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The Graduate Division of the School of Education and Psychology was created in 1993 and received State of New York approval for its first graduate degree programs in 1995. The Graduate School was established on the basis of a firm conviction that education is one of the most important tools for bringing about continuous improvement in the conditions of life for all people.

Solidly committed to the goal of universal education of high quality, the Graduate School was given the mission of developing and implementing educational programs that would supply schools and other educational settings with the most professionally competent teachers, administrators, and educational support personnel. A central philosophical concept on which the Graduate School is based is the notion that the goal of learning is more learning and that the primary mission of education is to enhance educability - to stretch minds and to increase each person's ability to learn independently. The founders recognized that not all children come to school equally prepared to exercise their own intelligence and to derive maximum benefit from the school experience. This recognition lead to the important goal of placing in the hands of all learners the essential tools of learning: personal logic systems, a solid knowledge base about methods of learning, habits of thinking about one's own thinking processes, and a motive structure that makes learning its own reward.

 
 
The Graduate School of Education and Psychology offers currently seven graduate degree programs and two certificate programs leading
to New York State certification in different fields:
 

 

Every course in every curriculum in the Graduate Division of the School of Education and Psychology is designed both to impart a specified body of knowledge and simultaneously to expand students' abilities to use their own intelligence productively and effectively. The integration of acquiring knowledge and developing more effective tools of learning characterizes all aspects of the Graduate School and its instructional programs.

Five of these programs lead to bilingual/bicultural certification in Special Education , School Psychology, Speech and Hearing Handicapped, and for School Social Workers and Guidance Counselors. Three other programs lead to certification as School Administrator and Supervisor, School District Administrator, or School Business Administrator. The most recently added program leads to the sixth year advanced certificate in School Administration and Supervision.

Recognizing the diversity of potential graduate students and the multiplicity of their needs for advanced education, the Graduate School is flexible in its wish to meet the needs of individual students. All courses are taught either in late afternoons and evenings during the week, or on Sundays. Instruction is offered at Touro's main campus at 27 West 23rd Street in Manhattan, as well as in the Brooklyn, Ave. J campus, and the Stillwell Ave. campus.

 


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