International Laboratory of Research and Design in elearning

 

We study how people learn in multimedia environments and design evidence-based solutions grounded in contemporary theory, digital data, and experimental methods

 

Tag "Institute of Education"

Freedom to Learn Online, and Why Strategy Matters

Freedom to Learn Online, and Why Strategy Matters
Online learning promises flexibility. In asynchronous courses, students can decide when, how, and in what order to engage with learning materials. Yet this freedom comes with new challenges. Without a prescribed learning sequence, students must design their own pathways, and these choices can shape not only how much they learn, but how difficult learning feels.

Upping the Learning Ante: Why Brain Pre-gaming Is the Cognitive Priming Everyone Needs

AI
Is “pre-training” the unsung hero of effective learning—or just an unnecessary hurdle for already smart students? That’s the research quest Anna Gorbunova, Anastasiia Kapuza, Ouhao Chen, and Jamie Costley embark on in their recent study, Rethinking Pre-training: Cognitive Load Implications for Learners with Varying Prior Knowledge. Published in Frontiers in Psychology, their work dives into how priming your mind before tackling complex material can transform the learning experience, challenging long-held beliefs about how we actually absorb knowledge.

From Innovative Technologies in Education to Learning Experiences: What Made the 17th Asian Conference on Education Remarkable

From Innovative Technologies in Education to Learning Experiences: What Made the 17th Asian Conference on Education Remarkable
On 23–28 November, the 17th Asian Conference on Education (ACE2025) was held in Tokyo. It brought together colleagues from the International Laboratory of Research and Design in eLearning of the Institute of Education.

Studying Inequality in Education

Martin Carnoy, Academic Supervisor of HSE International Laboratory for Education Policy Analysis, will be presenting his report entitled 'Studying inequality in education: big data and small data approaches ' at the XVIII April International Academic Conference this week.