the 2015 Conference Program

poolville community center
Dinner Friday evening, along with
our keynote address, will be held at
the Poolville Community Center,
which was originally a public school
house for 44 years. It is located at
1245 Earlville Rd, in Earlville, NY.
Exit the ALANA center by driving
down Oak Dr., turning right at the
first stop sign. Turn right on to
Hamilton St. and continue on for
three miles. Then turn right onto
Poolville Rd., continue on for two
miles and the community center will
be on your right.
the 44th annual gathering of the
NEW YORK STATE
FOUNDATIONS OF
EDUCATION
ASSOCIATION
directions & parking
Colgate University is on Route 12B
in Hamilton, NY. If using a GPS
navigation system, please use 110
Broad Street as your destination.
The conference will take place in
the ALANA Cultural Center. Enter
campus at the traffic light on W.
Kendrick St. Follow Oak Drive
around to the left. Continue
straight at the first stop sign and
ALANA will be up on your left, across from Colgate’s greenhouse.
Parking is available just before ALANA at the Human Resources
Center, as well as farther up the hill behind the center.
many thanks to…
The Dean of the Faculty’s Office, John Palmer and
the Department of Educational Studies, the Upstate
Institute, and the Colgate Council for the Arts.
new york state foundations of education association
13 oak drive
hamilton, ny 13346
www.nysfea.net
“IS TEACHER
EDUCATION WORTH
FIGHTING FOR?”
march 27th – 28th, 2015
colgate university
13 oak drive | hamilton, ny 13346
speakers and presenters
schedule of events
KEYNOTES
Peter Taubman & Paula Salvio
saturday, march 28th
Dr. Taubman is professor of Education in the School of Education at
Brooklyn College. He is the founder of both the Bushwick School for
Social Justice, and Reclaiming the Conversation on Education, the latter a
powerful coalition of resistance to corporate reforms.
8:30 – 9:30 am
Breakfast/Business meeting/Election of New
Officers
9:30 – 10:25 am
Mark Garrison, Tim Glander, & Richard Ognibene,
“Popular Educational Classics: A Reader with
Contributions from Four NYSFEA Members”
Dr. Salvio is Professor of Education at the University of New Hampshire,
where she currently serves as an Education and Culture Faculty Scholar,
working as a feminist and media studies specialist on the design of
projects that bring the knowledge and creative inquiry of the humanities
to studies in sustainability.
SCHEDULE
friday, march 27th
Registration will begin at 1:30 pm and will run until 2:30 pm. The
afternoon panels will take place in the ALANA Cultural Center.
2:30 – 2:55 pm
3:00 – 3:25 pm
Shawgi Tell, “Why Charter Schools Aren’t Public
Schools”
Ashley Taylor & Lauren Shallish, “Accountability for
inclusion: Critical disability studies as a point of
resistance”
10:30 – 10:45 am | coffee & tea break
10:45 – 11:10 am
Derek Ford, “We Have Never Been Urban: Teacher
Education and Architecture for the Urban”
11:15 – 11:40 am
Wendy Everard & Mary DiNapoli, “Notes from the
Field: A Discussion About our Student Teaching
Collaboration”
11:45 – 12:10 pm
Linda Street, “Internationalizing Higher Education:
Toward Academic Imperialism or Global Activism?”
12:15 – 12:40 pm
Khuram Hussain, “The Commons' Core: Visions of
Curricular Reform at the Grassroots”
3:30 – 3:45 pm | coffee & tea break
3:45 – 4:10 pm
Anne Burns Thomas, “Diversity Under Continued
Attack: Supporting Students of Color in the
4:15 – 4:40 pm
Sarah Fleming, “A Pragmatic Approach to Teacher
Education? Pre-service and In-service English
Teachers’ Perspectives on the Inaugural
Katrina Bratge and Local School Administrators,
“Bright Stars in Stormy Seas: The Teachers Who
Can Guide the Way”
4:45 – 5:40 pm
At 6:15pm, please join us at the Poolville Community Center for
the presidential and keynote addresses over good food & drink.
12:45 – 1:30 pm | lunch
1:30 – 2:00 pm
DESSERT PRESENTATION
Devon Branca & Barbara Regenspan, “Poets in
Conversation”
Thank you so much for joining us at this year’s NYSFEA
conference. We hope to see you next year!