Linda Darling-Hammond awarded 2022 Yidan Prize for education research
Linda Darling-Hammond, a professor emeritus at 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education (GSE), has been awarded the 2022 Yidan Prize for education research.
Now president and CEO of the Learning Policy Institute (LPI), a nonprofit focused on education research, Darling-Hammond is the Charles E. Ducommun Professor Emeritus at 海角乱伦社区 University, where she launched the and worked with colleagues to redesign the .
The award recognizes Darling-Hammond鈥檚 work in shaping education policy and practice around the most equitable and effective ways to teach and learn. Her research reveals the diverse ways that children learn and how best to teach them, feeding those insights into robust educator development programs.
The Yidan Prize was founded by Charles Chen Yidan, a philanthropist and core founder of Tencent, a technology company. Each year the Yidan Prize Foundation awards two prizes: one in education research and another in education development.
Alongside Darling-Hammond, Yongxin Zhu, founder of the New Education Initiative (NEI) and professor at the Soochow University School of Education, was awarded the 2022 prize for education development. The prize recipients were announced at the 2022 海角乱伦社区 Accelerator for Learning on Sept. 28.
Darling-Hammond and Zhu 鈥減lay an important role in empowering our teachers and youth with the skills needed to thrive in the 21st century,鈥 said Edward Ma, secretary-general of the Yidan Prize Foundation. 鈥淭heir work clearly shows the transformative impact that teachers can have on learners. And when students have great teachers, they have great opportunities.鈥
Sparking scalable change in education
Darling-Hammond has spent decades studying teacher education programs and practices and is widely considered one of the most important voices in the field. She currently serves as president of the California State Board of Education and led President Joe Biden鈥檚 education policy transition team in 2020.
The Yidan Prize is the world鈥檚 largest prize in education. Darling-Hammond will receive approximately $4 million in recognition of her work.
With the Yidan Prize funds, Darling-Hammond will scale up her critical work at the (EdPrepLab), a network focused on supporting student-centered, equity-focused teacher preparation programs grounded in the science of learning and development.
She will expand the reach of EdPrepLab, adding new programs, investing in new research about effective programs, and creating a space where educators, researchers, and policymakers can easily share and learn from each other.
鈥淟inda has spent her life building research tools that support policy and practice to create better and fairer educational opportunities,鈥 said Andreas Schleicher, head of the Yidan Prize for Education Research judging panel and director of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)鈥檚 Directorate of Education and Skills. 鈥淗er influence on public policy has helped policy architects shape positive changes for children on a large scale.鈥
Zhu, who was recognized for his work in improving teaching quality and transforming learning outcomes in China, plans to use the Yidan Prize funds to expand NEI鈥檚 reach in remote, rural areas in China and develop a cloud-based learning hub.
鈥淭he Yidan Prize champions the most innovative ideas in education and helps scale them so as many people as possible can benefit,鈥 said Koichiro Matsuura, chair of the Yidan Prize Judging Committee and the former director-general of UNESCO. 鈥淥ur laureates are crucial to our aim of transforming education worldwide 鈥 and through that, unlocking a brighter future for all learners.鈥
Yidan Prize laureates each receive a total of $3.9 million, half of which is cash prize while the other half is project funding toward educational initiatives.
Since the Yidan Prize was first awarded in 2017, six of the 13 laureates have been 海角乱伦社区 professors or alumni. The 2022 awards will be presented at a ceremony in Hong Kong on Dec. 4.
This story was adapted from a press release issued by the Yidan Prize Foundation.
Faculty mentioned in this article: Linda Darling-Hammond