Members of the Monmouth College Education Department Discuss Efforts in Preparing Teachers for Rural Communities

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The Monmouth College educational studies program has received a federal grant in the amount of $750,000 through the federal Community Project Funding Program to support the Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives program to prepare more teachers for rural communities, explains Professor and Co-Chair of Educational Studies Craig Vivian:

“Our goal is to take that model and start to export that and become a place where people can come and learn what we are doing and try and get into the same vision that we have. That vision includes one, creating a learning space at the farm and the garden that we have at the college; two, is building up an endowment for our TARTANS, which is our Rural Teacher Corps; number three is starting to bring together and synthesize a lot of the community institutions that are already here and trying to build those and make them stronger working together.”

The Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives program launched in 2019 and has helped prepare more than 150 students at the college, with three dozen becoming teachers in the region. Additionally, the program has worked with more than 600 students in Warren County schools through various educational programs.

Tammy La Prad, Assistant Professor and Co-Chair, Educational Studies, Jenni Dickens, Director of Partnerships and Initiatives for the Educational Studies Department, and Craig Vivian, Professor and Co-Chair, Educational Studies Coordinator, Peace Corp Prep provide and update on the educational department at Monmouth College on the WRAM Morning Show

For the entire story on Monmouth College’s grant to support College’s efforts in preparing more teachers for the region’s rural communities, read below, courtesy of Duane Bonifer:

Monmouth College’s educational studies program has received a major boost in its efforts to prepare more teachers for rural communities.

The support comes in the form of a $750,000 federal grant, which U.S. Rep. Cheri Bustos of Illinois secured through the federal Community Project Funding program.

The grant will support the Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives program, which aims to address teacher shortages in rural communities, increase representation of teachers of color and encourage more student-community engagement.

Since its inception in 2019, the Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives program has worked with more than 150 students at the liberal arts college, three dozen of which went on to become teachers in the region. The program has also worked with more than 600 Warren County school children through involvement with various programs, including the College’s Educational Farm & Garden.

“This exceptional grant recognizes and advances Monmouth College’s role as a force for good in our immediate community and in communities across Illinois,” said Monmouth President Clarence R. Wyatt. “I am proud of the work being led by our educational studies faculty members and their students. I am especially grateful to Congresswoman Cheri Bustos for her great efforts in securing this grant and for her strong partnership with Monmouth College.”

“By developing a strong triangle of cooperation between Monmouth College, area schools and community center, we are helping address the shortage of teachers in rural areas,” said Monmouth educational studies co-chair Craig Vivian. “And because our students are prepared to be teachers-as-leaders, we also give communities another individual who can enhance and support community initiatives.”

The Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives(opens in a new tab) has three components – the TARTANS Rural Teacher Corps; place-based teaching sites that provide classrooms where students focus on their local place through project-based inquiry learning; and the Monmouth Educational Farm & Garden, which provides living resources that enrich hands-on education about agriculture, sustainability and nutrition.

“Schools are the lifeblood of many rural communities,” said Monmouth educational studies co-chair Tammy La Prad. “One way communities are strengthened is when they have visionary teachers who invest in them by extending their classrooms beyond the walls of a school building, and that is what the Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives prepares its educational studies graduates to do.”

In less than five years of work, “it’s been pretty extraordinary to see how the Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives program has helped bring forth transformative opportunities in our region, thanks to working together with a diverse group of organizations and people,” said Jennifer Dickens, the program’s director of partnerships and initiatives.

“The Monmouth Rural Education Initiatives program has mobilized what’s already good in the region and it has introduced crucial opportunities to strengthen it,” said Dickens.

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