As Wayne Corey delves another year into the adventure that is his retirement, he takes a gander at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s continuing-studies catalogue and remembers the advice given to him by Prof. John L. Baker.
Go learn about stuff
Julia Koza's class creates magic with notes. Historically the music-education area at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has been a center of leadership and creativity; it has been home to some of the finest music-education scholars and teachers in the world. It was among the first graduate programs in music education to embrace interpretive research; its current faculty continues a tradition of innovation in research paradigm and theory, specializing in the emerging areas of revisionist history, ethnography, critical textual and discourse analysis, semiotics, iconography, policy studies and action research.
University of Wisconsin-Madison undergraduate Kari Sexe, left, helps Alvin Martin read a book during the Allied Drive Literacy Time program at the Allied Learning Center, which is run by Madison School & Community Recreation in Madison. Through the outreach program, the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Library and Information Studies students provide book-based programming to elementary students from Kindergarten through third-grade. The university's Youth Services specialization is for students who are interested in working with children and teens in public libraries and also K-12 school libraries. The university is ranked the fourth-top school in the nation for library degrees in services for children and youth by US News and World Report.





