School Children Have Fun with Science at CofC Camp
The College-sponsored summer camp gets elementary school kids excited about engineering and science through hands-on activities.
The College-sponsored summer camp gets elementary school kids excited about engineering and science through hands-on activities.
Teacher education professor Jon Hale's new book, "Freedom Schools," focuses on the creation of 41 schools for black students during the Mississippi Freedom Summer of 1964.
FitCatz is an aquatic and motor therapy community service program designed to help children with disabilities become efficient movers.
Professor Anne Gutshall was selected for an award from the Delta Gamma Foundation after being nominated by some of her former students, who are also members of the sorority. She will accept the award at the foundation's annual banquet in June.
Terry K. Peterson was honored in Dallas at the Beyond School Hours: National Education Conference, which began March 9, 2016. He has also recently helped launch the College's Afterschool and Summer Learning Resource Center.
Starting March 14, the College is hosting a four-day symposium that will highlight the importance of creating diverse learning environments.
Kendall Deas, an expert in education policy research and an adjunct professor in the School of Education, Health, and Human Performance, was recently named a 2016-2017 New Leadership Academy Fellow by the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor and its National Center For Institutional Diversity.
Six months after the shooting incident at Emanuel A.M.E. Church, College of Charleston professors share their thoughts on the tragedy and President Barack Obama's eulogy of the slain Rev. Clementa Pinckney.
The College is hosting alumni educators at a January basketball game and mailing out College of Charleston posters to South Carolina classrooms.
The featured event on Sept. 15, 2015, will include survivors of the 1963 Birmingham Church Bombing as well as a member of Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C.