Implications for educational practice of the science of learning and development

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By NCBI Pubmed Posted on Jan 29, 2023
In Category - Education
Linda Darling-Hammond, Lisa Flook, Channa Cook-Harvey, Brigid Barron, David Osher
1. Learning Policy Institute; 2. Stanford University; 3. American Institutes of Research

Applied Developmental Science (Taylor & Francis Online) 2020
24 : 2
97-140
10.1080/10888691.2018.1537791
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License
Linda Darling-Hammond, Lisa Flook, Channa Cook-Harvey, Brigid Barron & David Osher (2020) Implications for educational practice of the science of learning and development, Applied Developmental Science, 24:2, 97-140, DOI: 10.1080/10888691.2018.1537791. Share Research.
Abstract
This article draws out the implications for school and classroom practices of an emerging consensus about the science of learning and development, outlined in a recent synthesis of the research. Situating the review in a developmental systems framework, we synthesize evidence from the learning sciences and several branches of educational research regarding well-vetted strategies that support the kinds of relationships and learning opportunities needed to promote children’s well-being, healthy development, and transferable learning. In addition, we review research regarding practices that can help educators respond to individual variability, address adversity, and support resilience, such that schools can enable all children to find positive pathways to adulthood.

This article draws out the implications for school and classroom practices of an emerging consensus about the science of learning and development, outlined in a recent synthesis of the research. Situating the review in a developmental systems framework, we synthesize evidence from the learning sciences and several branches of educational research regarding well-vetted strategies that support the kinds of relationships and learning opportunities needed to promote children’s well-being, healthy development, and transferable learning. In addition, we review research regarding practices that can help educators respond to individual variability, address adversity, and support resilience, such that schools can enable all children to find positive pathways to adulthood.

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