Room Reservations in the College of Education

View Full Calendar

The College of Education offers the following rooms for reservation by the College of Education faculty, staff and students to support the teaching, research and public service functions of the college; students may work with a faculty or staff member to reserve a space for related activities.  Questions or concerns about the use of the space may be directed to Jim Rowan at 312-355-0721 or Jimrowan@uic.edu

Room 1013 ETMSW

  • Capacity: 16 people
  • User: Faculty and Staff
  • Weekdays: Monday- Friday 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m UI Card Required for Building Access After Hours 
  • Weekends: Saturday & Sunday 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. UI Card Building Access Required
  • Room Purpose: Classroom, meeting and small events
  • Furniture: Moveable / flexible furniture & 3 whiteboards
  • Technology/Equipment: Windows PC, all-in-one smart bar (camera, microphone, speakers), large 85" Samsung Advanced Digital Whiteboard (WM85B WMB Series LED-backlit LCD) with pen-enabled whiteboarding functionality and integrated video conferencing capabilities.
  • Important Reminders: Food allowed

Room 3015 ETMSW

  • Capacity: 10 people
  • User: Faculty and Staff only
  • Weekdays: Monday - Friday 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (No evenings or weekends)
  • Access: Room is locked. Visit Room 3335 or Room 3022 for access.
  • Room Purpose: PhD Defense and meetings
  • Furniture: Fixed Furniture with Chairs
  • Technology/Equipment: Windows computer, 360-degree microphone, wall-mounted PTZ camera, podium, medium-sized wall display, and integrated video conferencing capabilities.
  • Important Reminders: Food not allowed, turn off lights & lock the door when exiting.

Room 3252 ETMSW

  • Capacity: 24 people
  • User: Faculty and Staff
  • Weekdays: Monday - Friday 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m UI Card Required for Building Access After Hours 
  • Weekends: Saturday & Sunday 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. UI Card Building Access Required
  • Room Purpose: Classroom, meeting and events
  • Furniture: Moveable / flexible furniture & 3 whiteboards
  • Technology/Equipment: Windows PC, podium, wall-mounted PTZ cameras, wall microphones with integrated speakers, whiteboard-capable display, two medium-sized wall displays, smart wall mic/speaker system, and video conferencing capabilities.
  • Important Reminders: Food allowed

Room 3312 ETMSW

  • Capacity: 12 people
  • User: Faculty and Staff
  • Weekdays: Monday - Friday 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
  • Weekends: Saturday & Sunday 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. UI Card Building Access Required
  • Room Purpose: Classroom, meeting and events
  • Furniture: 
  • Technology/Equipment: Windows PC, 360-degree desk microphone, PTZ camera with integrated speakers, medium-sized wall display, video conferencing capabilities, and Echo360 lecture capture system.
  • Important Reminders: Food allowed

Room 3427 ETMSW

  • Capacity: 30 people
  • User: Faculty, Staff and Students
  • Weekdays: Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
  • Weekends: Saturday & Sunday 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. UI Card Building Access Required
  • Room Purpose: Classroom, meeting and events
  • Furniture: Moveable/flexible furniture & 3 whiteboards
  • Technology/Equipment: Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) setup with no built-in computer, optional wireless microphones, projector, wall-mounted PTZ camera, podium, video conferencing capabilities, and Echo360 lecture capture system.
  • Important Reminders: Food allowed. As a courtesy to other building occupants, please keep rooms doors closed while class is in session.

How to Make a Reservation

  1. Scroll to the calendar below.
  2. Click the white plus sign (+) on the blue background (top right corner of the calendar).
  3. A window will appear showing available rooms.
  4. Select a room, click the link, and follow the detailed instructions in the reservation window. Note: If no end time is selected, the default reservation duration is one hour.
  5. Your request will be routed to a reservation manager for approval.

Additional Reservation Support

  • If you wish to delete or modify a reservation, please email Jim Rowan, jimrowan@uic.edu.
  • If you have been denied access to the reservation system and think you should have access, please complete the "Unit Security Contact" form through ETL.
  • If you need to reserve a conference phone, please contact a member of your department staff and they will reserve it for you. The conference phone and reservation book are kept in Room 3335.
  • If you need to reserve presentation and/or multimedia equipment, please go to:                                                             https://maradona.ed.uic.edu/reservation_index.php

Senior Seminar Presentations

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Edward Podsiadlik
Location
3427 ETMSW
Date
Mar 30, 2022   1:00 - 3:30 pm  
Views
9
Originating Calendar
Reservations 3427 ETMSW

Anecdotes & Afterthoughts presentations

In this book I integrate literature that I’ve used in my middle grades teaching (over eighteen years) with educational philosophy and real-world anecdotes. The literature serves as a lens through which to reflect our individual and collective understanding of teaching and learning.

The primary works of literature used to facilitate this journey are: The Red Badge of Courage (Stephen Crane, 1895), Les Misérables (Victor Hugo, 1862), and American Idiot (Greenday, 2004); Light in August (William Faulkner, 1932), Seinfeld scripts (1991-98), and Frankenstein (Mary Shelley, 1818); and The Odyssey (Greek and Roman mythology), Night (Elie Wiesel, 1960), and The Souls of Black Folk (W. E. B. DuBois, 1903).

Each group of three students will select one chapter/one book. Reading the novels, although a wonderful idea, is not required for a deep understanding of these chapters. The book aims to offer new pathways through which to better understand our intrinsic identities as educators. Each chapter concludes with “Recommendations for Reflection” that readers are encouraged to consider individually and/or collectively.

                                                            **************

Each group is responsible for 3 components (that can be divided up however group members decide).

Component One: A brief 3-4 slide PowerPoint that summarizes the main points of the chapter; and/or presents the major themes of the chapter. For instance, it can describe specific points presented & explored; explain specific examples of how the literature is used to illuminate teaching and learning and reflection. You as the educator and the curriculum designer are free to decide what you feel is most relevant to share to your peers.

Component Two: Create some kind of chart that lists 1) 3-4 quotations from the chapter that you feel most resonate with your teaching experiences and that you feel are “worth sharing.” 2) Explains (in your own words) your understanding of what the quote is saying and how it connects to your experiences.

Component Three: Surprise us! Maybe show a selected brief related video clip or maybe create some kind of original work (like a collage or a poem) that summarizes the chapter or highlights key themes, etc. These kinds of things can be followed by 1-2 related critical thinking questions.

 

link for robots only