Dr. Karen Feathers, Graduate Program Director
434.395.2837, featherskh@longwood.edu
The Special Education: General Curriculum 5th Year K-12 concentration is open only to Longwood students who have successfully completed all requirements for the Longwood Liberal Studies/Special Education undergraduate general curriculum K-12 as described in the Longwood University undergraduate catalog. Successful completion of this program leads to the Master of Science degree and meets current eligibility requirements for the Virginia Postgraduate Professional License in Special Education: General Curriculum K-12.
Once admitted to the graduate program, the candidates will select one of two specialization tracks:
1) English Language Learners
2) Middle School Pedagogy
NOTE: Though many courses overlap, this is a different program from the Special Education: General Curriculum Plus One K-12 and the Special Education: General Curriculum Initial Licensure K-12 programs.
Admission
Applicants must be completing their undergraduate degree from Longwood University in Liberal Studies concentrating in Special Education.
In addition to the above, applicants must have:
- a 2.75 cumulative GPA (on a 4.0 scale)
- provide a 500-word personal essay
- a résumé.
Residency
The completion of residency is mandatory in the Special Education program. The residency is 6 one credit hour courses requiring 100 field clock hours for each credit hour. SPED 507 , SPED 508 , and SPED 509 are taken in the fall and EDUC 607 , EDUC 608 , and EDUC 609 are taken in the spring. Grading is pass (P) / not pass (NP). Only the grade of ‘P’ will meet degree requirements. A grade of incomplete (I) may be assigned at the discretion of the instructor ONLY if all field clock hours have been successfully completed. All students must be enrolled in a minimum of one (1) credit hour of the applicable field experience to be completing any clock hours of placement in the field in order to be in compliance with insurance regulations per the Attorney General’s office. Students cannot begin a placement prior to registering for the required course in the semester they wish to begin observing all applicable deadlines.
Comprehensive Examination
The Special Education program requires a comprehensive examination as the culmination of their program. Students take the Praxis II - Special Education: Core Knowledge and Mild to Moderate Applications. Students must be enrolled to allow for completion of 30 semester hours of course work, must have a B average (3.0 GPA) in all courses completed, and must have already filed the Application for Graduate Degree to be eligible to enroll in the comprehensive examination.
Students must register for the comprehensive examination (EDUC 699 ) no later than the last day to add a course in the semester in which they wish to take the examination. Registration must be done by submission of the Graduate Course Enrollment Request form to the Registrar’s Office when all of the above criteria have been met. The course does not carry any credit hours.
The Praxis II is a multiple choice test administered by Educational Testing Service (ETS) at testing centers. Immediately upon completion of the exam at the testing center, examinees must print a copy of their results and deliver them to the Special Education program by the date required.
The grading system for the evaluation of the examination will be pass (P)/not pass (NP). Students who do not pass the examination shall be allowed one re-examination. The re-examination will be administered at a time set by the Director of the Special Education Graduate Program within the same semester. The re-examination will test the same material as the original sections of the Praxis II, but will be a subjective question on each section designed and graded by the Special Education faculty. Students will only be required to retake the subjective question on the section(s) they did not pass. Failure of the examination for a second time will be final, and students will be dismissed from the graduate program.