Paula K. Hooper
· Assistant Professor of InstructionNorthwestern University · Social Policy Analysis and Evaluation
Active 1983–2023
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Sociology
- Psychology
- Mathematics education
- Knowledge management
- Pedagogy
- Engineering
- Engineering ethics
- Political Science
- Epistemology
- Management science
- Multimedia
- Philosophy
- Public relations
- Medical education
- Medicine
Selected publications
Proceedings. · 2023 · 1 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Sociology
- Computer Science
- Political Science
The influence and reach of maker education continues to grow, bringing new possibilities for hands-on, student-centered, design-oriented, and/or transformational learning to more people in more spaces.Maker education has also more recently attended to issues of justice, equity, and culture.What does the future of maker education hold?What materials and practices will these spaces offer next?What support do teachers need to enact pedagogically sound and culturally relevant learning?How will developing technologies respond to teachers' and learners' needs for accessibility and sustainability?How will maker-based learning be documented and assessed?To answer these and other questions, we propose convening a panel on the Future of Maker Education to both solicit panelists' ideas on the future of maker education and foster audience discussion around these issues.
Human Development · 2022 · 1 citations
- Sociology
- Mathematics education
- Computer Science
In this 50th anniversary of the Jean Piaget Society, we have been asked to celebrate The Having of Wonderful Ideas and Other Essays on Teaching and Learning (Duckworth, 2006) – winner of the 1988 AERA award for outstanding research contribution in the areas of teaching and teacher education, now in its 3rd edition, published on four continents, in 7 languages. We have taken the name that Inhelder gave to Piaget’s research method – Critical Exploration – as the basis for the name of our approach to teaching – Critical Exploration in the Classroom. In this paper, we talk about what that name and this book mean to our teaching and to constructivism. Each one of the four authors has written one section, allowing us to present several different aspects of the book.
Deepening perceptions of learning: Studying and designing ethical practice with researchers, teachers and learners
2020 · 1 citations
- Computer Science
- Computer Science
- Mathematics education
ICLS · 2020-06-01 · 1 citations
articleJournal of Science Teacher Education · 2016-03-08 · 13 citations
articleCorrespondingThis qualitative case study looks closely at an elementary teacher who participated in professional development experiences that helped her develop a hybrid practice of using inquiry-based science to teach both science content and English language development (ELD) to her students, many of whom are English language learners (ELLs). This case study examines the teacher’s reflections on her teaching and her students’ learning as she engaged her students in science learning and supported their developing language skills. It explicates the professional learning experiences that supported the development of this hybrid practice. Closely examining the pedagogical practice and reflections of a teacher who is developing an inquiry-based approach to both science learning and language development can provide insights into how teachers come to integrate their professional development experiences with their classroom expertise in order to create a hybrid inquiry-based science ELD practice. This qualitative case study contributes to the emerging scholarship on the development of teacher practice of inquiry-based science instruction as a vehicle for both science instruction and ELD for ELLs. This study demonstrates how an effective teaching practice that supports both the science and language learning of students can develop from ongoing professional learning experiences that are grounded in current perspectives about language development and that immerse teachers in an inquiry-based approach to learning and instruction. Additionally, this case study also underscores the important role that professional learning opportunities can play in supporting teachers in developing a deeper understanding of the affordances that inquiry-based science can provide for language development.
Making Through the Lens of Culture and Power: Toward Transformative Visions for Educational Equity
Harvard Educational Review · 2016-01-01 · 431 citations
articleIn this essay, Shirin Vossoughi, Paula Hooper, and Meg Escudé advance a critique of branded, culturally normative definitions of making and caution against their uncritical adoption into the educational sphere. The authors argue that the ways making and equity are conceptualized can either restrict or expand the possibility that the growing maker movement will contribute to intellectually generative and liberatory educational experiences for working-class students and students of color. After reviewing various perspectives on making as educative practice, they present a framework that treats the following principles as starting points for equity-oriented research and design: critical analyses of educational injustice; historicized approaches to making as cross-cultural activity; explicit attention to pedagogical philosophies and practices; and ongoing inquiry into the sociopolitical values and purposes of making. These principles are grounded in their own research and teaching in the Tinkering Afterschool Program as well as in the insights and questions raised by critical voices both inside and outside the maker movement.
Tensions and Possibilities for Political Work in the Learning Sciences
International Conference of Learning Sciences · 2014-01-01 · 29 citations
articleSenior authorHow can the learning sciences engage more directly with the political dimensions of defining and studying learning? What might this engagement offer for democratizing learning? This paper delineates a tension between deep studies of learning and explicit attention to issues of power, inequality and human dignity. We frame this as a productive tension that will generate new insights, as well as conceptual and methodological tools that contribute to the democratization of learning. We identify a history of ideas inside and outside the learning sciences that inform this objective, including the political dimensions of the field’s founding theorists. We then offer examples of ways these tensions manifest in our own empirical work, and conclude by considering how explicit attention to political dimensions of learning can advance our theories about what learning is, about what it is for, and about the conditions that give rise to deep forms of learning for all. Expanding Space for Politics in the Learning Sciences? In this article we are grappling with the following questions: How can the learning sciences engage more directly with the political dimensions of defining and studying learning? What might that engagement offer for democratizing learning? Addressing these questions is crucial to educators and designers of learning environments who share a commitment to working with youth and communities contending with marginalization. The work is underway (Bang, et. al, 2012; Gutierrez, 2008; Lee, 2001; Nasir, Roseberry, Warren & Lee, 2006). We believe the time is ripe for making this a more central preoccupation of the field. In our view the learning sciences has a political tension—a tension that has emerged as a shared thread across our work. Here, politics refers to explicit attention to issues of power, hierarchy and inequity, and to the roots of those issues. The field also has an edge that can ground and inform the work of colleagues in other fields who directly address political dimensions of education—we know how to investigate learning with methods that trust and are informed by locally situated social actors and their multiple forms of practice and knowledge. Here, we will describe the boundaries of this tension, ground the discussion in examples from our own work and propose a theoretical stance that privileges human dignity as a central concern. A key strength of scholarship in the learning sciences is in the combined commitment to theories that explore learning as situated in the lives and practices of people (Dewey, 1942; Vygotsky, 1978; Lave, 1987 Gutierrez & Rogoff, 2003) while drawing on grassroots methods in research design (Hawkins & Pea, 1987; Barab, et al., 2004; Barab & Squire, 2004;). Theory offers a way of explaining phenomena of concern, but we sense an apparent contradiction within our field about what we want to explain. At times, learning sciences can orient toward a dominant frame regarding the purposes of education and learning: educational achievement and competition in a global marketplace. This frame was not created by the learning sciences, but the field is responsive to it. This frame is expressed in a variety of ways, yet competition remains the organizing feature. In this view individuals prepare to compete within an economic system and, through that system, collectively contribute to a country’s economic standing—and in turn, degree of control (Eckert, 1989; Varenne & McDermott, 2008). In the learning sciences, this looks like a commitment to developing expert knowledge and deep conceptual understanding without a broader attention to the political and economic factors that shape and constrain trajectories of learning. We have operated as a future-oriented field, researching and designing toward learning environments that can consistently yield deep conceptual understanding, reflection, and expert knowledge that can serve our practice in the world (Sawyer, 2006). The challenge arises when we fail to or choose not to articulate to what end. In those cases, the dominant narrative is ready and waiting to absorb that future as its own. Put another way, it is one thing to marshal support for strong systems of education through calls to prepare people to be effectively competitive—people tend to envision being on the succeeding end of imagined competitions. It is the same thing, although not often articulated, to establish losers in the competition. This is where the political tension becomes taut. An alternative frame places its emphasis on human dignity as a mode of inclusion. Again, this alternative frame did not originate within the learning sciences, but the field clearly desires to be responsive to it (Esmonde & Caswell, 2010; Nasir & Hand, 2006; Nasir, et al., 2006). In this view, varied, localized, cultural ways of knowing can yield respect, reflection, and cooperation—if not riches. Notably, voices in the field organized in this way tend to express the politics at play in the work of learning and knowing. In this frame, deep conceptual understanding and the practices of novices and experts are still key features of the work. The distinction is in making human dignity and social equity the primary commitments. With this commitment comes a more explicit attention to the kind of future that is embodied and potentially engendered by alternative educational designs and practices. Where new social and political visions are made explicit, research on deepening conceptual understanding and expertise also takes shape differently: intellectual activity is understood as embedded in social relations; those social relations can either reproduce or reimagine and transform the hierarchies (raced, classed, gendered, aged, nationalized, etc.) and forms of competition that uphold the status quo. Thus, in addition to treating learning as a cognitive, affective and social process, understanding human learning as a fundamentally political process can lead to distinct empirical insights, designs and methods. Where we do not actively attend to political dimensions in learning, we can reproduce depoliticizing currents that weaken our analyses, making it more difficult to scale our work across settings. Building on Two Active Modes of Theorizing One way to illuminate this distinction is to consider two active modes of theorizing in the learning sciences. One approach is to theorize in ways that yield scalable designs to support learning in various disciplinary contexts: Unlike these previous generations of educational research, learning scientists spend a lot of time in schools—many of us were full time teachers before we became researchers. And learning scientists are committed to improving classroom teaching and learning—many are in schools every week, working directly with teachers and districts. Some even take time off from university duties and return to the classroom, teaching alongside teachers and learning how to make theories work in the real world. This is a new kind of science, with a goal of providing a sound scientific foundation for education (Sawyer, 2006, p. 15). When we theorize from this place, we emphasize science that is grounded in real practices and lived experiences of students, teachers, novices, experts, and professionals. We also tend to prioritize schooling, even as we draw from understandings of learning in everyday life. In and of themselves, these are not overtly political moves. Rather they allow us to reveal practices—local or disciplinary—around which knowledge can be jointly produced. Learning, then, is understood in terms of its depth and effectiveness for yielding flexible and adaptive expertise. This is the bread and butter of the field and we are making meaningful progress. Still, systems that privilege some and marginalize others persist. This is a concern the learning sciences also takes seriously. A second mode of theorizing holds tightly to local practices that are culturally mediated. With this lens, practices that support learning are somewhat freed from the disciplines and can be rooted in a wide variety of activities and cultural spaces (e.g. sports and games, shopping, organizing and activism, etc.). When our lens is focused on cultural ways of knowing and doing, politics have more freedom to emerge through processes of negotiating meaning. We are interested in extending these situated, sociocultural modes of theorizing by investigating what it would mean for the method to scale while the design itself may not. If the learning sciences is to emphasize human dignity, we need to theorize in ways that may not be scalable in a strictly scientific sense. That is, “a sound scientific foundation for education” might be upgraded to sound human-centered methods for learning where knowledge is not only co-constructed but also politically active.
Well@Work: promoting active and healthy workplaces
Loughborough University Institutional Repository (Loughborough University) · 2008-01-01 · 5 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorThe workplace offers significant potential as a setting to promote healthy lifestyles to the adult working population.This is well recognised in the UK but to date under utilized; moreover there is limited evidence on workplace health from studies undertaken within an English context.The Well@Work programme was a national workplace health initiative, comprising nine regional projects encompassing 32 workplaces representing different sized organisations and sectors.This report summarises the national evaluation of Well@Work and represents a comprehensive assessment of the impact of these workplace health programmes aimed at improving employee health, delivered across a diverse set of workplaces. Aims of Well@WorkThe aims of the Well@Work pilot project were to assess the effectiveness of workplace health programmes in promoting the health and well-being of employees in a diverse set of workplace environments and to develop an evidence base on 'what works' in health promotion in the workplace in England. Objectives of Well@WorkThe objectives of Well@Work were to conduct nine regional projects, each implementing a health lifestyle programme with a core focus on physical activity, nutrition and smoking; to undertake a national evaluation to assess the effectiveness of healthy lifestyles programmes on key behavioural, health-related and business-related outcomes; and to identify the factors and barriers associated with implementation, success and the sustainability of workplace health programmes. Management and Timelines of Well@WorkWell@Work was conducted over 3 years.Selection of participating workplaces took place in
DSpace@MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) · 1998-01-01
dissertationOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Media Arts & Sciences, 1998.
1998-01-01 · 11 citations
article1st authorCorresponding
Frequent coauthors
- 5 shared
Shirin Vossoughi
- 3 shared
Arturo Cortez
University of Colorado System
- 2 shared
Kalonji Nzinga
- 2 shared
Kelsey Tayne
- 2 shared
Natalie Davis
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 2 shared
Angela Booker
University of California, San Diego
- 1 shared
Kylie Peppler
- 1 shared
Nikki McDaid-Morgan
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