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When

Dec 2, 2009 8:00 am (Wednesday)

Where

Adelphi University (map)

1 South Avenue
Garden City, NY 11530
What
Calendar: School of Education Contact: armstrong-leach@adelphi.edu - Adelphi Education Description: SEL Fall conference at Adelphi University : District-Wide Implementation Strategi...
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Description
Calendar:
School of Education

Contact:
armstrong-leach@adelphi.edu - Adelphi Education

Description:
SEL Fall conference at Adelphi University : District-Wide Implementation Strategies
Hosted for the first time by Adelphi University's Ruth S. Ammon School of Education in Parternship with Western Suffolk BOCES and The Long Island Social Emotional Literarcy Forum (LI SELF).
Social emotional development and learning is the process "through which children and adults acquire the skills to recognize and manage their emotions, demonstrate caring and concern for others, establish positive relationships, make responsible decisions and handle challenging situations effectively. This skill set provides the foundation for academic achievement, maintenance of good health, and civic engagement in a democratic society".
Department contact:
Patrice Armstrong Leach X 4094
More about Adelphi University
Adelphi University
Founded on June 24, 1896, Adelphi University is the first institution of higher education on Long Island, and its charter was one of the earliest granted by the New York State Board of Regents to a coeducational college. The University is in its second century of practical preparation for undergraduates, graduate students, and returning adult students in the arts, sciences, humanities, business, education, nursing and health maintenance, social welfare, and clinical psychology. Adelphi has a mission of service to Long Island, the New York metropolitan region, and the nation. Adelphi University's first classes were held in a building in Brooklyn that also housed the Adelphi Academy, a preparatory school that still exists today. The University's original enrollment was 57 students, taught by 16 faculty members. Adelphi University's roots reach back to 1863 and the founding of the Adelphi Academy, a private preparatory school located at 412 Adelphi Street, Brooklyn, New York. The Academy was incorporated in 1869 and its Board of Trustees was charged with establishing "a first class institution for the broadest and most thorough training, and to make its advantages as accessible as possible to the largest numbers of our population." The school quickly gained a reputation for its innovative curriculum, particularly in physical culture and early childhood education. By 1893, 1,032 students were enrolled in its primary, grammar, three-year subcollegiate and two-year collegiate division. The appointment of Dr. Charles H. Levermore as the head of the Academy in 1893 was an important moment in Adelphi's history. Realizing the city of Brooklyn was without a liberal arts college, Levermore seized the opportunity to establish Adelphi College. Through the efforts of Timothy Woodruff, former Lieutenant Governor of New York State and future president of the Board of Trustees, Adelphi College, with 57 students and 16 instructors, was granted a charter—one of the earliest charters granted to a coeducational college by the Board of Regents of the State of New York—on June 24, 1896. Henceforth, degrees issued bore the seals of Adelphi College and of the University of the State of New York and were signed by the officers of the college and by the Chancellor and Secretary of the University. For the next 25 years, the Academy remained intact yet separate from the College. Over the course of the next one hundred years Adelphi grew and changed significantly. For more than three decades following 1912, the institution served only women. In 1929, Adelphi moved to its present location, on 75 beautifully landscaped acres in Garden City, N.Y. In 1944, Adelphi's School of Nursing became the first such school established by a college in New York State in response to the pressing need for nurses created by the United States' entry into World War II. To mark the opening of two federally funded residence halls for women, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt delivered an address at Adelphi entitled, "The Challenge of Nursing for Young Women Today." Within five years, the School—one of the largest college-units of the United States Cadet Nurse Corps—graduated 500 nursing students into active service in the Corps and expanded the College's enrollment by 1,200 students. After the war, Adelphi reverted to its original coeducational model to accommodate returning World War II servicemen. The School of Social Work was founded in 1949; doctoral education followed in 1950. Adelphi's program in clinical psychology was formally organized in 1952 and evolved into the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, which has the distinction of being the first university-based professional school in psychotherapy. In 1963, after another decade of expansion, Adelphi was granted university status by the Board of Regents. By the 1970's, the Garden City campus, established in 1929, had expanded from its original three buildings—Blodgett, Levermore, and Woodruff Halls—to 21 buildings on 75 acres, including the Leon A. Swirbul Library, now a fully computerized collection of more than 1.7 million volumes and microformat and audiovisual items. Today, a full- and part-time faculty of 634 serves a student body of more than 7,700 undergraduate and graduate degree candidates on the main Garden City campus and at facilities in New York City, Hauppauge, and Poughkeepsie. Adelphi University's schools and programs include the College of Arts and Sciences; the Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies; the Honors College; the School of Business; the School of Education; the School of Nursing; the School of Social Work; and Adult Undergraduate Degree Program (ABLE). Uniting these diverse liberal arts and professional programs is their shared tradition of academic innovation and rigor and their common philosophy of education and lifetime learning. Their more than 500 full- and part-time faculty serve over 6,800 undergraduate and graduate degree candidates. While focusing its rich resources on the needs of its students, Adelphi also seeks to serve its locality, state, and nation through the research and practice of its faculty; the strengthening of ties between the professional schools and community; the staging of distinguished cultural events at its campuses; and most essentially, the education of a generation of future leaders and informed citizens, professionals, and community members.

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