Online High Schools Test Students' Social SkillsFriday, October 2, 2009
Rand Spiro Quoted in Wall Street Journal
Online High Schools Test Students' Social SkillsSaturday, September 12, 2009
Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology

Thursday, October 1st, 3:30-5:00pm in 252 Erickson
All around us people are learning with the aid of new technologies:
children are playing complex video games, workers are taking online
courses to get an advanced degree, students are taking courses at
commercial learning centers to prepare for tests, adults are consulting
Wikipedia, etc. New technologies create learning opportunities that
challenge traditional schools and colleges. These new learning niches
enable people of all ages to pursue learning on their own terms. People
around the world are taking their education out of school into homes,
libraries, Internet cafes, and workplaces, where they can decide what
they want to learn, when they want to learn, and how they want to learn.
The developments described above are changing how people think about education। This rethinking will take many years to fully penetrate
our understanding of the world and the society around us। To be successful,
leaders will need to grasp these changes in a deep way and bring the
government’s resources to bear on the problems raised by the changes
that are happening. They will have to build their vision of a new
education system around these new understandings. The rethinking that is
necessary applies to many aspects of education and society. We are
beginning to rethink the nature of learning, motivation, and what is
important to learn. Further the nature of careers are changing and how
people transition back and forth between learning and working. These
changes demand a new kind of educational leadership and changing roles
for government. New leaders will need to understand the affordances of
the new technologies, and have a vision for education that will bring
the new resources to everyone.
Bio: Allan Collins is Professor Emeritus of Education and Social Policy at
Northwestern University. He is a member of the National Academy of
Education, and a fellow of the American Association for Artificial
Intelligence, the Cognitive Science Society, the American Educational
Research Association, and the American Association for the Advancement
of Science. He served as a founding editor of the journal Cognitive
Science and as first chair of the Cognitive Science Society. He has
studied teaching and learning for over 30 years, and written extensively
on related topics. He is best known in psychology for his work on how
people answer questions, in artificial intelligence for his work on
reasoning and intelligent tutoring systems, and in education for his
work on situated learning, inquiry teaching, design research, and
cognitive apprenticeship. From 1991 to 1994 he was Co-Director of the US
Department of Education’s Center for Technology in Education.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Research Methodology Videos

• "Problems with the Design and Implementation of Randomized Experiments"
• "Reversion to the Mean, or Does Dosage Matter?"
• "Assessing Intervention Fidelity: Models, Methods, and Modes of Analysis"
• "Why the Research Community Should Take Notice of State Longitudinal DataSystems"
• http://ies.ed.gov/director/conferences/09ies_conference/agenda.asp
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Nell Duke Receives AERA's Early Career Award
LARC Co-Director and Principal Investigator Nell K. Duke, an Associate Professor of Teacher Education and Educational Psychology, was awarded the 2009 AERA Early Career Award. The award honors a scholar who has conducted a distinguished program of cumulative educational research in any field of educational inquiry within the first decade following receipt of their doctoral degree. For more information about Dr. Duke's research contributions, click here.
Guofang Li Interviewed by European Network
LARC Principal Investigator Guofang Li , an Associate Professor of second language and literacy education at Michigan State University, was recently interviewed by the European Urban Knowledge Network (EUKN) about the 'rainbow underclass,' a term she coined in her book Culturally Contested Literacies, as a multicultural group of people, including poor whites, living in U.S. urban neighborhoods. To read more about Li's research on the EUKN, click here.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Rand Spiro Quoted in Washington Post
Do men and women use the Internet differently? LARC researcher Rand Spiro responds to this question in a Washington Post article on learning, gender, and the Internet. Read Spiro's thoughts at: The Online Male Takes a Licking and Keeps on Clicking.
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
The Future of Reading: The Digital Librarian

Sunday, January 25, 2009
NEW REPORT: National Early Literacy Panel

Wednesday, January 7, 2009
BookTV Debate: On Literacy & Technology
The Millennials: The Dumbest Generation or the Next Great Generation?Thursday, January 1, 2009
Voice of Literacy Podcasts
Betsy Baker, Professor of Literacy Education at the University of Missouri--Columbia, hosts a bi-weekly series of podcast interviews with literacy researchers who discuss the implications of their research for teachers, parents, principals, and policymakers. Titled Voice of Literacy, the website offers podcasts that provide backstory and insight into recent articles in the Journal of Literacy Research and Reading Research Quarterly.