“Learning is not something you do for four years. Learning is something you do forever.” Sanjay E. Sarma, MIT’s vice president for open learning, delivered these words to crowds in Palo Alto on February 5 and San Francisco on February 7 who gathered not only to celebrate the strength of MIT’s community during the MIT Campaign for a Better World, but—fittingly—to share knowledge. Both events, which were attended by more than 700 alumni, parents, and friends, showcased Institute leaders, faculty, alumni, and students who are advancing the science of teaching and learning in areas ranging from neuroscience to online education.
“I graduated from MIT more than 40 years ago, and I’ve seen it continually invent and discover and then shower the world with gifts,” Mark Gorenberg ’76 said in his welcoming remarks in San Francisco. Many of these gifts have come in the form of new approaches to teaching and learning, even though, as faculty speaker Eric Klopfer noted, the Institute does not have a school of education. “We also don’t have a cancer school or an energy school,” pointed out Klopfer, who is a leader of several cross-Institute groups, including the Scheller Teacher Education Program, the Education Arcade, the pK-12 Initiative, and the Abdul Latif Jameel World Education Lab. “We see problems such as these as interdisciplinary challenges that require diverse expertise.”
Other speakers at the two evenings represented the range of that expertise, including Chancellor for Academic Advancement W. Eric L. Grimson PhD ’80, whose intro computer science course on MITx has enrolled 1.2 million online learners; Shuja Keen ’99, president of the
MIT Club of Northern California, who in addition to his professional pursuits is founding board member of the educational nonprofit Spark Academy; and Jenna Hong ’19, an undergraduate doing research at the intersection of computing and cognitive science.
On March 19 and 21, similar gatherings in San Diego and Los Angeles will bring together alumni further south in California to explore another topic central to the Better World campaign: how the MIT community is working to address global challenges in the areas of environment, energy, and sustainability.
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This story was adapted from an February 22, 2019, article by Nicole Estvanik Taylor for Slice of MIT. Read the full story.