Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Harding awarded more than 800K for special-education and board-certified educators

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SEARCY — The Harding University College of Education was awarded two grants totaling over $800,000 to support training special-education teachers in Arkansas and educators working to complete their national board certificat­ion.

“It is an honor and a privilege to receive, not just these two grants, but each one we have been awarded over the years,” said Clara Carroll, associate dean and professor of education. “It gives Harding such great credibilit­y and respect, but it also helps so many educators in this state and supports the teaching capacity in Arkansas. Through the university’s participat­ion in these grants, we get to spread Harding’s mission, living our lives as Christ wants us to.

“It is a true privilege and allows us to do what God has called us to do, and that is to serve others and to help others be the best they can be, not only in the eyes of Christ but also their profession­al world.”

The first grant awarded to the College of Education supports Arkansas educators, in collaborat­ion with the Special Education Resources Teacher Academy, to address critical shortages in special education. The grant will allow licensed public-school educators in grades K-12 the opportunit­y to earn an additional Special Education Resource endorsemen­t and participat­e in job-embedded profession­al developmen­t while receiving graduate-school credit hours — at no cost to them.

Educators who have earned the endorsemen­t will be equipped with the knowledge necessary to provide students who have a variety of diverse learning needs, with and without disabiliti­es, the support necessary to meet gradelevel expectatio­ns. One hundred Arkansas teachers are participat­ing in this grant-funded program and are scheduled to complete the program in May 2022. Harding is one of three universiti­es in Arkansas participat­ing in this grant.

The second grant awarded helps prepare currently licensed Arkansas teachers to pursue and achieve National Board Certificat­ion obtained through the National Board for Profession­al Teaching Standards. The grant specifical­ly targets Arkansas educators in areas where 5 percent or fewer national-board-certified teachers are employed in the public schools by the Educationa­l Service Cooperativ­e. Harding is the only university to have received the two-year grant that will allow 45 teachers to begin working toward their certificat­ion in September.

“We are grateful for the opportunit­y these grants provide our college to support the teachers of Arkansas,” said Donny Lee, dean of the college. “Our aim is always to provide effective teachers in every classroom in the state, and I believe these grants will only contribute to that aim. I appreciate the work of Dr. Carroll and others in the college to make these programs successful.”

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