<h1 id="toc0"><strong>Important Questions in Education Research</strong></h1>
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During the event, we will discuss the list of education research
questions Alan Kay considers fundamental, ways questions can be
addressed, and reasons why few researchers try.<br>
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<h2 id="toc1"><a name="Important Questions in Education Research-Recording"></a><strong></strong><br></h2>
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<h2 id="toc2"><a name="Important Questions in Education Research-Login"></a>Login</h2>
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Saturday, August 7th 2010 we will meet in the LearnCentral public Elluminate room at 11am Pacific - 2pm Eastern time. <strong><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?month=8&day=7&year=2010&hour=14&min=0&sec=0&p1=207" rel="nofollow">WorldClock for your time zone.</a></strong><br>
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<h2 id="toc4"><a name="Important Questions in Education Research-Agenda"></a>Agenda</h2>
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During the event, we will discuss Alan's list of important questions in
education research, and his vision of how to address the questions.<br>
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Partial list of questions:<br>
<ul><li>Should various levels of a child's society be able to choose some of what a child should learn? If so, what and why?</li><li>What kinds of learning are we going to try to help the child
accomplish? Case-based recognition of situations, and actions to take?
Deep understanding and fluency that resembles practitioners in a subject
area? Etc.</li><li>What is the spectrum (or the dimensions) of children's abilities
to learn a wide variety of subjects (e.g. from sports to physics)?</li><li>What is the similar spectrum (or dimensions) of internal and
external motivations for putting effort into learning various subjects?</li><li>How can we ascertain what kinds of help are needed by the different kinds of children?</li><li>What are the trade-offs and pathways of teaching children how to learn vs. teaching subject matter?</li>
<li>What are the best kinds of situations/environmens/processes to help children learn difficult to learn ideas?</li></ul>
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<h2 id="toc5"><a name="Important Questions in Education Research-References"></a>References</h2>
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<a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://procod.com/preda/kay.html" rel="nofollow">Alan Kay's reading list</a><br>
<a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.vpri.org/pdf/m2004001_power.pdf" rel="nofollow">"The Power Of The Context"</a> - Alan Kay's tribute to his research community<br>
<img src="http://mathfuture.wikispaces.com/file/view/pov-cover-smaller.png/155220777/pov-cover-smaller.png" alt="pov-cover-smaller.png" title="pov-cover-smaller.png"><br>
<a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://vpri.org/pov/" rel="nofollow">"Points of View: A Tribute to Alan Kay" book </a><br>
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<h2 id="toc6"><a name="Important Questions in Education Research-Event Host"></a>Event Host</h2>
<strong><img src="http://mathfuture.wikispaces.com/file/view/Alan_Kay.jpg/154770761/Alan_Kay.jpg" alt="Alan_Kay.jpg" title="Alan_Kay.jpg" align="left">Alan Kay</strong>
is one of the earliest pioneers of object-oriented programming,
personal computing, and graphical user interfaces. His contributions
have been recognized with the Charles Stark Draper Prize of the National
Academy of Engineering “for the vision, conception, and development of
the first practical networked personal computers,” the Alan M. Turing
Award from the Association of Computing Machinery “for pioneering many
of the ideas at the root of contemporary object-oriented programming
languages, leading the team that developed Smalltalk, and for
fundamental contributions to personal computing,” and the Kyoto Prize
from the Inamori Foundation “for creation of the concept of modern
personal computing and contribution to its realization.” This work was
done in the rich context of ARPA and Xerox PARC with many talented
colleagues. <br>
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He has been a Xerox Fellow, Chief Scientist of Atari, Apple Fellow,
Disney Fellow, and HP Senior Fellow. He is currently an Adjunct
Professor of Computer Science at UCLA. In 2001 he founded Viewpoints
Research Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to children,
learning and advanced systems research. <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.vpri.org/" rel="nofollow">http://www.vpri.org</a><br>
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At Viewpoints Research Institute he and his colleagues continue to
explore advanced systems and programming design by aiming for a “Moore’s
Law” advance in software creation of many orders of magnitude. Kay and
Viewpoints are also deeply involved in the One Laptop Per Child
initiative.
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