Essentials Magazine Essentials Summer 2019 | Page 24

BY MELINA UNCAPHER, BABE LIBERMAN, AND JUDI FUSCO Research Insights for Setting Up Powerful Learning Environments Y ou’ve probably heard about the “learning sciences,” but what is this research field and how can it help educators? Learning sciences research — which draws from many academic disciplines including neuroscience, education, devel- opmental science, linguistics, psychology, and sociology — focuses on how people learn, investigates novel approaches to teaching and learning, and designs for educational environments to promote effective learning. Learning sciences research can aid educators in selecting instructional strategies, developing curric- ula, and creating learning spaces. The learning environment is an im- portant equity consideration, as equity gaps often stem from different oppor- tunities in the places in which students grow up. How safe, nurturing, and stimulating an environment may affect a child’s brain development. When children are born, their brains are optimized for all environments. As 24 essentials | summer 2019 they grow and develop, their brains undergo a process of synaptic pruning, removing connections that are not nec- essary for the environment where they live. In the schematicabove, you can see that the older brain (the brain on the right) has fewer connections. Why is this? Because connections that were not consistently needed in the environ- ment were pruned away while strong connections were made over time for experiences that were consistently en- countered.Thus, this older brain is more efficient than the younger brain (on the left) because it has been optimized for its environment. Context matters for student learning, so those who design learning environ-