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Optimize Learning Through Science
COGx translates research from cognitive science into evidence-based programs that improve student learning outcomes.
Empowering all stakeholders in the student learning journey
How would you like to start?
I want to learn about the science of learning
Personally invest in grasping the
science of learning (educators, students, tutors).
I want science of learning at my institution
We serve learning institutions of all sizes at any stage of the journey (schools, ministries, learning centers, and enterprise solutions)
Did You Know?
0
%
of educators wish for more tools to foster efficacious learning in their students
0
%
of educators said that their students don’t know how to learn in an optimal way.
0
%
educators said that learning would improve if they were trained to identify learning differences to personalize intsruction.
Source: COGx Global Survey
We surveyed over 1,000 educators from around the world. The results highlighted the challenges in the current education system.
The Case for the Science of Learning in Schools
"...not only can we put cognitive science discoveries into practice, but I believe we're ethically obligated to do so; the benefits of cognitively friendly instruction are so profound that inaction at this point would be tantamount to malpractice. We have knowledge that can save students from the educational winnower and help them realize a lifelong love of learning. It's time to put that knowledge to work."
Prof. Sarma (MIT)Author of "Grasp: The Science Transforming How We Learn"
"In the past few decades, knowledge of human learning and development has proliferated rapidly.”
(Darling-Hammond et al., 2020; National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, 2018)Cognitive Science - Academic Research
"The current approach to teaching is often disconnected from how students learn and causes too many students to drop-out, struggle, and/or work too hard to do well. This in turn, inhibits interest and careers in STEM, which are often perceived to be “too hard” by students or “for smart kids”
(Hines, 2014)Cognitive Science - Academic Research
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