UMES named co-recipient of $1 million education grant

SP
Sandra Phoenix
Mon, Jun 13, 2011 12:19 PM

University of Maryland Eastern Shore News
May 27, 2011

UMES named co-recipient of $1 million education grant

PRINCESS ANNE - (May 27, 2011) - A $1 million federal grant to train "Great Principals for Maryland" will be used by two public universities to collaborate in offering classes at a new Lower Eastern Shore School Leadership Institute.

A four-year Race to the Top grant has been awarded to the University of Maryland Eastern Shore and Salisbury University, sister institutions in the University System of Maryland. The institute begins operation in August.

Planners say aspiring principals who enroll in the institute will learn strategies to lead public schools and help students reach annual performance goals. A focus of the training is closing the achievement gap between student groups.

The institute will partner with county school systems in Wicomico, Worcester, Somerset, Dorchester and Talbot to identify potential candidates.

"Receiving this grant is another indicator of the close cooperation between the University of Maryland Eastern Shore and Salisbury University," said Charles Williams, UMES' vice president for academic affairs. "This leadership institute will further our efforts to serve and support the public schools on the Eastern Shore."

The TIAA-CREF Institute honored the two universities in 1998 with a Theodore M. Hesburgh Award in recognition of a joint effort to establish an undergraduate dual-degree program in environmental/marine science and biology at their respective institutions.

"Salisbury University and the University of Maryland Eastern Shore have had a distinguished history of collaboration," said Diane Allen, SU's provost and senior vice president of academic affairs. "Our mutual commitment to education and teacher preparation makes this leadership institute a natural and welcome partnership between our two institutions."

The institute will partner with New Leaders for New Schools, a nationally recognized non-profit organization that recruits and trains principals to be highly effective in managing low-performing schools. NLNS is providing expertise and support in selecting participants as well as helping with their professional development.

Institute instruction will provide participants with:

  • traditional coursework leading to principal licensure and professional development;
  • preparation to assume a leadership role in challenging and under performing schools;
  • an intensive mentoring program with personalized guidance and coaching in the participant's leadership development;
  • a personalized and specific action plan to implement improvement at each participant's school.

Derry Stufft, coordinator of UMES' Educational Leadership Doctoral Program and Douglas DeWitt, SU's Educational Leadership Program director, teamed up to write the grant application for the institute. Andrew Carrington of UMES also helped write the proposal.

Stufft and DeWitt both view the institute as a partnership with county school superintendents to improve education for lower Eastern Shore students.

For more information contact Stufft at 410-651-6216 or DeWitt at 410-543-6286, or visit their respective campus Web sites at www.umes.edu or www.salisbury.edu.

SANDRA M. PHOENIX
Program Director
HBCU Library Alliance
sphoenix@hbculibraries.orgmailto:sphoenix@hbculibraries.org
www.hbculibraries.orghttp://www.hbculibraries.org/
404.592.4820
Skype:sandra.phoenix1

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Honor the ancestors, honor the children.

University of Maryland Eastern Shore News May 27, 2011 UMES named co-recipient of $1 million education grant PRINCESS ANNE - (May 27, 2011) - A $1 million federal grant to train "Great Principals for Maryland" will be used by two public universities to collaborate in offering classes at a new Lower Eastern Shore School Leadership Institute. A four-year Race to the Top grant has been awarded to the University of Maryland Eastern Shore and Salisbury University, sister institutions in the University System of Maryland. The institute begins operation in August. Planners say aspiring principals who enroll in the institute will learn strategies to lead public schools and help students reach annual performance goals. A focus of the training is closing the achievement gap between student groups. The institute will partner with county school systems in Wicomico, Worcester, Somerset, Dorchester and Talbot to identify potential candidates. "Receiving this grant is another indicator of the close cooperation between the University of Maryland Eastern Shore and Salisbury University," said Charles Williams, UMES' vice president for academic affairs. "This leadership institute will further our efforts to serve and support the public schools on the Eastern Shore." The TIAA-CREF Institute honored the two universities in 1998 with a Theodore M. Hesburgh Award in recognition of a joint effort to establish an undergraduate dual-degree program in environmental/marine science and biology at their respective institutions. "Salisbury University and the University of Maryland Eastern Shore have had a distinguished history of collaboration," said Diane Allen, SU's provost and senior vice president of academic affairs. "Our mutual commitment to education and teacher preparation makes this leadership institute a natural and welcome partnership between our two institutions." The institute will partner with New Leaders for New Schools, a nationally recognized non-profit organization that recruits and trains principals to be highly effective in managing low-performing schools. NLNS is providing expertise and support in selecting participants as well as helping with their professional development. Institute instruction will provide participants with: - traditional coursework leading to principal licensure and professional development; - preparation to assume a leadership role in challenging and under performing schools; - an intensive mentoring program with personalized guidance and coaching in the participant's leadership development; - a personalized and specific action plan to implement improvement at each participant's school. Derry Stufft, coordinator of UMES' Educational Leadership Doctoral Program and Douglas DeWitt, SU's Educational Leadership Program director, teamed up to write the grant application for the institute. Andrew Carrington of UMES also helped write the proposal. Stufft and DeWitt both view the institute as a partnership with county school superintendents to improve education for lower Eastern Shore students. For more information contact Stufft at 410-651-6216 or DeWitt at 410-543-6286, or visit their respective campus Web sites at www.umes.edu or www.salisbury.edu. SANDRA M. PHOENIX Program Director HBCU Library Alliance sphoenix@hbculibraries.org<mailto:sphoenix@hbculibraries.org> www.hbculibraries.org<http://www.hbculibraries.org/> 404.592.4820 Skype:sandra.phoenix1 1438 West Peachtree Street NW Suite 200 Atlanta, GA 30309 Toll Free: 1.800.999.8558 (Lyrasis) Fax: 404.892.7879 www.lyrasis.org<http://www.lyrasis.org/> Honor the ancestors, honor the children.