<p>I am trying to find a complete listing of courses on the website of Duke's program in education, but the courses displayed are limited only to the current semester; what is this program like anyway? I'm also searching for some related research, but the website offers little helpful information :( the page for sociology program is way more resourced and informing tho. #:-S </p>
<p>What are you interested in? As an education minor, the reason why courses only display for a given semester is because faculty are constantly teaching new (and interesting!) courses. There are courses that are taught every semester (Education 101, Educational Psychology), courses that are taught as part of the FOCUS program for first-years (led by Dr. Malone and Dr. Riggsbee), courses that are taught every year (School Dropout and Ed Policy; Children, Family, and Schools; School Leadership), and then courses taught semi-frequently (Educational Anthropology, Education Law). Then we have a rotating set of seminars (De/Re/Segregation, Charter Schools) that change pretty frequently depending on faculty interest. There’s a new course being offered next semester that tackles ed policy from Reconstrution up until NCLB, as well as one on higher education learning objectives.</p>
<p>The department is pretty policy focused. Then there are two teacher licensure programs (in elementary and secondary education) that have a cohort of new students every year.</p>
<p>Really, the best way to get a sense of the courses is to go semester by semester through the course schedule, because the classes change pretty frequently depending on faculty interest. <a href=“http://registrar.duke.edu/courses-classrooms/schedule-classes”>http://registrar.duke.edu/courses-classrooms/schedule-classes</a></p>
<p>I see! incredibly helpful, thank you! </p>