person: Fine Arts Building

Digital SAT/PSAT Reading/Writing (Ages 13-16)
August 4-7
Monday - Thursday | 1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
In-Person: Fine Arts Building


 

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Tue, 24 Mar 2020 18:30:42 +0000 Christie Miller 90101 at
Online Writing Courses - Non-Credit /online-writing-courses-non-credit Online Writing Courses - Non-Credit Christie Miller Wed, 11/20/2019 - 15:11

 

 

Comprehensive Career Builder in Tech Writing

Online Certificate Class
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Technology Bootcamps /technology-bootcamps Technology Bootcamps Christie Miller Wed, 11/20/2019 - 14:34

Offered in partnership with Quickstart.

This 26-week non-credit online training prepares you for a cybersecurity career. You’ll learn the best practices to analyze critical data and build security frameworks. You’ll be prepared for the top security certifications that give you a competitive edge in the job market.

Certifications you’ll be prepared for:

  • CompTIA A+
  • CompTIA Security+
  • CompTIA CYSA+
  • CompTIA Network+
  • Ethical Hacking
  • CompTIA Pentest+

 

In this 26-week non-credit online training, learn the core programming concepts, website structuring and designing, assigning responsive behaviors to the site, setting up the entire back end system from basic to complex web applications. Gets hands-on experience on the following tools to complete real-life projects:

  • Core Concepts
  • HTML and CSS
  • JavaScript
  • GIT
  • Node.JS
  • Query
  • Python
  • Express.JS
  • Bootstrap
  • React.JS
  • mySQL
  • WordPress

The 26-week non-credit bootcamp prepares you for the in-demand jobs belonging to the data science industry. You will learn the necessary skills and earn the latest certifications that provide you with a competitive edge in the job market.
 
Skills you will learn:

  • Transact-SQL
  • Excel
  • Power BI
  • Data Visualization
  • R Programming
  • Machine Learning
  • Spark
  • Azure
  • HD Insights
  • Predictive Analysis
  • Python

In this 16-week non-credit training, you will learn the fundamentals, data analytics tools, and the widely-used T-SQL programming language, from the industry's top experts. The objective of this training is to prepare you for the in-demand data analytics jobs such as data analyst, financial analyst, marketing analyst, business analyst or business intelligence analyst, etc. You will get hands-on experience with the following tools.

  • Transact-SQL
  • Excel
  • Power BI
  • Data Visualization
  • Data Analysis
  • Descriptive Analytics

Program Price List

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Wed, 20 Nov 2019 20:34:14 +0000 Christie Miller 88146 at
Seminar Descriptions /academics/our-centers-and-programs/community-and-professional-education/cas-professional-development-seminar-series/seminar-descriptions Seminar Descriptions Christie Miller Mon, 06/17/2019 - 16:27

You can also browse our Seminar Series brochure, including a convenient calendar of all seminar dates.

When ready, start the sign-up process here! 

integrating the beatles into language, literature and history

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Oct. 4, 2024
Karen Duchaj, Linguistics Department
k-duchaj@neiu.edu

Using the example of the Beatles and their language use, attendees of this workshop will engage in hands-on activities to explore new ways of using pop culture singing/lyrics to make English, language arts, and modern cultural history concepts more relevant to students, engaging the students’ curiosity mixed with learning through discovery. Dialects, in particular, will be explored as a means to further student interest in social relationships, social judgments, and identities. Attendees of this seminar will benefit by having another tool with which to engage students in poetry, dialect variation, and cultural history by presenting dialects and poetry via modern pop-culture.

epistemic injustices in the classroom

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Oct. 11, 2024
Stacey Goguen, Philosophy Department
s-goguen@neiu.edu

In teaching, we want to empower our students as learners. An important part of learning new things is using what we already know: our epistemic agency. This is our capacity for (and comfort with) investigating questions, making claims, casting doubts, and forming judgements about the world around us. In this seminar, we’ll examine how unjust stereotypes and biases can interfere with epistemic agency in the classroom, creating “epistemic injustices.” Participants will have the opportunity to learn about epistemic injustices from the overt to the subtle. They’ll also be able to reflect on philosophical issues of identity, authority, testimony, the goals of education, and what fairness in the classroom looks like. The takeaway will be knowledge to help you spot epistemic injustices in education, some tactics for dealing with the ones within your control, and some questions to help you think more about agency and education. 

teaching intersectionality through the figure of Malintzín

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Oct. 18, 2024
E. Mar Garcia, English Department
e-garcia20@neiu.edu

Malintzín, or Malinalli or Marina, is a Nahua historical figure known by many names and known for, among other things, serving as a translator for Hernan Cortés during the conquest of Mexico. This seminar offers a historical overview of her life then quickly turns to examining her representation across various literary works from different periods and cultures, with an eye towards using the examination of her and her representation as a way of teaching and modeling intersectionality in the classroom. From the song “La Llorona” by the well-known Mexican rock band Caifanes, to Chicana writer Lucha Corpi’s influential series “The Marina Poems,” to Sandra Cisneros’ short story “Woman Hollering Creek,” along with countless mythological and even horror movie depictions, the figure of Malintzín has been variously made to reveal her own life story and to comment on the racial/gender/colonial issues of the place and time in which writing about her takes place. We will look at several examples of her appearance in literature to develop a multifaceted approach to understanding her that serves both Chicanx and non-Chicanx student populations.

persona non grata: embracing persona in the classroom

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Nov. 1, 2024
Larry Dean, English/Creative Writing Department
l-dean@neiu.edu

According to the Academy of American Poets, “A persona poem is a poem in which the poet speaks through an assumed voice.” Also likened (and sometimes referred) to as dramatic monologues, persona poems may share certain characteristics with that theatrical device, but in other respects they are quite different, especially functioning as a standalone literary work. In this seminar, we will read and discuss a variety of persona poems, from their beginnings to present day, considering what makes them ‘tick.’ Participants will discover ways in which to engage students in their creation, connecting composition to the research process, enhancing close reading skills, inhabiting the bodies and/or minds of individuals other than themselves, challenging preconceived notions, and encouraging empathy. We’ll also examine the key elements of poems, such as line, stanza, and space, learning how each contributes to a poem’s overall effect above and beyond its language, grammar, and syntactical choices.

composition, feedback and identity:
teachers as writers and responders

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Nov. 8, 2024
Tim Duggan, Teacher Education Department
t-duggan@neiu.edu

Teaching writing in middle and high school can be relentless, simply due to the number of students we serve and their various individual needs. Writing instruction research indicates that students would benefit from more writing practice in school, but who has time to read the work of 150 students week after week? Research also shows that students benefit from individualized feedback on their writing, but again, who has the capacity to give patient and consistent feedback to all students at the appropriate developmental level? And how can teachers nurture and develop their own writing identities as they guide their students? This workshop engages participants in generating innovative and educationally sound solutions to the dilemmas of writing practice and writing identity in school.

*CANCELLED*
Mock spanish vs. spanglish in the classroom: what's the difference and why does it matter?

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Jan. 31, 2025
Denise Cloonan Cortez de Andersen, Department of World Languages and Cultures
d-cloonan@neiu.edu

Code-switching, the practice of alternating between two or more languages or varieties of language in conversation, is one type of linguistic phenomena that is characteristic of languages in contact, but context and tone play significant roles in whether it is perceived as derogatory or not. Mock Spanish (derogatory) and Spanglish (not derogatory) are both contact language phenomena and it can be challenging to determine the difference. In this seminar, we will look at examples of both and discuss ways to encourage creative expression in Spanish in the classroom without being offensive to others.

*CANCELLED*
early literatures of latinx migration: teaching history to inform the present 

9:00 a.m.-noon
CANCELLED
E. Mar Garcia, English Department 
e-garcia20@neiu.edu

This workshop will provide materials written by incarcerated and other authors who are examining the problems of mass incarceration in the U.S. There are films, documentaries, articles, scholarly books, and fiction that can help students of all ages examine "law and order" in America and consider how incarceration is linked to race, slavery, poverty, mental health, gender, and sexuality, among other things. We will discuss how to help students understand how much of an anomaly our prison system is in the history of the world and alternatives that exist both within and outside of the U.S. We will consider the sometimes conflicting discourses of victims' rights and the rights of the incarcerated as well as the ways education, inside and outside of prisons, can intervene in cycles of violence and despair. While the number of people incarcerated in Illinois and the country has slightly decreased over the past five years, it is likely that many students in our classes have loved ones who have been locked up or have had some interaction with the legal system themselves. Pulling this topic out of the darkness and thinking about alternatives through writing and fiction can help all of us imagine a better, less violent future.

believing in literature:
articulating the value and purpose of literary study for students and ourselves

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Feb. 14, 2025
Timothy Libretti, English Department & Acting Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences
t-libretti@neiu.edu

At the onset of “literature” (itself a contested category) becoming a serious subject of study in schools and universities, the purpose was to inculcate students in the great tradition, teaching them the masterworks of world literature and national literary traditions with the aim of humanizing and enculturating them. And over time different schools of literary theory and criticism defined literature and the purpose of studying it differently. Today, at least one purpose organizing the literature curriculum is the imperative for cultural representation. These competing purposes, often at work in less than coherent ways, manifest themselves, to some extent, in battles over text selection. This seminar is designed to offer a time to pause and reflect on why we teach literature and what we hope our students take from our classes so that we can provide our students with this metacognitive approach to literary study so they understand the skills they’re developing. We will walk through a telescoped history of the origins of literary study in the academy from the 1920s forward, reflecting on the changing purposes of the literature classroom with an eye toward helping you define or confirm your role and helping you articulate this purpose for students.

The possibilities of Digital Humanities in the Classroom

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Feb. 14, 2025
Tim Scherman, English Department 
t-scherman@neiu.edu

The opportunities and challenges of AI have many of us wondering what happened to what we used to call the Digital Humanities (DH) — a host of engaging approaches to literature and culture emerging in the 21st century (and earlier) that we were just getting around to tackling when the AI revolution hit. Let’s slow down for a few hours and discuss what tools and purposes we still might have from “early” DH (2009?) to help our students engage literature using digital tools that make “cheating” completely beside the point..

The protest poster and risograph printing

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, Feb. 28, 2025
Lauren Meranda, Art + Design  
l-meranda@neiu.edu

This hands-on workshop will focus on the history of the protest poster over the centuries (yes, centuries!) and will allow participants to become familiar with Risograph printing. After an introduction to the relationship of the protest poster to social justice and political (to name a few) movements, participants will be able to shape a clear and impactful visual narrative and create a multi-color, multi-layer Risograph poster with the theme and message of their choice. Poster production materials will be provided.

To "AI" or not to "AI:" 
using ai to boost creativity and writing proficiency in the classroom

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, March 7, 2025
Lisa Hollis-Sawyer, Psychology Department
l-hollissawyer@neiu.edu

The workshop will focus on how AI technology, in its many forms and applications, can be an effective tool in course design to help boost students' creativity in integrating ideas from a course and apply AI technology to help formulate strategies to develop projects and draft papers. Case studies will be presented and discussed regarding "pitfalls" to avoid in using AI and the "potential" for AI in designing course-related assignments and in-class activities. The workshop will focus on utilizing AI technology to brainstorm ideas related to course content and explore how AI can be used in ways that have not been used before in instructional design. Examples of how AI technology can be used will be presented, and there will be a group discussion about teachers' perceptions of AI usage with students. Next, participants will be paired up to design an AI-related class activity that will be conducted during the actual workshop. Pairs will present their ideas for the AI-supported class activity to the other participants. Finally, there will be a concluding discussion about using AI in the classroom and an exercise regarding how the policies of using AI technology (the "dos" and "don'ts") in the classroom can be incorporated into course syllabi.

Shakespeare, "othello" and race

9:00 a.m.-noon
Friday, April 11, 2025
Bradley Greenburg, English Department
b-greenburg@neiu.edu

In this seminar I’ll argue that Shakespeare’s "Othello" is a play that reflects the racism of his period, and reflects on it. "Othello" is a work that demonstrates a sophisticated awareness of racial categories, racial bigotry, and racial politics. Written and first performed in the first few years of the 17th century, the play is keen to offer stereotypes as well as deconstructing them. In our time together we’ll explore the conception of race in early modern Europe, how "Othello" fits into it, and how the play (arguably) turns these ideological constructions back on themselves.
 

Start the sign-up process here!

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Mon, 17 Jun 2019 21:27:01 +0000 Christie Miller 85961 at
CAS Professional Development Seminar Series /academics/our-centers-and-programs/community-and-professional-education/cas-professional-development-seminar-series CAS Professional Development Seminar Series Christie Miller Fri, 06/14/2019 - 17:03

Open registration for the 2024-25 Seminar Series begins Aug. 8, 2024.

Stimulating Professional Education for Chicago Area Educators

91Porn continues to offer a series of exciting interdisciplinary seminars to feed the intellectual hunger of community college and high school teachers of all disciplines. Starting in 2012 with a focus on English, the Pro Dev series has expanded to include history, biology, fine art, psychology, philosophy, world languages and cultures, ethics, and political science, with more to come.

Those seeking professional development and a nourishing space to explore the challenges of our evolving and volatile world can join Northeastern faculty members in these seminars designed to spur intellectual growth, reinvigorate classrooms, and increase relevance in our contemporary society.

2024-2025 Seminar Schedule now available

For 2024-25, we’ve brought back some popular topics from series past (Language and the Beatles), and expanding on others (teaching poetry and the rise of A.I.), while maintaining the essentials in anti-racism and social equity. Each three-hour seminar attended and completed earns the participant three (3) CPDU credits.

View the full seminar descriptions. Take a look then return to this page to sign up!

You can also browse the illustrated brochure.

Have a larger group interested in a seminar delivered at your institution? If you have a group of 20 or more interested in a single seminar, please contact the coordinator of the CAS Professional Development Series Bradley Greenburg at b-greenburg@neiu.edu, or our administrator Hilary Jirka at h-jirka2@neiu.edu, to work out the details.

Pricing and registration

What's new for 2024-25

Seminar seats will be available for a flat fee of $100 per seat. No more price tiers!

Pricing for large (20+) groups that request a special session or a seminar presented at their home institution will be handled on a case-by-case basis.

We have also streamlined registration in response to your requests for a more straightforward process.

Please fill out to sign up as an individual or as an admin entering group registrations.



Paying by credit card? We will email you a secure payment link after form submission.
Paying by check? We will email you an invoice with a remittance mailing address after form submission.

Questions? Contact English Department Office Administrator Hilary Jirka at h-jirka2@neiu.edu.

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Fri, 14 Jun 2019 22:03:45 +0000 Christie Miller 85956 at