Education at Bates

The Bates Department of Education seeks to foster the democratic possibilities of schooling through the study of education in the United States and internationally.

Education students work closely with faculty and with each other to analyze the complex dynamics between the purposes and products of schooling and the social structures and cultural processes that constitute the broader context for education. Because education is a field rather than a discipline, our faculty and the courses in our minors cross multiple fields — including psychology, philosophy, sociology, the arts, the sciences, history, and anthropology. 

Contact Us

Tobie Akerley Gordon
Pettengill Hall
Phone: 207-786-8295 takerley@bates.edu

What You Will Learn

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To better understand and critically examine the purpose and impact of schooling in society
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To examine the possibilities and importance of education reform
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To develop concern for the common good through community connection
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To bridge teaching theory and teaching practice early on
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To contribute to the field of education through teaching, learning, and/ or research
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To apply multidisciplinary perspectives to the field of education

Life After Bates

Students who successfully complete the teacher education minor are eligible to obtain a teaching certificate in Maine, with reciprocity in at least 45 states — and it does not expire, meaning you could begin teaching immediately, or years after graduation. The educational studies minor prepares students to be strong applicants to post-graduate elementary education, school counseling, and other graduate programs in education. It also provides a solid foundation for students interested in applying knowledge of educational structures to work in a variety of fields, including medicine, public policy, and law.

94%

of 2020-2024 social sciences graduates are employed and/or attending graduate school

Associate Professor of Education Mara Tieken, winner of the 2024 Kroepsch Teaching Award, teaches students in her course “EDUC 231 - Perspectives on Education” in Pettigrew 30 on January 16, 2025.

EDUC 231 - Perspectives on Education
This course introduces students to foundational perspectives (anthropological, historical, philosophical, psychological, and sociological) on education and helps students apply these perspectives to contemporary schools and classrooms. The course considers several large questions: What should be the purpose of education in a democratic society? What should be the role of the school? Who should participate in making decisions about schools? In what ways do schools reflect and perpetuate larger social inequities, and, alternately, how can they contribute to a more just and inclusive society? Students must complete at least thirty hours of fieldwork.

Associate Professor of Education Mara Tieken, winner of the 2024 Kroepsch Teaching Award, teaches students in her course “EDUC 231 – Perspectives on Education” in Pettigrew 30 on January 16, 2025. EDUC 231 – Perspectives on Education This course introduces students to foundational perspectives (anthropological, historical, philosophical, psychological, and sociological) on education and helps students apply these perspectives to contemporary schools and classrooms. The course considers several large questions: What should be the purpose of education in a democratic society? What should be the role of the school? Who should participate in making decisions about schools? In what ways do schools reflect and perpetuate larger social inequities, and, alternately, how can they contribute to a more just and inclusive society? Students must complete at least thirty hours of fieldwork.

Associate Professor of Education Mara Tieken, winner of the 2024 Kroepsch Teaching Award, teaches students in her course “EDUC 231 - Perspectives on Education” in Pettigrew 30 on January 16, 2025.

EDUC 231 - Perspectives on Education
This course introduces students to foundational perspectives (anthropological, historical, philosophical, psychological, and sociological) on education and helps students apply these perspectives to contemporary schools and classrooms. The course considers several large questions: What should be the purpose of education in a democratic society? What should be the role of the school? Who should participate in making decisions about schools? In what ways do schools reflect and perpetuate larger social inequities, and, alternately, how can they contribute to a more just and inclusive society? Students must complete at least thirty hours of fieldwork.

Associate Professor of Education Mara Tieken, winner of the 2024 Kroepsch Teaching Award, teaches students in her course “EDUC 231 – Perspectives on Education” in Pettigrew 30 on January 16, 2025. EDUC 231 – Perspectives on Education This course introduces students to foundational perspectives (anthropological, historical, philosophical, psychological, and sociological) on education and helps students apply these perspectives to contemporary schools and classrooms. The course considers several large questions: What should be the purpose of education in a democratic society? What should be the role of the school? Who should participate in making decisions about schools? In what ways do schools reflect and perpetuate larger social inequities, and, alternately, how can they contribute to a more just and inclusive society? Students must complete at least thirty hours of fieldwork.

Bates College students from FYS 491: Reading Japan in Multicultural Picture Books taught by Keiko Konoeda, lecturer in Japanese, visit 5th graders from Geiger Elementary School on December 12, 2023. Bates students helped the 5th graders make their own Onigiri and paper cranes. (Theophil Syslo | Bates College)

Bates College students from FYS 491: Reading Japan in Multicultural Picture Books taught by Keiko Konoeda, lecturer in Japanese, visit 5th graders from Geiger Elementary School on December 12, 2023. Bates students helped the 5th graders make their own Onigiri and paper cranes. (Theophil Syslo | Bates College)

Lewiston Middle School students participate in a WriteIn! Program on May 20, 2024, with with Bates student tutors from the Bates Student Writing and Language Center. 


These two classes of LMS students taught by LMS English teacher Elizabeth Arlene were led in a creative writing exercise in Hathorn Hall  by Bates students George Miller and Amy XX?? And Ahige Api ’27 and Lexi Inter ’26. The activity was called Scriblish where one person started a story by writing one line and passing it along for a total of five writers (or you could add a drawing) until a story was completed and read aloud to the group.

Lewiston Middle School students participate in a WriteIn! Program on May 20, 2024, with with Bates student tutors from the Bates Student Writing and Language Center. These two classes of LMS students taught by LMS English teacher Elizabeth Arlene were led in a creative writing exercise in Hathorn Hall by Bates students George Miller and Amy XX?? And Ahige Api ’27 and Lexi Inter ’26. The activity was called Scriblish where one person started a story by writing one line and passing it along for a total of five writers (or you could add a drawing) until a story was completed and read aloud to the group.

As an education minor at Bates, you will gain real-world experience through community-engaged learning, which takes place as part of almost every education course through a variety of community and school-based settings. We offer two minor pathways. Students may choose a grades 6-12 teaching certification pathway that includes student teaching (the teacher education minor) or take an exploratory approach based on emerging interests in education (the educational studies minor). Both include real world teaching experience from the very first course — a unique approach not offered at all institutions.

Featured Courses

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Patricia S. Buck

Associate Professor of Education

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Anita S. Charles

Senior Lecturer in Education and Director of Secondary Teacher Education

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Isabel Martinez-Cuenca

Visiting Lecturer in Education

Photo of Bronwyn M. Sale

Bronwyn M. Sale

Lecturer in Education

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Stacy L. Smith

Visiting Lecturer in Education

Photo of Mara C. Tieken

Mara C. Tieken

Professor of Education

News & Events

Bates announces Stoddard Fitness and Well-Being Center and athletics facilities upgrades
March 5, 2026

Bates announces Stoddard Fitness and Well-Being Center and at…

Bates is embarking on a $45 million project to update two key athletic facilities and construct a new fitness and well-being center. A gift of $10 million from Jon W. Brayshaw ’90, P’25 and Jocelyn Stoddard Brayshaw ’88, P’25 has brought the college a vital step closer to construction. The new facility will be named the Stoddard Fitness and Well-Being Center. 

Over the woodlands brown and bare, over the harvest-fields forsaken, silent, and soft, and slow descends the snow. — Longfellow Back on campus after the February freak storm, Bates feels suspended between motion and stillness; cars crunch in half-melted tracks, boots drip by radiators, flights and plans still catching up somewhere in the clouds. Some of us are here, some are delayed, and the quiet holds space for both. It’s a strange return; rushed arrivals, late-night drives, weather maps open on our phones, yet the air itself feels calm, like the world pressed pause just long enough for us to notice it. The paradox is real; chaos in the forecast, steadiness on the quad. Snow does that. It softens edges, lowers voices, makes even a campus full of movement feel like it’s breathing slowly.
March 5, 2026

February at Bates

February on campus saw sports successes, several large snowfalls, and our annual Winter Carnival — a week of events celebrating the joys of the chilly season.