“Nothing interferes more with science than believing that you know something that you do not actually know.”
—Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (translated from German)
School research is one of the most intriguing fields of research within education. In school research, the individual person, groups, institutions, and societies are closely intertwined. Therefore, school-research findings reflect dynamic constellations of factors. This circumstance places enormous demands on research methods, measurement instruments, and the study and evaluation designs.
Numerous practical considerations bespeak the importance of research on schools and schooling. For example:
Social and political uncertainty as to whether the current school system can fulfill its educational goals requires suitably informative, evidence-based responses from school researchers.
Research efforts at the Chair are empirical, interdisciplinary, practice-oriented, and local, national, and international in scope.
International Cooperation: The chair collaborates with universities, ministries of education, talent centers, and other institutions in Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania, and South America. Collaborations exist with, for example, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (Beijing, China); Dublin City University / CTY Ireland (Dublin, Ireland); the Engineers Europe (Brussels, Belgium); Florida Atlantic University (Boca Raton, Florida, USA); Future Minds (Lima, Peru); the Hong Kong Academy for Gifted Education (Hong Kong, Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China); the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy (Aurora, Illinois, United States); Kaunas University of Technology (Kaunas, Lithuania); King Faisal University (Al-Ahasa, Saudi Arabia); the Bulgarian Ministry of Education and Science (Sofia, Bulgaria); Monash University (Melbourne, Australia); Mount Kenya University (Thika, Kenya); Mully Children's Family (Nairobi, Kenya); the National Centre for Learning in Science, Technology and Health, ASTRA (Copenhagen, Denmark); Platform Talent voor Technologie (The Hague, Netherlands); the University of British Columbia (Vancouver, Canada); and the University of Wollongong (Wollongong, Australia).
The chair’s research groups are investigating teaching and learning processes in preschool, elementary school, and high school. Areas of focus include:
Research is published in in English and German. Contributions include peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters, and monographs. Publications focus on various readerships (scientists, educational practitioners, parents, and the general public).
From 2007 to 2014, Prof. Dr. Stoeger was editor in chief of the peer-reviewed journal of the European Council for High Ability (ECHA), High Ability Studies. In cooperation with the Chair of Educational Psychology of the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Prof. Dr. Stoeger edits the monograph series Schulp?dagogik und Lehr- und Lernforschung (School Research and Teaching and Learning Research).