Thomas Del Prete
Professor of Practice, Education
Professor Emeritus, Education
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Professor Del Prete has been Director of the Adam Institute for Urban Teaching and School Practice since 2012. Previously, he was Director of the Hiatt Center for Urban Education (1998-2012) and Chair of the Education Department (1996-2012). A graduate of Brown University, and a former secondary teacher in History and English, he earned his doctorate from Harvard University, concentrating on teaching, learning, and curriculum.
Professor Del Prete founded and supports the continuing development of Clark's partner school collaborative, including the Goddard, Hiatt, and Woodland elementary schools and Claremont Academy, South High and University Park Campus School. The partner school collaborative is dedicated to the joint development of learning cultures and practices that serve the students in "Main South," a diverse and low income area of Worcester. Likewise, the partnership is committed to developing exemplary models of urban teacher preparation, professional development and school reform, and to learning from the effort. Professor Del Prete developed the "rounds" model, a classroom-based collaborative learning model for teachers, as well as the curriculum team model that bridges and integrates arts and sciences and practitioner perspectives -- two signature programs. For a number of years he served as co-chair of the partnership History Curriculum Team.
In pursuing the partnership work, Professor Del Prete has been awarded grants from the federal Department of Education, the Massachusetts State Department of Education, the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education, and national and local private foundations. Most recently, he received a grant from the Greater Worcester Community Foundation to support development of the Main South College Success Program, a neighborhood- and school-based effort to maximize support for first-generation college students. He is an original and continuing member of the steering committee for University Park Campus School. He received the Thomas Jefferson award from the Worcester Public Schools for his service to University Park Campus School in 1999, and the John W. Lund Community Achievement award at Clark in 2000.
Professor Del Prete's interests include university-school partnerships, models of urban teacher education, secondary school reform, history curriculum and learning, and spirituality and education. He has been recognized for his scholarship on Thomas Merton and education. His book Thomas Merton and the Education of the Whole Person earned the first scholarship award given by the International Thomas Merton Society in 1991. He has published about twenty articles and reviews in Merton studies. He was elected President of the International Thomas Merton Society for a two year term in 1997. His most recent books focus on urban school cultures and practice and professional learning through the rounds model.
Degrees
- Ed.D. in Teaching, Curriculum, and Learning Environments, Harvard University, 1987
- M.A.T. in Concentration in Social Studies, Rhode Island College, 1978
- B.A. in American Civilization (American History and American Literature), Brown University, 1976
Affiliated Department(s)
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Scholarly and Creative Works
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Malewitz, T. Authenticity, Passion, and Advocacy: Approaching Adolescent Spirituality from the Life and Wisdom of Thomas Merton
Chapter: ForewordPublished by Wipf and Stock
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2020
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Awards & Grants
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Noyce Clark-Science-Math Teacher and Education Program (CSTEP)
National Science Foundation
Sep. 15, 2013 - Aug. 31, 2022
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Main South Neighborhood School and College Success Program
Jacobs Foundation
Jan. 1, 2020 - Dec. 31, 2021
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Main South Neighborhood School and College Success Program
Greater Worcester Community Foundation
Jan. 1, 2020 - Dec. 31, 2021
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