Professor Uri Wilensky

Prize

Yidan Prize for Education Research

Year

2025

Contents

Bio

Judge's citation

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Professor Uri Wilensky

Lorraine H. Morton Professor of Learning Sciences, Computer Science and Complex Systems, Northwestern University

Expertise

Agent-based modeling; Complex systems literacy; Computational thinking in STEM education

Developing systems literacy through modeling complex phenomena

Professor Uri Wilensky is reshaping how we understand, engage with, and make decisions within the complex, interconnected systems of our world.

 

Through agent-based modeling (ABM), students, teachers, and researchers can build, modify, and explore NetLogo models, revealing how individual behaviors create ripple effects that give rise to large-scale, non-linear patterns. This allows them to adjust underlying rules, analyze outcomes, iterate, refine, and question as they go.

 

Uri designed NetLogo to support learners at every level — but it’s also the most widely-used ABM platform in professional research. Students are learning to think like natural and social scientists, using the same tools as accomplished academics. The desktop platform has seen more than 2.5 million downloads since 2010 from the NetLogo website with many more downloads from other mirror sites, and the web-based version has tens of thousands of users every month.

 

ABM also acts as a bridge between subjects, since students use the same modeling principles to compare biological, ecological, social, and physical systems. By helping students grasp sophisticated concepts and develop computational thinking skills, Uri’s work is fostering a generation of collaborative, interdisciplinary thinkers — essential for tackling the challenges of today’s increasingly interconnected, AI-enabled world.

 

Uri is also broadening access to ABM through curriculum development. He’s helped systems integrate computational modeling across a range of subjects, equipping more and more learners across the globe with a better understanding of complex systems.

Professor Uri Wilensky explores how computational representations can recast knowledge across scientific and social domains. By equipping students with tools to understand nonlinear, complex systems, he fosters their confidence and agency to navigate today’s interconnected world.

Andreas Schleicher

Panel Head, Judging Panel for Education Research, Yidan Prize