Address:
35 W. Rosedale Ave.
302 Recitation Hall
West Chester, PA 19383
Kathy Crouse
Administrative Assistant
610-436-2321
KCrouse@wcupa.edu
Dispositions are the values, commitments, and professional ethics that influence one's behaviors toward students, families, colleagues, and communities and affect student learning, motivation, and development as well as the educator's own professional growth.
Dispositions are guided by beliefs and attitudes related to values such as caring, fairness, honesty, responsibility, and social justice. For example, they might include a belief that all students can learn, a vision of high and challenging standards, or a commitment to a safe and supportive learning environment. (excerpt from NCATE Glossary)
If a faculty member documents that a particular Teacher Education or pre-service student is having difficulty with one of the following dispositional expectations in a university- or field-based course that a faculty member is teaching, he/she will request a meeting with the student, share evidence of the concerns, hear the student's reason for the behavior(s) of concern, make recommendations for improvement where appropriate, and follow up the meeting with a notice and action plan sent to the student and his/her department chair. The notice and action plan will be placed in the student's file in the department. The student also may be required to meet with a committee of faculty within the major department, at the department's discretion, to:
If the behavior of concern is not corrected satisfactorily, it may lead to the department's recommendation to deny formal admission to Teacher Education and/or advancement in the program. These recommendations would be forwarded to the Associate Dean for Curriculum and Accreditation of the College of Education for a ruling. At this time, if the student chooses to appeal the ruling, the matter would come before the Teacher Education Student Appeals Committee, according to established protocol.
The Associate Dean for Curriculum and Accreditation of the College of Education makes decisions about students' requests for exceptions to requirements according to established criteria and interpretations of College of Education regulations, and about student dispositions in courses and field experiences that may preclude advancing in courses. The Student Appeals process applies to questions, based on decisions and documentation provided by the Associate Dean for Curriculum and Accreditation, regarding (a) enforcement of said regulations and their exceptions, and (b) outcomes of student dispositional evaluation in professional sequence, field, and student teaching situations. Since appeals involve questions of professional judgment, the Student Appeals Committee may not recommend that a decision be revised in the student's favor unless there is clear evidence that the original decision was based on prejudiced or capricious judgment, or was inconsistent with official University processes. Decisions by the Associate Dean for Curriculum and Accreditation that may be appealed include but are not limited to:
A student must initiate an appeal in writing within 21 calendar days from the mailing date of the Associate Dean's decision or action in question; forms are available in Recitation 302. This written appeal should be sent, care of the Coordinator of Teacher Certification in R302, to the Student Appeals Committee, which shall review the appeal. Written notification of Committee recommendations are sent to the Dean of the College of Education, whose decisions may not be appealed.
The student involved may be assisted by an advisor. The advisor may be another student, an administrator, or a faculty member. Witnesses may be called on behalf of the student. The advisor does not speak on behalf of the student, testify (unless he or she has first-hand-knowledge of a fact), or question witnesses. The advisor generally consults and/or privately interacts with the student, unless the University grants the advisor permission to represent the student in a particular case.
Resource persons or expert witnesses may be called at the request of the Committee. In the event that the appeal involves knowledge of the discipline, the Committee shall be required to utilize at least one resource person from the discipline, an expert advisor(s) to aid them in their deliberations and recommendations.
All parties must be informed of the appeal in writing by the chairperson of the Student Appeals Committee (hereafter referred to as "chairperson"), normally within five class days after the receipt of the appeal application. Copies of documents and correspondence filed with respect to the appeal shall be provided to the relevant parties through the chairperson. Thereafter, neither new evidence nor new charges shall be introduced before the Committee. The chairperson shall notify in writing the relevant parties of the exact time and place of the hearing and shall provide existing University and/or Commonwealth regulations germane to the appeal at least seven calendar days before the beginning of the proceedings. Throughout these proceedings, the burden of proof rests upon the person bringing the appeal. The Student Appeals Committee also may seek out pertinent witnesses and documentation.
During the hearing, both the faculty member and the student shall be accorded ample time for statements, testimony of witnesses, and presentation of documents.
The Student Appeals Committee shall deliberate in executive session and customarily render a recommendation by majority vote within five calendar days of the close of the hearing. The chairperson may participate in these deliberations but not vote.
The chairperson shall notify, in writing, the Dean of the College of Education and the student of the recommendation within five days of the Committee's final action. The notification shall include the basis upon which the Committee's recommendation to the Dean was reached.