METALS News
Active learning: “Hands-on” meets “minds-on”
A child jumps from icon to icon to tell a story as part of the Urban Thinkscape in Philadelphia.
New research shows learning is more effective when active
Engaging students through interactive activities, discussions, feedback and AI-enhanced technologies resulted in improved academic performance compared to traditional lectures, lessons or readings, faculty from Carnegie Mellon University’s Human-Computer Interaction Institute concluded after collect…
Active learning best method for students, study says
Whether you’re a kid or a college student, you’ll learn more with interactive activities, discussions, movement and even AI-enhanced technologies than you will just sitting still and listening, a new study suggests.
Put Children In The Driving Seat Of Their Own Learning For Better Results
Active learning – group work, discussions, hands-on learning – is more effective than traditional “teacher talk”, according to a new study.
METALS Students See Their Future in Alumni Mentors – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Using alumni mentors, CMU is making sure that high-quality, personalized feedback is possible in larger classes.
Survey reveals positive outlook on online instruction post-pandemic
The experience of learning remotely during the pandemic left students with a positive attitude toward online and hybrid courses, a new survey suggests.
A New Way to Learn Computer Science – News – Carnegie Mellon University
CMU team awarded Catalyst Prize from Schmidt Futures for work on learning tool.
Learning Engineering in Action – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Learning engineering, the way we design and build learning environments, has been a part of Carnegie Mellon University’s approach to education since Herb Simon coined the term more than fifty years ago. This year, as the COVID-19 pandemic affected the way all educators and students teach and learn, …
Signature Courses Lead the Way – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Preparations for fall are an investment in the future.
New AI Enables Teachers To Rapidly Develop Intelligent Tutoring Systems
Intelligent tutoring systems have been shown to be effective in helping to teach certain subjects, such as algebra or grammar, but creating these computerized systems is difficult and laborious. Now, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have shown they can rapidly build them by, in effect, teac…
Hammer Earns NSF CAREER Award
Jessica Hammer, the Thomas and Lydia Moran Assistant Professor of Learning Science in the School of Computer Science’s Human-Computer Interaction Institute, has received a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award, the organization’s most prestigious award for young…
HCII Students’ Game Wins “Most Creative” at TreeHacks | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Lucid Drums earned Most Creative Hack and finished in Top 8 Congratulations to Laura Beth Fulton, MHCI class of 2020, and Jiachen (Lilian) Gong, METALS class of 2020, for their recent success at TreeHacks 2020. Their team’s interactive VR game to improve childhood development and patient coordinatio…
Innovation across the board
PL² supercharges the goal of school administrators everywhere: figure out what works and help it spread.
Personalized engagement powered by personalized learning
By helping mentors focus their efforts, PL² amplifies Ready to Learn’s power to effect change.
Building a bridge between home and school
How can technology help parents and families support their children’s progress in school? Families at Shaler Reserve Primary School are piloting one approach using PL².
Noticing student progress, online and off
How can educators use technology to keep track of those things they might otherwise miss? That’s the question PL² is exploring with Propel Schools.
Revolutionizing Education – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon University is catalyzing a worldwide revolution in learning and teaching through its OpenSimon learning engineering community.
Simon Initiative Work in Rural Panama Begins – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon University learning engineers are heading to rural Panama to help teachers improve student outcomes in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) courses.
HCII’s McLaren Will Promote Educational Technology in Chile
Bruce McLaren believes the moment is right to raise the status of educational technologies in Chile.
CMU, Lumen Learning Partner Delivery and Support of Evidence-Based Courseware – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon University’s Open Learning Initiative (OLI) and open education innovator Lumen Learning announced plans to provide coordinated delivery and support for OLI courseware.
With Flip of a Giant Ceremonial Switch, CMU Starts Effort to Energize ‘Learning Engineering’ – EdSurge News
Pittsburgh, PA—For a moment this week, the provost of Carnegie Mellon University looked a bit like a game show host as he grabbed the lever of an …
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How Carnegie Mellon’s $100 Million Software Donation Will Radically Change How Professors Teach
Carnegie Mellon University is betting $100 million that the best way to spark a revolution in education is not by building some product with artificial intelligence or some other whizzy new technology but by empowering educators to become applied learning scientists in their own classrooms.
Carnegie Mellon Announces Release of Toolkit To Kickstart Global Revolution in Educational Effectiveness – News – Carnegie Mellon University
CMU will unveil tools, software and content to address the challenges of rapid change and growth related to 21st century educational needs.
Renaissance and Carnegie Mellon University Partner to Provide Educators with New Insights into Student Learning
The second collaboration between the global edtech leader and the acclaimed university will provide new data and analytics tools for school and district leaders WISCONSIN RAPIDS, Wis. (July 9, 2019) – Renaissance®, a global leader in pre-K–12 education technology, today […]
HCI Class Project Turned Entrepreneurship Lesson for Dedicated METALS Students | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
The work began as a group project for an elective HCI course. Three Masters of Educational Technology and Applied Learning Science (METALS) students took the seminar-studio Learning Media Design course in Fall 2018 with instructor Marti Louw. This course focuses on the process of creating effective …
OpenSimon Toolkit To Make Every Classroom a Learning Laboratory – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon has launched OpenSimon — a learning engineering community that will catalyze a revolution in learning and teaching for the world’s educational institutions.
Faculty Competencies for Innovation? | Inside Higher Ed
Guest post by Michael Goudzwaard and Rachel Niemer.
Carnegie Mellon and Lumen Learning Announce EEP-Relevant Collaboration
Late last week, Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and Lumen Learning jointly issued a press release announcing their collaboration on an effort to integrate the Lumen-developed RISE analytical framewo
Two Research Projects To Close ‘Opportunity Gap’ for Students | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
A pair of separate, but complementary, research projects led by Carnegie Mellon University will use cutting-edge research in motivation, thinking, culturally affirming teaching and human-computer interaction to galvanize a community of teachers, mentors and parents around improving math achievement.…
Carnegie Mellon, Lumen Learning Partner To Expand Support for Evidence-based Learning Materials – News – Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon’s Simon Initiative and open courseware provider Lumen Learning today announced a partnership to share tools for developing, evaluating and continuously improving evidence-based learning materials.
CMU: Pittsburgh’s Learning Engine (Opinion)
The third post in our 6-part #RemakeLearning series looks at CMU’s partnerships with Pittsburgh Districts to advance education innovation and shape a new K-12 approach to computer science.
METALS Capstone Sponsor, MARi, finalist in Reach Higher Learning Career App Challenge | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
It’s not everyday that a Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII) capstone project brings you to the White House to present your work, but that’s what happened for Masters of Educational Technology and Applied Learning Science (METALS) student Kathy Yu. On July 7, 2016, Yu, HCII Assistant Profess…
Decimal Point | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
When it comes to learning math, how much fun you are having is rarely factored into the equation. That isn’t to say that game designers have not tried to turn instruction into more engaging material. For instance, there are plenty of educational games on the shelves; unfortunately, very few of them …
Alumni Spotlight: Mark Potter, METALS ’14 | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Mark Potter is a 2014 graduate from the Masters of Educational Technologies and Applied Learning Science (METALS) at Carnegie Mellon University. Though he originally was pursuing a career in accounting, his time spent tutoring students helped him realize his passion for improving educational outcome…
Technology use continues to rise in schools as an important means for teachers to create a more personalized learning experience for students. Schools are increasingly dedicating significant budgets to apply educational technology to classrooms, as much as 6.6 billion in the U.S. alone.
Can past learning activities predict differences in individual student success? A recent project with researchers from the Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII) set out to answer just that, and picked up a Best Paper award along the way.
Carnegie Mellon University, like other colleges and universities, is able to create smaller learning cohorts from large lectures by using teaching assistants. These TAs often have varied backgrounds and levels of familiarity with the U.S. educational system, which can make learning experience and outcomes differ from section to section.
Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII) Assistant Professor Amy Ogan firmly believes that the best way to improve educational technologies in international classrooms is to visit those classrooms personally, observing students and learning about how they learn.
Nesra Yannier, a current Ph.D. candidate in the HCII, recently presented her thesis project to an auditorium full of entrepreneurs, faculty, students, alumni and industry professionals at the 20th Show and Tell event for Project Olympus on Thursday, April 14, 2016. The event, supported by the Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (CIE), includes student and faculty start up projects.
Carnegie Mellon University researchers have found a way to improve education for elementary and middle school students.
In a lab in Pittsburgh filled with sleek computers, doll houses and an assortment of colorful toys, two scientists are trying to find better ways to teach students who speak in non-mainstream dialects how to excel in school–and in life–by learning to communicate in mainstream English. Their surprising conclusion?
Can robots teach better than real teachers? Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University may have programmed ones that can. In an ongoing six-year program, researchers have built and tested animated children that talk with and teach elementary and middle school students. The bots helped raise math, science, and reading test scores significantly in multiple studies, researcher Justine Cassell tells Tech Insider.
HCII Faculty, Students to Present Papers and Works in Progress
Amy Ogan, an assistant professor in the HCII and an educational technologist, is fascinated by researching ways to make learning more engaging, effective and enjoyable. Ogan is also a recent recipient of the Jacobs Foundation Research Fellowship, a global fellowship program for the research on child and youth development.
The National Science Foundation recently hosted a three-day conference to celebrate the success of its six Science of Learning Centers, and three HCII faculty members were among the representatives from Carnegie Mellon and the University of Pittsburgh’s LearnLab.
Traditional education models generally revolve around lectures, but new findings from HCII Professor Ken Koedinger and a team of Carnegie Mellon researchers shows that lectures aren’t nearly as effective as people think they are – at least those of the video variety.
The Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII) at Carnegie Mellon University received two new grants to advance research in the area of intelligent tutoring. The use of intelligent tutoring systems (ITS) has been shown to bridge the gap between lower and higher performing students. ITS will continue to play a critical role in improving the performance of U.S.
Artificially intelligent software is changing the face of the American classroom, and Slate’s recent article “No More Pencils, No More Books” looks to experts like HCII Professor Ken Koedinger for insight into whether or not these types of learning technologies are effective.
Louw Receives NSF Grant for Citizen Science | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Learning Media Design Center Director and HCII faculty member Marti Louw will receive a three-year, $1.7 million National Science Foundation award to develop and study a cyberlearning tool that supports deep looking and learning in citizen science. The grant, “Learning to See, Seeing to Learn: A Soc…
Koedinger Talks LearnSphere in Hechinger Report, U.S. News & World Report | Human-Computer Interaction Institute
“LearnSphere, a new $5 million federally funded project at Carnegie Mellon University, aims to become ‘the biggest open repository of education data’ in the world,” begins the Hechinger Report article “Carnegie Mellon Project Revives Failed inBloom Dream To Store and Analyze Student Data.” The piece…
Fun and Games – Carnegie Mellon University | CMU
For Carnegie Mellon University’s Vincent Aleven, the claim was too good to be true.