Skip to content

Campus: Improving Early Childhood Learning and Development, presented by Liz Simons, STEP '84

Event Details

Date/Time:
Wed, April 24, 2019
06:00PM - 08:00PM
Venue:
Paul Brest Hall, Munger Graduate Residence, Stanford University
Location:
555 Salvatierra Walk, Stanford CA 94305
Map address
Registration Period:
02/04/2019-04/22/2019
Contact:
GSE Alumni Relations
6504976857

Join fellow alumni and friends for a community conversation with Dan Schwartz, dean of the Stanford Graduate School of Education, and professors Deborah Stipek and Rebecca Silverman on challenges and advancements in early childhood education.

From neuroscience showing the vast amount of brain development to longitudinal data on higher college completion rates and increased employability, research shows significant cognitive and societal benefits in investing in resources and opportunities for more than 24 million children under the age of 6 to thrive in their schools. Learn how Stanford scholarship is pursuing strategies to understand and improve young children’s learning and development.



ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

Deborah Stipek is the Judy Koch Professor of Education in the Stanford Graduate School of Education and a professor, by courtesy, of psychology. She also serves as the Peter E. Haas Faculty Director of the Haas Center for Public Service at Stanford. From 2001 to 2012 and then again from 2014 to 2015 she served as the I James Quillen Dean of the GSE. She earned a doctorate in developmental psychology from Yale University. Prior to coming to Stanford, she was a faculty member at UCLA where she served for 10 of her 23 years there as the Director of the Corinne Seeds University Elementary School and the Urban Education Studies Center. During this period as a faculty member at UCLA she took a year off to work for U.S. Senator Bill Bradley. Stipek’s scholarship concerns instructional effects on children’s achievement motivation and learning, early childhood education, and elementary education. She is particularly concerned about learning opportunities for young children living in poverty. In addition to her research on instruction, she has been involved in education policy at the federal and state level. She currently chairs the Heising-Simons Development and Research on Early Math Education (DREME) Network.

Rebecca Silverman is an associate professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Education. Her research is focused on the language and literacy development and instruction of early childhood and elementary age children from diverse backgrounds. She is particularly interested in how to best support children who may have difficulty in learning to read and write, particularly children who have difficulty developing literacy due to language-related differences. She investigates how language skills like semantics, syntax, and morphology, influence reading and writing outcomes for both monolingual and bilingual children and which classroom practices are positively correlated with children's language and literacy development. Silverman conducts studies on interactive and extended read-alouds, peer learning, multimedia supports, and small group intervention. Silverman formerly taught at the University of Maryland’s College of Education after completing a doctoral degree in language and literacy at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. She also served as a 2017-2018 Fulbright Scholar in Yangon, Myanmar.


Daniel L. Schwartz is the I. James Quillen Dean and Nomellini & Olivier Professor of Educational Technology at the Stanford Graduate School of Education (GSE). An expert in human learning and educational technology, Schwartz oversees a laboratory whose computer-focused developments in science and math instruction permit original research into fundamental questions of learning. His book, The ABCs of How We Learn: 26 Scientifically Proven Approaches, How They Work and When to Use Them, distills learning theories into practical solutions for use at home or in the classroom. NPR noted the book among the "best reads" for 2016.



ABOUT LIZ SIMONS, AM '84

After graduating from the Stanford Teacher Education Program, Liz worked in Spanish-bilingual and English as a Second Language (ESL) classrooms and subsequently founded Stretch to Kindergarten, a spring-summer early childhood education program. In addition to serving on the GSE’s Advisory Council, Liz serves on the Leadership Council of Too Small to Fail and on several boards including The Marshall Project, The Foundation for a Just Society, Math for America, the Learning Policy Institute, and the Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society.



ABOUT THE IMPROVING LIVES THROUGH LEARNING TOUR

For more than 100 years, Stanford Graduate School of Education has been committed to rigor, daring, and relevance in education research, practice, and policy. The Improving Lives Through Learning Tour shares how the school continues to build upon that legacy through local conversations about the future of learning.



ABOUT STANFORD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION

The mission of Stanford Graduate School of Education is to produce groundbreaking research, model programs, and exceptional leaders in education to achieve equitable, accessible, and effective learning for all.

Event Links

Event 28918