Program Details

Learn more about the Hybrid MEd program including mission, strands and competencies.

The Hybrid MEd Mission

Teacher education at Seattle University prepares social justice educators who actively strive for educational equity in partnership with students, families, and communities furthest from justice, through a lifelong process of critical reflection and action rooted in anti-racist and humanizing pedagogies. 

Strands and Competencies

The strands and competencies are pillars of the Hybrid MEd in Transformational Teaching and Learning program. Below you'll see the different strands, the essential questions for each pillar, and competencies. 

Essential Question: How will you develop your identity as an anti-racist, humanizing teacher working for social justice?    

1.1 TCs are committed to examining their own histories, identities, biases, assumptions and their own tensions with racism and oppressions.  

1.2 TCs value learning as a lifelong process in becoming an anti-racist educator.  

1.3TCs recognize students' intersecting identities and critically reflect on how biases, perceptions, expectations and actions in classrooms and schools affect their learning opportunities.  

1.4 TCs understand how anti-racist and humanizing pedagogies impact the teacher student relationship and professional relationships.  

1.5 TCs understand how historical and institutional structures create and maintain racial and other inequities and oppressions in education.  

1.6 TCs develop the skills to reimagine and enact solutions to the inequities within schools, specifically focused on students who are disproportionately harmed on a micro or macro level, based on their various identities (racial, ethnic, gender, sexual, etc.).  

1.7 TCs demonstrate the expectations and requirements of the teaching profession and engage with all stakeholders in humanizing ways.  

Essential Question: How will you partner with families, communities, and school personnel to cultivate learning opportunities in pursuit of educating the whole person?  

2.1 ​​TCs are committed to listening to and honoring the voices of persons who are from communities furthest from justice, including indigenous communities.   

2.2 ​​TCs value the partnerships with families, communities and other school personnel as a necessity in educating the whole person. 

2.3 TCs understand the purposes and principles behind developing and maintaining authentic partnerships.  

2.4 TCs develop asset-based practices and pedagogies in collaboration with students, families and communities in pursuit of educating the whole person.   

2.5 ​​TCs demonstrate accountability to the community through cycles of feedback, action, and co-reflection with families, school personnel and community partners.   

Essential Question: How will you facilitate an inclusive and culturally sustaining learning community in your classroom that fosters a sense of belonging and agency for each student? 

3.1 TCs believe that “all learners can achieve at high levels and persist in helping each learner reach their full potential.” (INTASC, 2(l))  

3.2. TCs create classroom communities where students' identities, cultures and languages are valuable resources for learning.  

3.3 TCs collaborate with learners to establish and monitor expectations for a learning community to foster and maintain a sense of belonging, agency, and collective responsibility for the classroom.  

3.4 TCs create classrooms where learners have agency to regularly name, critique and address injustices.  

Essential Question: How will you design and enact relevant and meaningful instruction and assessment to develop students' identities, knowledge, understandings, skills, and dispositions to bring creativity and innovation to the world's most pressing issues? 

4.1 TCs utilize strategies to prepare all students to be responsible for an environmentally sustainable, globally interconnected and diverse society.  

4.2 TCs make careful decisions about the content they teach using a social justice lens and the ways of knowing and doing in the discipline.   

4.3 TCs design and enact meaningful and responsive instruction in which alignment exists between content goals, assessment and students' identity development, assets and diverse learning needs.  

4.4 TCs apply research-based theories of learning and development to design and enact equitable instruction.   

4.5 TCs design and enact instruction and assessment using a range of equitable instructional models and technologies so that learners can apply knowledge in authentic ways and develop critical thinking skills.  

4.6 TCs design and enact instruction and assessment in which students can develop academic language and literacy skills to engage with content and represent their ideas in a range of modalities.  

4.7 TCs incorporate tools of language teaching to foster English language development and provide opportunities for students to draw on their home languages for learning.  

4.8 TCs understand and apply humanizing strategies and resources to support students with exceptional needs, including disabilities and giftedness.  

4.9 TCs enact assessment strategies to adjust and differentiate instruction and to support students in monitoring their own learning.  

4.10 TCs seek out feedback and engage in ongoing critical reflection to strengthen their practice. 

Essential Question: How will you work with partners to advocate for systemic change that advances equitable, anti-racist, and inclusive school communities?

5.1 TCs develop tools, ally networks and ability to draw on their positionality to the educational system and advocate for equitable schools.  

5.2 TCs understand decolonized theories of leadership and change, and how they operate in schools and districts. 

5.3 TCs will identify and engage in opportunities for advancing equity and inclusion in schools. 

Program Comparison

  Hybrid MEd Transformational Teaching and Learning Master in Teaching
Application Deadline Rolling Admissions through May Rolling Admissions January-May
Degree Title Master of Education Master in Teaching
Start Term Mid-August (about a month before Fall Quarter) Mid-August (about a month before Fall Quarter)
Length of Program 2 Years (45 quarter credits); 12-18 additional credits for added endorsemens 1 Year full time (60 quarter credits, over 3 quarters)
Licensure Preparation

WA State Residency Teaching Certificate with either an elementary endorsement or a subject-specific secondary endorsement with potential added endorsement in Year 2.

Options for added endorsement:

  • Advanced Teaching and Learning of Multilingual Students, ELL endorsement
  • Dis/Ability, Justice and Inclusion, SPED endorsement
WA State Residency Teaching Certificate with either an elementary endorsement or a subject-specific secondary endorsement.
Frequency and Modality
  • Online asynchronous
  • 3 classes per quarter
  • On-campus once a month on Saturdays
  • On-campus Summer Institute 5 days in mid-August Year 1 and Year 2. 
  • On-Campus courses
  • M-F, 9 am-3pm
Field Based School/Community Experiences
  • Flexibly scheduled in-person community and school-based experiences wherever you are located.
  • Time Commitment: 20 hours a quarter in Year 1; working full time in a mentor teacher's classroom/school in Year 2
  • Field-based experiences take place each quarter ranging from multiple weeks at a time.
  • Full time for 12 weeks in the final quarter, gradually assuming all teaching responsibilities.
Cost Per Credit Cost per credit Cost per credit
This program is a great fit for...
  • Working professionals who seek hybrid/online courses
  • School professionals seeking to gain certification and Master's degree
  • New teachers who prefer in-person learning
  • Aspiring education professionals who want a certification and Master's degree in one year

Get in Touch

If you have any questions about the program or application, we’re here to help.  

Christine Campbell

Assistant Director of Graduate Online Programs

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