If you'd like more resources, can search here;
http://searching-islam.com/
Can anyone go more in depth about the Islamic Golden Age? ( c. 750 CE to c. 1257 CE)
What was learned, compared to other areas in the world at that time? How did it effect Islam?
It didn't really effect Islam much. Islam helped the Golden age flourish, leaving no restrictions and pure encouragement to the seeking of knowledge. Caliphs would give good support in the creation of libraries and universities.
Many advancements were made in many subjects, especially; Biology, Medicine, Architecture, Mathematics, Science and so on.
The ruin of the empire of the Romans, and, along with it the subversion of all law and order, which happened a few centuries afterwards, produced the entire neglect of that study of the connecting principles of nature, to which leisure and security can alone give occasion. After the fall of those great conquerors and the civilizers of mankind, the empire of the Caliphs seems to have been the first state under which the world enjoyed that degree of tranquility which the cultivation of the sciences requires. It was under the protection of those generous and magnificent princes, that the ancient philosophy and astronomy of the Greeks were restored and established in the East; that tranquility, which their mild, just and religious government diffused over their vast empire, revived the curiosity of mankind, to inquire into the connecting principles of nature. [The Essays of Adam Smith, London, 1869, P. 353.]
It's summed up pretty well by George Sarton -
It was during the period of high Muslim apogee: 8th-13th centuries that most decisive scientific inventions were made, and the foundations of modern civilisation were laid, scientists and scientific discoveries in their thousands, artistic creativity, great architecture, huge libraries, hospitals, universities, mapping of the world, the discovery of the sky and its secrets, and much more.
"It will suffice here to evoke a few glorious names without contemporary equivalents in the West: Jabir ibn Haiyan, al-Kindi, al-Khwarizmi, al-Fargani, al-Razi, Thabit ibn Qurra, al-Battani, Hunain ibn Ishaq, al-Farabi, Ibrahim ibn Sinan, al-Masudi, al-Tabari, Abul Wafa, 'Ali ibn Abbas, Abul Qasim, Ibn al-Jazzar, al-Biruni, Ibn Sina, Ibn Yunus, al-Kashi, Ibn al-Haitham, 'Ali Ibn 'Isa al-Ghazali, al-zarqab, Omar Khayyam. A magnificent array of names which it would not be difficult to extend. If anyone tells you that the Middle Ages were scientifically sterile, just quote these men to him, all of whom flourished within a short period, 750 to 1100 A.D."
- George Sarton
I would recommend reading the following links;
http://www.khilafah.com/index.php/t...lamic-khilafah-and-its-illustrious-golden-age
http://www.islamic-study.org/islam's-influence-on-the-world.htm