Distinguished Lecturers Series

CRMSE's Distinguished Lecturers Series gives leading educators and researchers a forum to discuss key issues and emerging strategies in mathematics and science education. The series is designed to bring the science, education and business communities together to encourage conversations about the future of science and math education.

Distinguished Lecturer Symposium 2024

2024 Distinguished Lecturer Series
Thursday, April 25, 2024 (Live and Virtual)

Title: Inquiry and Equity in Undergraduate Mathematics Education

Reception: 4:00-5:00 PM (PDT)
Symposium: 5:00-7:00 PM (PDT)

Location: Parma Payne Goodall Alumni Center, 5941 Aztec Walk, SDSU

Download poster to RSVP for both live and virtual attendance.

Guest Speakers:  (Download abstracts)

Speakers for DL Symposium 2024

 

 

Distinguished Lecturer 2023 Series 

2023 Distinguished Lecturer Series
Thursday, May 4, 2023 (Live and Virtual)

Guest Speaker: Dr. Bryan A. BrownProfessor of Teacher Education, Graduate School of Education, Stanford University.

Dr. Brown presented: 

The Meaning Beyond the Words: How Language, Race, and Culture Impact Science Teaching and Learning

Abstract: This presentation explores how race, culture and language intersect to create the condition of contemporary learning. For years, research on the language of classrooms explored how the way we say things impacts students’ sense of belonging. Despite this research, Science and Technology Education have failed to adequately explore how issues of race, language, and culture shape the outcomes of teaching and learning in science. Through a sequence of research, this presentation explores the theoretical and pragmatic aspects of this dilemma. From a theoretical perspective, the talk explores the Language-Identity dilemma. As students learn, the way academic language is taught to them can present a cognitive and cultural conflict. From a cognitive perspective, if science is taught without respect for the implications of how language is learned, students can be misunderstood and misunderstand the teacher’s complex discourse. From a cultural conflict perspective, students may feel they are cultural outsiders when the language of the classroom positions them as outsiders. The presentation provides an overview of a series of qualitative and quantitative experiments that document the realities of this complex interaction.

Reception: 4:00-4:30 PM 
Lecture: 4:30-5:30 PM 
Q&A and Closing: 5:30-6:00 PM
(All times PDT)

Location: Parma Payne Goodall Alumni Center, SDSU

Biography: Bryan A. Brown is an associate professor of science education at the Graduate School of Education at Stanford University. From 2014-2018 he served as the Associate Dean for Student Affairs in the graduate school. He joined Stanford University in the 2004 after working on a post-doctoral fellowship at Michigan State University. His award-winning research focuses on improving urban science education. He focuses on exploring how language and identity impact urban students’ learning. Dr. Brown is a former high school science teacher who earned a Bachelor’s degree in Biological Sciences from Hampton University, a Master’s degree in Educational Psychology from the University of California, and a Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara. His 2009 research project on “Disaggregating Science Instruction” was awarded the Journal of Research in Science Teaching’s award as the top research manuscript of 2009. He was the 2007 winner of the National Association for Research in Science Education’s (N.A.R.S.T.) award for outstanding early career scholarship. His was named as a prestigious National Academy of Education and Spencer Foundation Fellow for 2005. In 2011, he received tenure at Stanford University in recognition of his research work. Dr. Brown’s research in urban schools examines how urban science education has underserved minority students by its failure to design instruction that is sensitive to the language and cultural needs of urban populations. His early research projects lead to the development of an instructional approach, known as Disaggregate Teaching, that is designed to improve learning for underserved populations. He continued that research by examining how the language the similarities, or Conceptual Continuities, between students’ informal language and those valued by science have great potential for improved learning. Currently, Dr. Brown leads the Science In The City Research Group. This research group examines how technology can serve as a mediator between a monolingual and monocultral teaching force and the multilingual and multicultural student population.

Bryan Brown's Distinguished Lecturer Talk

 

 

Bryan A. Brown

Bryan Brown meeting with MSED students
Bryan Brown meeting with MSED Students

 

Distinguished Lecturer 2022 Series 

2022 Distinguished Lecturer Series
Thursday, May 5, 2022 

Guest Speaker: Dr. Marta CivilProfessor of Mathematics Education and the Roy F. Graesser Chair, Department of Mathematics, The University of Arizona.

Dr. Civil will present: 

A Reflection on My Work on Funds of Knowledge and Parental Engagement in Mathematics Education

Abstract: I have been working on a research agenda grounded on the concept of Funds of Knowledge for about thirty years! In the initial stages of my work, the focus was on teachers learning from parents and family members to then inform their classroom teaching. In later projects, my focus became parental engagement in mathematics, where I sought to learn FROM and WITH the parents. This led to the idea of parents as intellectual resources for the teaching and learning of mathematics. Through what we call tertulias matemáticas (mathematical circles), we engage in a dialogue with parents to examine their own experiences as well as their children’s experiences with school mathematics. I discuss parents’ perceptions about the teaching and learning of mathematics, issues of valorization of knowledge, aspects of language and mathematics, and implications for research and teacher education. While the focus of my work has largely been at the K-12 level, more recently I have been looking at possible applications of this work at the college level.

Reception: 4:00-4:30 PM 
Lecture: 4:30-5:30 PM 
Q&A and Closing: 5:30-6:00 PM
(All times PDT)

Location: The Theatre—Conrad Prebys Aztec Student Union, SDSU

BiographyMarta Civil is a Professor of Mathematics Education and the Roy F. Graesser Chair in the Department of Mathematics at The University of Arizona. Her research looks at cultural, social, and language aspects in the teaching and learning of mathematics; participation in the mathematics classroom; connections between in-school and out-of-school mathematics; and parental engagement in mathematics. She has led multiple funded projects working with children, parents, and teachers, primarily in Mexican American communities. Her research is grounded on the concepts of funds of knowledge and parents as intellectual resources, with a focus on developing culturally sustaining learning environments in mathematics education. Her current work includes a collaboration with two other universities focused on the development of a mathematical partnership that engages teachers, parents, and multilingual children in grades 3-5 in underserved communities. She is also exploring how to apply lessons learned from her work in equity in K-12 settings to entry level college mathematics teaching and learning.

 

Marta Civil

Marta Civil's Distinguished Lecturer Talk

 

Distinguished Lecturer 2020 Series 

2020 Distinguished Lecturer Series
November 12, 2020 (Virtual)

Guest Speaker: Dr. Melanie Cooper, Lappan-Phillips Professor of Science Education, Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University.

Dr. Cooper presented: 

Evidence-Based Approaches to Curriculum Reform and Assessment

Abstract: There is a growing body of work from the learning sciences providing us with insights into how people learn; and from Discipline Based Education Research (DBER) we know what discipline-specific difficulties students face. However, it is quite surprising that relatively little of this understanding has made its way into the design of science and engineering curricula offered at most colleges and universities. 

This presentation will focus on the need for evidence-based curriculum transformations, the research findings that can guide them and how we might assess the results of these transformations. An approach to systemic reform that focuses on core ideas, scientific practices and cross-cutting concepts, will be discussed. Examples of such curriculum reform efforts “Chemistry, Life, the Universe and Everything” (CLUE) and the subsequent organic chemistry version (OCLUE), will be presented, along with the evidence to support such transformations.

Webinar via Zoom: 4:00-5:30 PM
Watch Melanie Cooper's presentation (Zoom video).

 

Melanie Cooper

 

Distinguished Lecturer 2019 Series

2019 Distinguished Lecturer Series
Saturday, April 13, 2019

Guest Speaker: Dr. Megan Franke, Professor of Education, Graduate School of Education & Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles.

Dr. Franke presented: 

Children’s Thinking (CGI): Attending to the details of children’s mathematical thinking to support participation and enhance opportunities for equity

Watch video of talk and discussion below.

Abstract: This session will explore how attending to the details and partial understandings of children’s thinking can enable teachers to engage students in learning together in ways that make use of the variety of resources that each student brings. We will explore how attending to partial understandings can help us challenge our assumptions, as well as what it looks like in classrooms to make use of the understandings students bring and leverage all forms of participation to support each student’s learning.

Reception: 8:00-8:30 AM
Lecture: 8:30-10:20 AM
Breakout Sessions: 10:20-11:30 AM

Location: Arts & Letters 101, SDSU Campus

Biography: ​​ Megan Franke is a Professor of Education at the University of California, Los Angeles. Dr. Franke’s research focuses on understanding and supporting teacher learning for both preservice and inservice teachers. She studies how teachers making use of research based information about the development of children’s mathematical thinking support students to learn mathematics. She is particularly interested in how teaching mathematics with attention to students’ mathematical thinking (Cognitively Guided Instruction) can challenge existing school structures and create opportunities for economically marginalized students and students of color to learn mathematics with understanding. She has been engaged in a series of studies with Dr. Webb that link classroom practice and student outcomes in elementary mathematics classrooms. She is a member of DREME (Development and Research in Early Mathematics Education) where she is working on a study of prek-2 coherence and the design of resources for early childhood teacher educators. Her research work to support teachers, schools and communities was recognized with the AERA Research into Practice Award and she was elected to the National Academy of Education.

 

Philip Bell

 

Megan Franke's Distinguished Lecturer Talk

 

 

 

Distinguished Lecturer 2017 Series

2017 Distinguished Lecturer Series
Thursday, May 25, 2017

Guest Speaker: Dr. Philip Bell, Professor of Learning Sciences & Human Development,  Shauna C. Larson Chair in Learning Sciences, University of Washington.

Dr. Bell presented: 

Promoting equity in systems of science education through research-practice-community partnerships

Watch video of talk and discussion below.

Abstract: The new vision provided in the NRC Framework for K-12 Science Education and the resulting Next Generation Science Standards provide a collective opportunity to broadly promote equity and social justice in education. These policy documents highlight that learning is fundamentally a cultural as well as a cognitive process—and that science learning experiences should be designed to overlap with the lives of youth and their communities in order to heighten meaning and relevance. I will highlight how building capacity and tools to support these shifts can be approached through sustained research-practice-community partnerships focused on identifying shared aims and improvement strategies to engage problems of educational practice. I will share multiple project examples to illuminate this strategy and associated research findings.

Reception: 4:00-4:30 PM
Lecture: 4:30-6:00 PM

Location: Arts & Sciences 101, SDSU Campus

Friday, May 26, 3:30-5:30: English Learners & Science Learning (discussion)
Phil met with practicing teachers for a roundtable discussion pertaining to"English Learners and Science Learning," held on Friday, 3:30-5:30 at CRMSE, 6475 Alvarado Road, Suite 218, San Diego. 

Biography: ​​Philip Bell is a professor of the Learning Sciences & Human Development and holds the Shauna C. Larson Chair in Learning Sciences. He is executive director of the UW Institute for Science & Math Education focused on equity-focused innovation in K-12 STEM education, and he is co-director of the Learning in Informal and Formal Environments (LIFE) Science of Learning Center. Bell pursues a cognitive and cultural program of research across diverse environments focused on how people learn in ways that are personally consequential to them. He has studied everyday expertise and cognition in science and health, the design and use of novel learning technologies in science classrooms, youth argumentation, culturally expansive science instruction, and scaled implementation of educational improvement. Bell served as a member of the Board on Science Education with the National Academy of Sciences for eight years, co-chaired the National Research Council consensus report effort on Learning Science in Informal Environments and served on the committee of the NRC Framework for K-12 Science Education that was used to guide development of Next Generation Science Standards. He has a background in human cognition and development, science education, computer science, and electrical engineering. Bell is also currently editing a series of research- and practice-based tools for science education called STEM Teaching Tools. The effort is providing resources for equity-focused improvements in science education.

 

Philip Bell

Philip Bell's Distinguished Lecturer Talk

 


 

 

Distinguished Lecturer 2016 Series

2016 Distinguished Lecturer Series
Thursday, May 5, 2016

Guest Speaker: Dr. Rochelle Gutiérrez, Professor of Mathematics Education, Department of Curriculum & Instructions, Latina/Latino Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Dr. Gutiérrez presented: 

Subversive Teaching: Mathematics Teachers Using Creative Insubordination to Address Social Justice

Watch video of talk below.

Abstract: Most teachers strive to make a positive impact on all of their students, but schooling contexts can change that. High stakes testing, Response to Intervention initiatives, Race to the Top campaigns, Common Core State Standards, new teacher evaluation systems, and the latest packaged reforms can keep teachers from acting on what is in the best interest of students and their learning.  Even when teachers do not agree with a school policy or they face colleagues who hold low expectations for students, they may not feel prepared to take a stand.  After all, most teacher education programs do not focus on preparing their graduates for the politics of school contexts or knowing how to strategically take risks in their teaching.  So, what might the work of teaching look like if teachers had professional development in the area of the politics of teaching?  How might they view their roles as teachers and what actions might they take?

With funding from the National Science Foundation, I have been working with a group of teachers over the past 6 years to develop their political knowledge and their propensity to take risks on behalf of their students.  These teachers advocate for their historically marginalized students (students who are Black, Latin@, emergent bilinguals, recent immigrants, etc.) to learn rigorous, creative, and meaningful mathematics and to develop more robust mathematical identities. I will report on the politics of teaching mathematics; the ways in which these teachers view the profession and their roles within it; as well as how they interact with colleagues, administrators, and others so that they are successful in advocating for youth and themselves.

Reception: 4:00-4:30 PM
Lecture: 4:30-6:00 PM

Location: Montezuma Lounge (reception) and Theatre (lecture), Conrad Prebys Aztec Student Union

 

 

Rochelle Gutierrez

 

 

 Rochelle Gutiérrez's Distinguished Lecturer Talk

 

Distinguished Lecturer 2015

2015 Distinguished Lecturer Series
April 28, 2015

Guest Speaker: Dr. Helen Quinn, Emerita Professor of Physics at Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, member of the National Academy of Sciences and Chair of the science workgroup at Stanford’s Understanding Language project.

Dr. Quinn presented: 

How Science Classes Can Contribute to Language Learning and How Language Learners Can Contribute to Science Classes

Abstract: Dr. Quinn talked about how the NGSS- oriented science classroom is rich in experiences with phenomena and in student-to-student discourse. These are exactly the conditions needed for language learning. Hence with appropriate teacher attention to inclusion and language demands the science classroom is an ideal venue for supporting language development.

Reception: 5:00-5:30 PM
Lecture: 5:30-6:30 PM

Location: Arts & Sciences 101, SDSU Campus 

Download slides of Dr. Quinn's talk.

Dr. Helen Quinn

Helen Quinn's Distinguished Lecturer Talk 

 

Past Distinguished Lecturer

 2014 Distinguished Lecturer Series
June 2, 2014

Guest Speaker: Dr. Jo Boaler, Professor, Graduate School of Education, Stanford University, CEO & Co-Founder, "youcubed",  presented:

The Mindset Revolution:  Teaching mathematics for a growth mindset

Abstract. In recent years scientific studies have demonstrated that student and teacher ‘mindsets’ have a profound impact on learning. Students with a ‘growth mindset’ (Dweck, 2006) who believe that intelligence and ‘smartness’ can be learned and that the brain can grow from exercise learn more effectively, displaying a desire for challenge and showing resilience in the face of failure. Such behaviors encourage greater math persistence, engagement and high achievement. Mathematics teachers play a critical role in the development of mindsets and this session will review the ways to teach for a growth mindset, including attention to classroom norms, math tasks, questions and assessment.

In this session Jo highlighted some of the work she has been doing around mindset, mathematics and the promotion of equity, and engaged everybody in thinking about ways to take the work forward.

Scroll down to watch the video of her presentation below.

Reception: 3:45-4:30 PM
Lecture: 4:30-6:00 PM

Location: Arts & Sciences 201, SDSU Campus

Biography: Dr. Jo Boaler is a Professor of Mathematics Education at Stanford University and founder of youcubed. Former roles have included being the Marie Curie Professor of Mathematics Education at the University of Sussex, England, a mathematics teacher in London comprehensive schools and a lecturer and researcher at King’s College, London. She is the editor of the Research Commentary Section of The Journal for Research in Mathematics Education (JRME), and the author of seven books including What’s Math Got To Do With It? (2009) Penguin, US, and The Elephant in the Classroom (2010) Souvenir Press, UK. She is the author of the first MOOC on mathematics learning for teachers and parents, a White House presenter and an advisor to the PISA team at the OECD.

 

Jo Boaler

Photo Gallery

Dr. Philip Bell, Spring 2017 DL

Philip Bell DL Talk 0

Philip Bell DL Talk 1

Philip Bell DL Talk 2

Philip Bell DL Talk 3

Philip Bell DL Talk 4

 

Dr. Rochelle Gutiérrez, Spring 2016 DL

Gutierrez Seminar 1

Gutierrez Seminar 4

Gutierrez Seminar 2

Gutierrez Seminar 3

Gutierrez Seminar 5

Gutierrez Seminar 6