About Elementary Education

What is Elementary Education?

Study to become an elementary (primary) teacher, educating students from kindergarten to Grade 6. In this program, you'll typically do your work experience placements in a rural or small-town school. Graduates from this program are recommended for teacher certification in ¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥.

Why Choose This Program?

This generalist program aligns with the immersive and experiential style of learning already in action at Augustana.

Spend your first two years at Augustana Campus in Camrose and the final two years on the North Campus in Edmonton. Starting your education journey at the U of A’s rural-based campus offers you a unique perspective through engagement with diverse communities outside an urban setting.

Major Map

View what studying in this program could look like each year, from courses to experiential learning to career development.

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Program Information

Degree

Bachelor of Education

Major

Elementary Education is a generalist program so there are no majors or minors to choose.

No application is needed to transition from Augustana Campus to North Campus within the program.

Specializations

  • Chemistry
  • Physics

Minors

  • Management
  • Music


Students in this program are eligible for 135+ Augustana awards (totalling over $480,000)


Low 70s program admission-average range


Teach kindergarten to Grade 6


Conduct your practicum in a rural or small-town school

Program Objectives

In this program, you will:

  1. Develop essential practical skills, professional ethics, and a knowledge of theory and its relationship to practice, liberal studies and subject-matter competence.
  2. Gain a sensitivity to and respect for children and the sociocultural contexts in which they live, and an understanding of schooling in their social/political/economic environment.
  3. Engage in quality teacher preparation that recognizes the importance of programming that adequately reflects changes in society and advances in knowledge.

Learning Outcomes

You will leave this program with the ability to:

  1. Teach all subjects and facilitate the learning of all students at the elementary school level within our multicultural society.
  2. Help students develop attitudes that encourage self-evaluation and improvement, and acquire knowledge and skills that facilitate life-long learning.
  3. Foster a sense of community in the classroom, and develop a strong professional commitment that is reflected in your own personal philosophy of education.

Careers

An undergraduate degree in elementary education is great for entry into the workforce or graduate and professional programs. Potential career options include:

Course Highlights

AUEPS 258 - Psychology for Teaching

Introduction to the fundamental concepts and issues in educational psychology. The focus is on the child from preschool to adolescence through examination of learning and instruction, individual differences, motivation, assessment, and classroom management.

AUEFX 200 - Introduction to the Profession of Teaching

Orientation to teaching. For the laboratory component of the course, a student spends half a day per week assisting in a local elementary or secondary school.

AUPED 222 - Introduction to Movement Activities of Youth [Ages 5-12]

Study of a variety of movement activities, including play, games, gymnastics and dance, in which children participate.

AUEDC 210 - Introduction to Educational Technology

Examination of frameworks, issues and trends regarding the role of technology in education. Students will gain hands-on experience applying learning theory and sound pedagogy to integrating technology into the school curriculum, using tools for internet use, digital media processing, multimedia/hypermedia presentations and common software.

AUIND 370 - Oral History

A seminar examining the oral history and tradition as systems of knowledge that preserve and pass on knowledge about people, cultures and history. It focuses on historic and contemporary approaches to oral history and traditions, including its use as traditional ecological knowledge (TEK). Students will be taught best practices for conducting research in oral history and tradition, including how to conduct community based research.

More courses in the

Brandon Alakas

Featured Faculty

Brandon Alakas

Brandon Alakas is a professor of English and teaches courses on classical and medieval culture. His research is on devotional literature written during the first half of the sixteenth century.

Explore more instructors who teach in the program

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