University-School Partnerships: A True Story of How They Work and Who They Help

Authors

  • Loleta D. Sartin Macon State College
  • Dr. Vicki Luther Macon State College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56887/galiteracy.81

Keywords:

university-school partnerships, collaboration, educational reform, teacher education, school policy research

Abstract

University researchers are calling for partnerships as a way to improve PK-12 schools and their own teacher education and school policy research (Via, 2008). Amongst the approximate 107,235 people graduating with a degree in education, many are in need of additional support and best practice acquisition (NCES, 2007; Darling-Hammond, 2000). Henderson, Mapp, Johnson, and Davies (2007), in their book Beyond the Bake Sale, postulate that partnerships and student achievement are closely linked.

Author Biographies

  • Loleta D. Sartin, Macon State College

    Loleta D. Sartin is an Assistant Professor in the Macon State College School of Education, where she teaches courses in literacy, integrated curriculum, and educational foundation. She is nearing completion of a Ph.D. in Higher Education Administration from Saint Louis University. 

  • Dr. Vicki Luther, Macon State College

    Dr. Vicki Luther ([email protected]) is an Assistant Professor in the Macon State College School of Education, where she teaches literacy courses. 

University-School Partnerships: A True Story of How They Work and Who They Help

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Published

10/30/2009

Issue

Section

Research and Practitioner Articles

How to Cite

Sartin, L. D., & Luther, V. (2009). University-School Partnerships: A True Story of How They Work and Who They Help. Georgia Journal of Literacy, 32(2), 9-14. https://doi.org/10.56887/galiteracy.81

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