Learning Together for Children’s Learning: An Interdisciplinary Convening
As the pace of student learning lags behind rates of enrollment globally, identifying innovative approaches to improve learning has become an increasingly important policy issue. One promising area of research examines how cognitive, social, and emotional skills are nurtured by and impact a child’s holistic education. As evidenced by the work on the Math Games pedagogy by Esther Duflo and Elizabeth Spelke in India, important complementarities exist when these different disciplines are brought together to develop, adapt, test, and scale innovations. However, examples of cross-disciplinary learning are limited.
See the agenda
See the presenters
The Learning Together for Children’s Learning (LTCL) convening aims to help fill this gap by matching researchers across disciplines to collaborate on promising experimental approaches to children’s learning (pre-primary through secondary school ages). J-PAL’s Foundations of Learning Initiative and the Innovation, Data, and Experiments in Education program are gathering researchers from economics, psychology, and other disciplines to:
- highlight success stories from experts in different fields (see featured speakers list below)
- kickstart new research partnerships across disciplines, and
- discuss and provide feedback on participants’ research, including completed projects, research designs, and new measurement ideas that are well-suited for including potential new coauthors.
The submission deadline for presenting at LTCL has closed and presenters have been notified.
The registration for attendance has also closed.
We invite all to attend a subsequent public one-day conference Collège de France (June 20).
Logistics
Getting to the venues:
- Days 1-2 (June 18-19) Getting to Jourdan Campus, Paris School of Economics (48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014)
- Day 3 (June 20) Getting to Collège de France (11, place Marcelin Berthelot, 75005)
Hotel Recommendations: For reasonable rates, we often recommend Hotel Terminus Orleans and Hotel Parc Montsouris near the Paris School of Economics. We also recommend Hotel Lion (20 minutes walk from PSE).
About the Foundations of Learning Initiative
J-PAL's Foundations of Learning Initiative aims to highlight strategies that improve learning by creating more efficient measurement instruments, evaluating educational approaches in the laboratory and testing generalizable models in real world settings. By developing a network of interdisciplinary researchers in cognitive sciences, psychology, and economics, this initiative fills an important gap in the field of fundamental research. Interdisciplinary research teams should apply for this funding via the Learning for All Initiative.
About Innovation, Data and Experiments in Education
The Innovation, Data and Experiments in Education program helps education researchers produce actionable evidence in France by facilitating access to administrative data, providing research resources and measurement tools, and structuring partnerships with policymakers and practitioners. The IDEE programme is funded by the French National Research Agency (ANR) within the framework of the "Investissements d'avenir" (reference: ANR-21-ESRE-0034).
Speakers
Esther Duflo, Director, J-PAL; President, Paris School of Economics; Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Elizabeth (Liz) Spelke, Professor of Psychology, Harvard University
Hiro Yoshikawa, Professor of Applied Psychology, New York University Steinhardt School
Marc Gurgand, Professor of Economics, Paris School of Economics
Pascal Bressoux, Professor of Education Sciences, Université Grenoble Alpes
Karen Macours, Professor of Economics, Paris School of Economics
Sandra Andreu, Head of Office, French Ministry of National Education and Youth
Julien Grenet, Professor of Economics, Paris School of Economics
Stanislas Dehaene, Professor and Chair of Experimental Cognitive Psychology, Collège de France
Elise Huillery, Professor of Economics, University Paris Dauphine - PSL
African Scholars
J-PAL is invested in creating more opportunities for African researchers to develop and drive the research agenda on the African continent through the use of randomized evaluations. The African Scholars Program provides funding, mentorship, and training opportunities to African researchers. One of J-PAL’s education initiatives LAI currently offers this program and has recently funded the following African Scholars' research projects, which will be presented at the LTCL event for feedback.
Mohammed Mutaka Seidu, Researcher, Parliament House, Ghana
Toyin Samuel Olowogbon, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Federal University Oye-Ekiti
Solomon Zena Walelign, Research Fellow, Ethiopian Policy Studies Institute
Tukae Mbegalo, Lecturer and Head of Department of Mathematics and Statistics Studies, Mzumbe University
Jaah Mkupete, Lecturer, University of Dar es Salaam
For any questions, please email [email protected].