Middle school students affix an EEG cap to a fellow student for a study
A program run by the Brainwave Learning Center engages middle school students in neuroscience research. Here, Simran Thakur and Jackson Rose affix an EEG cap onto a fellow student to observe brain activity in real time. (Photo: Peter DaSilva)

Getting a head start

At the Brainwave Learning Center, middle school students work with 海角乱伦社区 scientists to study how educational experiences affect the brain.
December 14, 2023
By Carrie Spector

Jackson Rose was in seventh grade when he took a class at school that sounded interesting, an elective exploring the science of sleep and its impact on the brain. Two years later, he and a classmate, Caroline Walker, were invited to an international neuroscience conference to share the findings from a research project they helped develop, presenting their work alongside leading scholars and scientists in the field.

How did two teenagers end up exhibiting cutting-edge research at a major scientific conference? 

Rose and Walker were students at , an independent school in Menlo Park, Calif., that鈥檚 also home to the , a research-practice partnership in collaboration with 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education (GSE). The on-site lab engages students with neuroscience in the classroom while advancing research in the field, bringing researchers, teachers, and students together to study how young learners鈥 brains respond to different learning experiences. 

The center 鈥 which launched in 2019 as part of the , led by GSE Professor Bruce McCandliss 鈥 is a fully integrated part of life at Synapse. 海角乱伦社区 neuroscientists collaborate with teachers to develop and conduct studies on cognitive development, including math and reading. Students learn about and watch their own brain activity, in real time, during research sessions. Researchers teach a unit on neurobiology for upper-level science classes, and host roundtable discussions for teachers on mind, brain, and education work.

The center also runs an immersive Middle School Research Assistant Program, where seventh- and eighth-grade students learn about research methods, receive training on how to use neuroscience equipment such as electroencephalography (EEG) to observe electrical brain activity, explore their own scientific interests, interact with scientists on a daily basis, and drive independent research projects.

Brainwave Learning Center staff and student group photo

From left: Radhika Gosavi, associate director of the Brainwave Learning Center; former Synapse students Jackson Rose, Arav Ramchandran, Anya Jain, Simran Thakur, Caroline Walker, and Alexandra Lu; and Elizabeth Toomarian, director of the Brainwave Learning Center. (Photo: Peter DaSilva)

Through the program, about 20 Synapse students have been supported in developing research projects over the past two years 鈥 which is how Rose and Walker鈥檚 work ended up at the 2023 conference of the Flux Society for Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, an influential forum for professional scientists, graduate and postdoctoral students, physicians, and educators.

鈥淚nitially, we just thought it might be interesting for the middle school students to get an idea of the scientific method, the type of science we do, and what the field is all about,鈥 said Radhika Gosavi, a trained scientist and associate director of the Brainwave Learning Center, who leads the research assistant program. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 grown into so much more.鈥 

Rose, for one, who has dyslexia, was curious about how a dyslexic brain might interpret information differently from a neurotypical one. As a seventh grader he started exploring studies on audiovisual integration 鈥 how the brain combines sounds and images, which early research suggests may differ between dyslexic and neurotypical thinkers. He worked closely with Gosavi to understand the scientific literature, shape research questions, and design an EEG study.

Then Rose and Walker, who joined the program the following year, were introduced to Lindsey Hasak, a GSE doctoral candidate whose research focuses on audiovisual integration in the process of reading. 鈥淚鈥檇 worked on the proof of concept for a few years of my PhD with neurotypical adults, and because of the students鈥 interest, we were able to expand the scope of the study,鈥 Hasak said.

Rose and Walker recruited a study sample of fellow students with and without dyslexia, learned all the steps involved in an EEG experiment, and carried out the research using ethical protocols. The Brainwave Learning Center team worked with them to analyze the data, which shows differences in brain activity between those with and without dyslexia.

Jackson and Caroline presenting their work

Caroline Walker (left) and Jackson Rose (right) discuss their research with Priscilla Zhao during a research showcase at Synapse School in 2023.

To give students the experience of presenting their work to an audience, the Brainwave Learning Center hosts a showcase at the end of each school year, drawing members of the school community, 海角乱伦社区 researchers, and others interested in educational neuroscience, including philanthropic organizations.

Students also submit their projects to local science fairs, and in 2023, three teams from the Middle School Research Assistant Program placed first or second in their category at the San Mateo County STEM Fair. One team went on to win first place in the cognitive science category at the California Science and Engineering Fair and qualified to submit their project to the Scientific Juniors Innovators Challenge, a national competition for middle school students. 

The center also submitted the project Rose and Walker worked on to the Flux Society鈥檚 2023 conference. Their submission was accepted 鈥 an accomplishment itself for any scientist 鈥 and Rose went to the event to present it at the poster session (Walker was unable to attend). 

Their poster, one of more than 130 at the conference, won the society鈥檚 annual member鈥檚 choice award.

The research assistant program may introduce middle school students to the scientific method, Gosavi said, but its lessons aren鈥檛 only for aspiring scientists. 

鈥淵es, the kids are learning science and scientific methodology. They鈥檙e coming up with creative ideas for research projects, and they鈥檙e winning science fairs and presenting at conferences,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 also so much value added to their journey as a learner. When kids understand more about how their brain learns, it gives them a different perspective on the learning process, and a sense of ownership over that process.鈥 

Rose has no idea whether he鈥檒l pursue a career in science, but he agreed that the program had an impact well beyond the technical skills he developed. 鈥淜nowing how the brain works has absolutely changed the way I think about learning,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 could see myself as a learner in a way that I never saw before.鈥