Nov 22-23, 2021  |  6:00pm - 12:00pm

Celebration of Education Scholarship - Productive Failure: Lessons for Lifelong Learning

Education Scholarship

Be sure to save the date for the next virtual Celebration of Education Scholarship event, presented by the Office of Education Scholarship.

Theme: Productive Failure: Lessons for Lifelong Learning, Nov 22-23, 2021

A full program and registration information will be announced soon via the DFCM listserv.

 

Fireside Chat - Mon, Nov 22 (6:00-7:00 pm)

Speaker: Dr. Danielle Martin, Incoming Chair,

Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto

We are delighted that our new chair, Dr. Danielle Martin, will be joining us for an informal chat on the evening of Nov 22. This will be a wonderful opportunity to get to know her, and to hear her thoughts on productive failure.

 

Morning Program - Tue, Nov 23 (9:00-12:00 pm)

Keynote Speaker: Prof. Dr. Manu Kapur, Chair of Learning Sciences & Higher Education, ETH Zurich

Title: Learning from Productive Failure

Dr. Kapur is an internationally recognized leader in the area of productive failure. His presentation promises to bring an engaging and challenging perspective to this important topic. There will be opportunity for questions and discussion, and we also look forward to hearing from some of our DFCM colleagues on their own learning experiences with failure.

Further information: dfcm.edscholarship@utoronto.ca

Dr. Danielle Martin is the incoming Chair of the Department of Family and Community Medicine (DFCM), University of Toronto. DFCM is the largest academic department of family medicine in the world and home to the World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Centre on Family Medicine and Primary Care.

Dr. Martin is grounded in her clinical primary care expertise. She is an active family physician whose clinical work has ranged from comprehensive family medicine in rural and remote communities to maternity care. She is a dedicated educator, mentor and role model to learners aspiring to enter medicine and health care leadership.

Dr. Martin is a respected leader in Canadian medicine and well-recognized media spokesperson, regularly named on lists such as Medical Post’s Power List. Her 2014 presentation to a United States Senate Subcommittee about the Canadian health care system has been viewed by over 30 million people across the globe.

Dr. Martin spent eight years as a senior hospital executive, most recently as Executive Vice President and Lead Medical Executive at Women’s College Hospital (WCH), where she was also medical lead of the hospital’s COVID-19 pandemic response. At WCH, she led the establishment of Women’s Virtual, Canada’s first virtual hospital.

The recipient of many awards and accolades, in 2019 Dr. Martin became the youngest physician ever to receive the F.N.G. Starr Award, the highest honour available to Canadian Medical Association members.

 

Prof. Dr. Manu Kapur holds the Professorship for Learning Sciences and Higher Education at ETH Zurich, Switzerland, and directs The Future Learning Initiative (FLI) at ETH Zurich. An ETH+ funded initiative, the FLI brings together more than 20 professors from 10 departments at ETH to advance research on the science of teaching and learning in higher education contexts, and translate it into the practice of teaching and learning at ETH Zurich.

Prior to this, Manu was a Professor of Psychological Studies at the Education University of Hong Kong. Manu also worked at the National Institute of Education (NIE/NTU) of Singapore as the Head of the Curriculum, Teaching and Learning Department, as well as the Head of the Learning Sciences Lab (LSL).

A mechanical engineer by bachelors training, Manu has always been passionate about mathematics. He taught college mathematics for four years, during which he was also the deputy leader for Singapore’s team to the 43rd International Mathematical Olympiad in Glasgow. It was then that his intrigue for mathematical cognition took root, which led him to pursue a doctoral degree in the science of learning (specialization in instructional technology) at Columbia University in New York. Manu holds a double Masters: a Master of Science in Applied Statistics from Columbia University in New York, and a Master of Education from the NIE, Singapore.

As a learning scientist, Manu makes a commitment not only to advancing understanding of human learning, but doing so in ways that make an impact in the actual ecologies of learning. Drawing on his engineering mindset for design, Manu conceptualized and developed the theory of Productive Failure to design for and bootstrap failure for learning mathematics better. He has done extensive work in real-field ecologies of STEM classrooms to transform teaching and learning using his theory of productive failure across a range of schools and universities in around the world.

His research on Productive Failure has been taken up by the Singapore’s Ministry of Education for wide-scale re-design and implementation of its pre-university mathematics (statistics) curriculum and pedagogy. This demonstrated Manu’s ability to build and sustain a high-quality, interdisciplinary scientific research program and work with multiple stakeholders (politicians, policy makers, funding bodies, schools) to impact not only theory but also policy and practice at the national scale.