‘No Surprises’ Policies Between School Districts and Universities: The Surprising Reality

October 2, 2017

The Madison Education Partnership (MEP)—a research-practice partnership between the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) and the Wisconsin Center for Education Research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison—was recently featured in Education Week.


Learners’ Construction of Fraction Values

October 1, 2017

Richard Prather studies the relationship between children's behavior and neural activity during early mathematics learning. He will discuss his current work using experimental psychology and computational modeling to investigate how learners understand fractions.


The Subaltern School

October 1, 2017

Karida Brown is a cultural sociologist whose interest lies in explorations of the racial self. In this talk, Brown will introduce her new research project, "The Subaltern School," in which she examines the extended effects of segregated schooling in today’s integrated era. Specifically, Brown will share her preliminary findings from the U.S. and South Africa.


Matthew T. Hora: Opposing UW Cultural Diversity Courses Hurts State’s Workforce Development

September 26, 2017

Matt Hora, director of the Center for Research on College-Workforce Transitions (CCWT), recently published an op-ed in the Captial Times.


CCWT Offers Rare, Critical Overview of Student Internships

September 26, 2017

Many policymakers, employers, educators and career services professionals seem to agree that internships are beneficial to college students. President Trump recently lauded the value of apprenticeships, and Wisconsin’s Gov. Scott Walker has considered making internships a mandatory graduation requirement for students in the UW system.


Study Finds MMSD’s 4-Year-Old Kindergarten Expands Educational Equity

September 20, 2017

Since the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) began 4-year-old kindergarten (4K) in 2011, more than two-thirds of its kindergarten students have started in its 4K programs. Now, with six full years of operational data on 4K, a new research-practice partnership between MMSD and UW–Madison’s Wisconsin Center for Education Research (WCER) is taking a close look at the district’s 4K enrollments.


Study Finds Wisconsin Children Unequally Ready for Kindergarten

September 18, 2017

The class of 2030 has just started kindergarten. As four million youngsters across the country begin the first step of education, a new study provides a first-time look at inequalities in school readiness among Wisconsin’s kindergarten students. Researchers from the Wisconsin Center for Education Research (WCER), part of UW–Madison’s School of Education, compared the literacy skills of Wisconsin’s kindergarten students and found them “far from equally prepared to learn.”


Ecology at Play

September 8, 2017   |   By Lynn Armitage

Mike Lawton loves his job as a science teacher at Rufus King High School in Milwaukee. “My greatest reward is when students come up to me and say, ‘Wow, this is the first science class I have ever liked,’” he says.


MSAN Featured in Education Week

September 6, 2017

We often hear about the need to "build capacity" of practitioners to use research. This usually gets translated as improving practitioners' skills in using research to make decisions or imparting knowledge on how to engage in continuous improvement efforts.


Jackson Discusses Whether Men are the New College Minority

August 18, 2017

A recent report from Carlow University showed that women outnumbered men by more than six to one during the Fall 2016 enrollment.


Jackson Quoted in Education Dive on Why Prospective College Students Don’t Expect to Graduate

August 8, 2017

Jerlando Jackson, the director of the University of Wisconsin’s Equity and Inclusion Laboratory in the Center for Education Research, quoted in Education Dive.


Jackson Quoted in the Atlantic on Why Men Are the New College Minority

August 8, 2017

Jerlando Jackson, the director and chief research scientist at Wisconsin’s Equity and Inclusion Laboratory, quoted in The Atlantic.


Astronomy Video Game Developed at UW–Madison Wins National People’s Choice Award

August 7, 2017

“At Play in the Cosmos,” an educational video game developed at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, is the winner of the Third Annual Mashable + Games for Change People’s Choice Award. This new educational resource for introductory college astronomy received the highest number of online votes among the 11 games nominated in the category.


Video Game by UW-Madison Group is up for National Award

July 14, 2017

A video game about exploring the cosmos that a University of Wisconsin-Madison institution developed is up for a national award for educational games.


The Value of Mentorship in the Scientific Field

July 13, 2017

The value of effective mentorship in the sciences is increasingly being recognized. Mentoring is tied to many benefits for a mentee (e.g., increased research productivity and career satisfaction), which also benefits the lab overall. Anyone can learn to be an effective mentor with the right training and practice.