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The Forum on the Future of Public Education

The Forum on the Future of Public Education strives to bring the best empirical evidence to policymakers and the public.

The Forum draws on a network of premier scholars to create, interpret, and disseminate credible information on key questions facing P-20 education. The Forum pursues original research and facilitates collaboration between researchers and policymakers to examine the pressing issues shaping the future of public education. Key constituencies of the Forum include scholars who influence research, policy and practice; policy makers and policy making bodies at all levels; members of the media who influence public opinion; foundations, organizations, business groups and others who support, criticize and advocate for reform; and citizens who make choices about education for themselves and their children.

America is witnessing a drastic redefinition of the policies and practices associated with “public education.” Too often, discussions around the future of public education are strong on passion but short on actual evidence. The Forum for the Future of Public Education is filing that gap by building a resource of objective, research-based insights on key educational issues. We are establishing an open venue- a true public forum to debate controversial and consequential policy issues that will shape American’s future.

Latest News

NSF-funded project to explore improvement of multimedia learning

by the College of Education at Illinois / Mar 16, 2017

Jennifer CromleyAssociate Professor Jennifer Cromley of the Department of Educational Psychology will lead a study funded by the National Science Foundation that will seek to improve the design, learning, and future research of multimedia learning.

The project, titled “Meta-Analysis to Support an Integrated Theory of Multimedia Learning,” will pull together trends across findings from more than 500 studies conducted with students studying math and science via multimedia instructional materials used in middle school through college.

As students are increasingly presented with math and science information in multiple media such as narrated animations or hyperlinked illustrated Web pages, Cromley said the project is important because new research is showing that popular design principles used by developers of educational media are too broad and don’t apply to all learners. A new model is needed, Cromley believes, that explains effective learning from multimedia as the joint and mutual action of stimulus characteristics, individual differences in learners, and varied learning tasks.

“A major contribution of this study would be moving from what is thought to work for all to what the recent research suggests works—and for whom—when learning with multimedia,” Cromley said.

According to Cromley, the project could potentially disseminate sound findings about learning with multimedia to broad audiences, including science and math teachers, postsecondary instructors, and discipline-based education researchers. Once completed, Cromley said the project will result in a book, articles, workshops, and a searchable website.

University of Texas at Austin faculty member S. Natasha Beretvas will be the co-principal investigator on the two-year study, which received $289,753 in funding.