Greenwich Time

The science of learning comes to Greenwich

- M-J Mercanti-Anthony, Ed.D, is a member of the Greenwich Board of Education and chair of researchEd Greenwich.

While this is only my third year as a member of the Greenwich Board of Education, it is my 25th in education. For a good two-thirds of that time, I had a nagging sense that I was missing something. Indeed, what surprised me most about my own teacher preparatio­n program was that we never actually talked about how kids learn.

I assumed, wrongly, that I would learn about the mind and how it worked. I thought that my study of “education” meant the study of “how learning happens.”

Yet when I completed pre-service training in the late 1990s, conversati­ons did not focus on what happened inside students’ heads. In my particular program, the closest I got to answering this question was the concept of “practition­er inquiry.” I was told to study my own students and hypothesiz­e what worked best. That sounded hollow to me — surely more experience­d hands knew better. Eventually, I assumed that I never learned about learning because we didn’t know much about it.

Yet the truth is we actually know quite a bit about learning. The fields of neuroscien­ce, cognitive science, and psychology have made great gains is understand­ing the science of learning. Alas, it is only much more recently that these concepts have begun to penetrate schools of education and teacher-training programs.

That is why I am so excited that the Board of Education is hosting researchEd Greenwich — a oneday education conference this Saturday, April 6, at Greenwich

That is why I am so excited that the Board of Education is hosting researchEd Greenwich — a one-day education conference this Saturday, April 6, at Greenwich High School.

High School.

The theme of the conference is “Unleashing the Science of Learning.” More than two dozen published authors and experts are presenting — representi­ng various facets of our understand­ing of how learning science can influence classroom practice.

ResearchEd is an internatio­nal, non-profit organizati­on dedicated to connecting educationa­l researcher­s to practition­ers in the field. A regular feature in Europe, Australia, and Dubai, Greenwich is the second school district in the United States to host an event. Next fall will see researchEd Delaware and researchEd Utah.

I attended the first conference last year hosted by the Frederick County Maryland School District. I was blown away by the caliber of the presentati­ons and meaningful­ness of the content. Here indeed were the ideas missing from my own training. Finally, I was at a conference not hearing about fads and gimmicks, but about the real science of how students learn and what that meant for daily classroom instructio­n.

I left thinking about how we could bring these ideas to our community. A year and a half later and after the work of many, many people, we are now on the eve of our own conference.

The caliber of speakers coming to Greenwich is world-class. Our keynote speaker, Dr. Carl Hendrick, is a professor of learning at the Academica University of Applied Sciences in Amsterdam. He is the co-author of the books, “How Teaching Happens” and “How Learning Happens.” Both are summaries of the seminal works of the learning sciences.

Other speakers include Dr. Jim Heal, Dr. Hendrick’s co-author, and Tom Bennett, the founder of researchEd and national advisor to the UK on matters of student behavior. Literacy expert James Murphy and renowned authors Tom Sherringto­n and Haili Hughes are all also flying in from the UK. Pedro de Bruyckere, author of “The Psychology of Great Teaching,” is joining us from Belgium.

Joining them at the conference are national thought leaders Robert Pondiscio, Barbara Davidson, Patrice Bain, and Natalie Wexler. Kim Marshall, of the Marshall Memo, is giving the closing keynote address. While these names are likely unfamiliar, within education each is a rock star. Google them if you do not believe me!

This is all to say, Saturday offers an extraordin­ary opportunit­y for Greenwich educators to learn from many of the titans of our field. I am certain that the ideas discussed next weekend at GHS will reverberat­e for years to come!

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