Educational Leadership for Teaching and Learning / Doctor of Education (Ed.D.)

60 credit hour Ed.D. program

The Educational Leadership Doctoral Program at Lewis University is unique and distinctive because it explores critical educational issues related to the changing conditions youth now face and the degree to which they have been put at risk by social policy, institutional mismanagement and shifting cultural attitudes.  This knowledge and discourse about youth out of ethical necessity suggests educators and leaders must be prepared to address these pressing social and political issues in their neighborhood, school, community and society.  The Lewis University Educational Leadership Doctoral Program explicitly focuses on this crisis in education and leadership and is committed to preparing critical transformative leaders who understand the complexity of the current context and who accept the challenge of creating alternative possibilities in order to educate students to live in a multicultural world, to face the challenge of reconciling difference and community and to address what it means to have a voice in shaping one’s future. 

Program Goals:

  1. Students understand and address the most pressing educational, social and political issues of their neighborhood, community and society.
  2. Students critique education in the context of globalization, post capitalism and neoliberalism.
  3. Students understand the pedagogical process as a means of building critical capacity and liberation.
  4. Students complete a theoretically sound dissertation with a social justice perspective.

Candidates seeking a doctoral degree must fulfill the following requirements:

  1. Submit Graduate Record Examination scores (valid within last 5 years).
  2. Example of scholarly and academic work.
  3. Complete a personal interview.

See complete admission requirements in College of Education introduction.

Degree Requirements

For information regarding the Superintendent Endorsement, see the Ed.D. Program Director.

The Ed.D. Cohort will begin its study in the fall semester. During that semester, one of the classes will be held one night/week for three hours. The other class will be held every other Saturday for six hours. Summer classes will be offered in an intensive two-week session.

 

51-710Philosophical Foundations

3

51-712Theories of Critical Transformative Leadership

3

51-715Foundations of Educational Inquiry

3

51-722Ethical and Moral Studies in Education

3

51-723Theories of Cultural Difference in Education

3

51-725Conceptualizing and Designing Research

3

51-731Critical Pedagogy and Assessment

3

51-735Qualitative Inquiry

3

51-737Curriculum Theory

3

51-738Critical Perspectives in School Law

3

51-743Topics in Globalization and Education

3

51-745Program Evaluation

3

51-746Theories of Institutional Transformation

3

51-747Organizational Theory

3

51-757Policy Studies in Education

3

51-760History of American Education

3

51-765Quantitative Inquiry

3

51-775Dissertation Seminar

3

51-785Dissertation

3

51-785: 3 - Course to be repeated for a total of 6 hours

Beyond coursework:

51-795Dissertation Supervision

1

Candidates enrolled in the doctoral program can earn a Superintendent Endorsement with three additional classes.

51-645Collective Negotiations and Personnel Administration

3

51-658School Finance and Fiscal Management

3

51-688Leadership Practicum

3