By Charles Booth, APSU

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (CLARKSVILLENOW)- Michael Johnson, a Northwest High School music teacher, can’t stop thinking about leadership strategies. For the last seven or eight months, he’s fixated on the topic, causing him to scrutinize his conversations with students and colleagues.

“A year ago today, I would never have analyzed it as much as I do now,” Johnson said. “The way I view things now is from the lens of ‘What’s the leadership style? Why is this working or not working?’ I’m not in a leadership role yet in the school system, but my thinking has translated into my classroom and my interactions with other teachers.”

Johnson began developing this new mindset back in August when he became one of Austin Peay State University’s first doctoral students. He, along with 19 other educators and working professionals, enrolled in the Eriksson College of Education’s new Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) degree program, with a focus on educational leadership, and with program’s first year coming to an end, he remains committed to one day being called “Dr. Johnson.”

“It’s clear this is not a fly-by-night degree,” he said. “This is very well established, with high expectations, and they’re not going to just hand you a degree. You’re going to have to work for it. That’s exciting. As the first cohort, we get to set the standard for that.”

Sarah Dugger plans to use her doctorate to teach at the college level. (Photo: APSU)

A hard-working cohort

Dr. Gary Stewart, APSU professor of education, spent the last several years developing the doctoral program because of a growing demand from local educators. Last summer, when the University was finally ready to admit students, Stewart made sure they enrolled only the top candidates.

In the next few weeks, Stewart will begin interviewing candidates for the doctoral program’s second cohort of students. And though the program is almost a year old, people continue to ask him if the rumors about Austin Peay offering an Ed.D. degree are true. He tells them they are.

“I get calls and emails all the time,” Stewart said. “I keep a perspective list over here, and just for the next cohort, I have almost 40 people who’ve expressed an interest.”

Austin Peay was founded in 1927 as a normal school for the training of rural educators in Tennessee.

The degree

The Ed.D. was designed to meet the needs of several groups of potential students, including:
• Current educational leaders in the K-12 environment who currently hold an administrative license.

• Classroom teachers who have earned master’s or Ed.S. degrees who wish to acquire the administrative license while obtaining a doctorate.

• Classroom teachers who have earned master’s or Ed.S. degrees who do not wish to be a school administrator but desire to become an educational leader.

• Current educational leaders in the K-12 environment who need to earn the doctorate to either enhance their marketability or to improve their skills.

• Military personnel who desire to continue their education after the master’s degree.

The degree, housed within the college’s Department of Educational Specialties, consists of 60 credit hours beyond a master’s degree, with students taking classes in leadership theory and practice, research and statistics, organizational analysis and analysis of educational policy, in addition to writing a dissertation.

For information on the Ed.D. program, visit Austin Peay State University’s website.