Prof Stephen Heppell | Professor
World expert on contemporary learning, online education and learning spaces (UK)

Prof Stephen Heppell, Professor, World expert on contemporary learning, online education and learning spaces (UK)

Stephen's "eyes on the horizon, feet on the ground" approach, coupled with a vast portfolio of effective large scale projects over three decades, have established him internationally as a widely and fondly recognized leader in the fields of learning, new media and technology. 

A school teacher for more than a decade, and a professor since 1989, Stephen has worked, and is working, with learner led projects, with governments around the world, with international agencies, Fortune 500 companies, with schools and communities, with his PhD students and with many influential trusts and organizations. 

Stephen's ICT career (he is widely credited with being the person who put the C into ICT), began with the UK government's Microelectronics Education Programme (MEP) in the early 80s, after he had been teaching in secondary schools for some years - which he enjoyed enormously. 

Stephen founded and ran Ultralab for almost a quarter of a century, building it into one of the most respected research centres in e-learning in the world - at one time Ultralab was the largest producer of educational CD-ROMs in Europe - before leaving it in 2004 to found his own global and flourishing policy and learning consultancy heppell.net which now has an enviable portfolio of international projects all round the world. 

Stephen's learning design work extends beyond the virtual and he has a broad portfolio of new learing spaces ranging from new school and universities, to sports coaching facilities and corporate spaces. Current school projects include whole schools, Science and STEM spaces in Australia, South America, Europe, Taiwan, India and more. 

A current major research direction, the Learnometer project, is an Internet of Things device monitoring all the core environmental variables impacting on cognitive processes inside learning spaces: CO2, pollution, light, temperature, sound and more. With millions of hours of data and schools all around the world installing LoMs and monitoring their resultant improvements, the aggreggation of marginal gains philosophy from Stephen's work with elite sports has spilled over into some extraordinary transformations inside education too. The Learnometer data has been particularly insightful during the CoVID pandemic - highlighting, for example, the cognitive impact pf TVOCs from deep cleaning, and the importance of outdoor learning in reducing aerosol transmissions.

Much of Stephen's work is on-the-ground, practical project based. Around the world a string of innovative schools from Peru to Australia, from the emirates back to Scotland and of course in England too, are proud to trace their remarkable progress back to his direct involvement. Stephen is at the heart of a global revolution in physical learning space design, complementing the work designing on-line communities, with a string of major new projects , particularly with major elite sporting organisations, worldwide.

Appearances:



Day 2 @ 09:00

Softer, lower walls: why learning is escaping out of doors

  • Before the pandemic learning was beginning to escape from the boxes we had placed it in: curriculum specifics, levels, assessment criteria, classrooms, campuses, age phases, duration and more.
  • During, and since that pandemic the escape has begun to look like a stampede as learning elsewhere, stage not age, lifelong learning, learning families and more are producing a new learning landscape with technology as a core enabler;
  • in particular the fresh locations of learning - once expensively contained in bespoke education buildings - have opened up a new life of nomadic campuses and wholly outdoor learning.
  • The impact of this on everything from the capital cost of education to the sheer joy of learning is proving to be dramatic.
last published: 11/Aug/22 02:45 GMT

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