Learning Environments for Tomorrow:
Next Practices for Education Leaders and Designers
June 30-July 3, 2025
The Eliot School, Boston, MA, USA
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How can schools, classrooms and other educational spaces be best designed support deep and life-long learning? How can architects, educators and designers create places for learning that incorporates the latest research and innovative practices from around the globe? Founded in 2007 at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education and Graduate School of Design, Learning Environments for Tomorrow (LEFT) convenes project teams in an interactive and intensive three-day studio format in which participants learn from leading experts and apply lessons to their active projects – ranging from modest redesigns of small settings, large school building renovation, to ambitious new construction and campus planning.
If you are designing or redesigning learning places, LEFT 2025 offers a unique opportunity for you and your team to receive research-based ideas, expert feedback and practical support. Keynotes from global experts will feature examples and lessons learned. Hands-on workshops led by Harvard faculty and award-winning architects offer opportunities to learn and practice techniques. Teams will work alongside other teams to apply and adapt ideas into their plans in daily design studios facilitated by expert practitioners. LEFT is designed to support teams of architects, educators, designers, educational planners and leaders involved in active projects.
LEFT examines how contemporary forces – such as generative technologies, shifting demographics, and climate change — are shaping how and where learning happens. Designing effective projects amidst such shifts requires a clear participatory process that explores several key questions: What are the learning needs, values, and challenge of the people for whom are designing? What are the educational programs and purposes (e.g. the desired goals, skills, and dispositions) that will be most meaningful? What architectural and design principles (e.g. flexibility, visibility, sustainability, etc.) can best support decision-making? How can we best develop plans and prototypes that can be tested and improved over time? Inspired by examples and research, teams will develop answers to these questions with expert support from LEFT faculty.
Importantly, LEFT also models its ideas in the very locations in which it convenes. LEFT 2025 will be held at the Eliot School, an innovative Boston Public School in the historic North End district of Boston. This multi-site, urban school will also serve as a site to inspire teams to consider what might be possible in their own contexts. In the years ahead LEFT will be convening annually in equally inspiring locations around the world.
Dr. Daniel Gray Wilson
Harvard University
Daniel is a Principal Investigator at Project Zero and Lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE). His current teaching and research explore the dynamics of collaboration and group learning, designing physical places that support learning, and adult learning and leadership in the workplace. He is a former Director of Project Zero (2014-2023) and Faculty Chair of Learning Environments for Tomorrow (LEFT). Since joining Project Zero as a researcher in 1993, Daniel has participated in dozens of research projects and collaborated with educators in a variety of countries and cultural contexts, including Australia, Brazil, Colombia, Denmark, Italy, Japan, South Africa, Spain, Taiwan, and the United States.
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Daniel Wilson is the director of Project Zero at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE), where he is also a principal investigator, a lecturer on education at HGSE, and the educational chair at Harvard’s Learning Environments for Tomorrow — a collaboration with HGSE and Harvard Graduate School of Design. His teaching and writing explores the inherent socio-psychological tensions — dilemmas of knowing, trusting, leading, and belonging — in adult collaborative learning across a variety of contexts. Specifically, he focuses on how groups navigate these tensions through language, routines, roles, and artifacts.
This interest can be seen in three areas of his current work:
- Professional Learning in Communities: How do a variety of professionals come together to learn with and from one another? Currently Wilson directs the research of Project Zero’s “Learning Innovations Laboratory (LILA),” an interdisciplinary professional learning community that facilitates cross-organizational learning on contemporary challenges of human development and change in organizations. LILA involves top leaders from twenty global organizations such as the Cisco, Novartis, the CIA, Steelcase, and the US Army. Since 2000, LILA has conducted dozens of explorations into themes such as the emerging science of decision making, the future of learning, and leadership development.
- Learning & Leadership Behaviors in the Workplace: How do professionals develop and deploy actions that enable learning in their everyday work? Wilson co-authored the book, Learning at Work (2005), outlines practices that support formal and informal learning in the workplace. From 2007-2011 he was a Research Fellow at the acclaimed innovation design consultancy, IDEO, in which he studied and designed interventions to enhance the learning and leadership behaviors in their design teams. Additionally, he is currently co-directing the “Leading Learning that Matters”, a research project with 25 independent schools in Victoria, Australia that aims to document innovative school leadership practices that support 21st century learning skills.
- Making Learning Visible: How can teachers and students create new forms of learning in which their identities and their knowledge can be made more visible to themselves and to others? Wilson was the principal investigator on the “Making Learning Visible Project,” a project that engages pre-k through high school educators in adapting the Reggio Emilia pedagogical principles
Since joining Project Zero as a researcher in 1993, Wilson, has also participated on projects such as: “Teaching for Understanding” (1993-1996), “Understanding for Organizations” (1996-1999), “Teaching for Understanding in Universities” (1996-1999), “Wide World Project” (1999-2002), “Project-based Learning in After Schools Project” (2000-2002), and the “Storywork Project” with the International Storytelling Institute (2002-2004).
David Stephen
New Vista Design
David is a co-founder of the High Tech High network of charter schools and their principal architect. He has varied experience as a teacher, program manager, writer, curriculum developer, and teacher trainer. During the past 30 years, David has had the opportunity to work nationally with leading school reformers on a wide range of successful and cutting-edge curriculum and facility design projects, playing a key role in the creation and/or architectural design of over 100 dynamic schools across the United States and abroad. As a former public school and a licensed architect, David brings a unique perspective on the design of innovative learning environments from the inside out.
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David Stephen’s professional life straddles the worlds of education reform and architectural design. As an educator, he has 25+ years of experience partnering with some of the field’s visionaries, working with schools nationwide to imagine, develop, and implement innovative school programs. As a licensed architect, he has over 15+ years of experience facilitating the architectural programming and design of forward-thinking school buildings. Not surprisingly, important and interesting connections happen at the intersection of these two disciplines. David speaks the “language of education” and the “language of design.” This allows him to not only translate and interpret best practices in education and design for his clients, but to assist them in fully exploring the relationship between the two.
Through his work at New Vista Design, David spends approximately 30% of his time helping districts, schools, and teachers develop multi-year training initiatives in student-centered and inquiry-based curricula and programming. His experience as a teacher, program coordinator, and curriculum developer in a variety of project-based educational environments grounds this work. Another 60% of David’s time is focused on partnering with districts, schools, and architectural firms to help facilitate the design of dynamic and forward-thinking school buildings. In this capacity, David has had the opportunity to collaborate with many pioneering architectural firms and school networks, and has played a key role in the architectural design and/or renovation of over 100 elementary, middle, and high school facilities across the U.S. and abroad. His projects include the design of facilities for the highly acclaimed High Tech High network of schools, Da Vinci Schools, Denver School of Science & Technology, Harlem Village Academies and Oracle Design Tech High School.
Finally, David devotes approximately 10% of his time to engaging in research and advocacy efforts that aim to create and highlight best-practices and new models for school programs and buildings of the future. He has served since 2011 as the Co-Chair of Harvard Graduate School of Education’s LEFT (Learning Environments for Tomorrow) Institute, and regularly facilitates workshops for educational changemaking organizations and projects such as Schools That Can, the Deeper Learning Network, Agency by Design, Nellie Mae Education Foundation, and A4LE (the Association for Learning Environments).
Ela Ben-Ur
Ela supports educators and organizations making positive change with Design Thinking. Over 13 prior years at innovation firm IDEO, Ela was a design practitioner, project leader, team coach, facilitator for clients, and co-founder of IDEO’s Leadership Studio. Ela teaches courses from product design to life design
at pioneering Olin College, where she holds the title of Academic Partner. She has
led featured workshops at venues from MIT (her alma mater) to the National
Science Teachers’ Association, AIGA, International Development Design Summit,
and US Conference on AIDS.
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With many co-experimenters, she developed
Innovators’ Compass (#innovatorscompass, innovatorscompass.org), a visual tool
used from preschools to companies and communities to creatively and
collaboratively navigate challenges. Ela’s daughters are her inspiration.