Sinopsis
A weekly podcast, with insightful conversations about edtech and the future of learning, hosted by EdSurge's Jenny Abamu and Jeffrey R. Young. Whether youre an entrepreneur, an educator, or an investor, theres something for everyone on the air.
Episodios
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How to Redesign Our Educational System for Lifelong Learning
30/12/2020 Duración: 31minThe disruptions in the job market caused by COVID-19 mean colleges and employers will need to rethink the relationship between the workplace and the classroom. That’s according to Michelle Weise, who makes the case in her new book, Long Life Learning.
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How the Brain ‘Grasps’ New Concepts
22/12/2020 Duración: 24minForgetting is a feature, not a bug. That's one of the surprising truths about how the brain works in the new book "Grasp: The Science Transforming How We Learn." We talk with the book's co-author, Sanjay Sarma, a professor and the vice president for open learning at MIT.
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Online or In Person: Which Choice Aced the Pandemic Semester? Campus Diaries Ep. 8
16/12/2020 Duración: 46minSome colleges were committed to doing as much in-person teaching and activities as possible this semester, even during this health crisis. While other colleges decided early on to focus attention online and pretty much shutter campus for now. For our series finale of the Pandemic Campus Diaries series, we ask: which decision was the right one for students and professors?
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A Conversation With #EduColor's José Vilson About Inclusive Teaching
08/12/2020 Duración: 42minHow can educators make their teaching more inclusive? For perspective and advice, we recently talked with José Vilson, co-founder and executive director of #EduColor, a nonprofit advocacy group dedicated to issues of race and social justice in education and author of “This Is Not A Test: A New Narrative on Race, Class, and Education."
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How to Save Public Higher Ed. New Book Makes Case For Rethinking the Value of Colleges
01/12/2020 Duración: 35minThis week's guest, John Warner, has just released a timely book with fresh arguments on how to frame this larger question of who should pay for higher education -- and even how we should think about college’s place in American life. The book is called “Sustainable. Resilient. Free.: The Future of Public Higher Education.”
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‘No-Excuses’ and ‘Progressive’ Schools Are Training New Teachers Very Differently About Race
24/11/2020 Duración: 29minResidencies are the new trend in teacher education. What are they teaching about race? Victoria Thiesen-Homer, a postdoctoral research fellow at Arizona State University’s School of Social Transformation, embedded herself in a no-excuses and a progressive residency school for her new book, “Learning to Connect: Relationships, Race, and Teacher Education."
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What Lessons Have Emerged From the Pandemic Semester? Campus Diaries Ep. 7
18/11/2020 Duración: 25minThis stressful and disrupted semester is leading professors to rethink how they teach, and helping students learn about themselves. But are there things that will stick even after the health emergency ends? Hear views from six campuses on the latest installment of our Pandemic Campus Diaries series.
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Child Abuse Is Harder to Spot During the Pandemic. What Can Educators Do?
10/11/2020 Duración: 24minOther than their parents and caregivers, children spend more time with their teachers and school staff than with almost any other adults. So when something is wrong or seems off, educators are often the first to notice. As a result, educators end up detecting a significant number of child-abuse cases each year. But with the arrival of the coronavirus pandemic, these situations where trouble might be noticed have disappeared overnight. To get a sense of where this issue stands seven months into the pandemic, EdSurge connected with Bart Klika, chief research and strategy officer at Prevent Child Abuse America
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High Stakes, High Anxiety This Election Day. Pandemic Campus Diaries Ep. 6
03/11/2020 Duración: 32minToday is Election Day in the U.S. And for this installment of our Pandemic Campus Diaries series, we are focusing on how the election and social unrest have been playing out on campuses during this pandemic semester. Students seem to be voting this election season like never before. But some professors are struggling to hold productive discussions of political issues in this polarized time.
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Students Are Distracted. What Can Educators Do About It?
27/10/2020 Duración: 27minStudents these days are distracted. Devices and social-media notifications constantly beckon, and in this time of COVID-19 and widespread remote instruction, the distractions have multiplied. So what are educators to do? EdSurge connected with James Lang, author of the new book "Distracted: Why Students Can’t Focus and What You Can Do About It."
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Who Is Missing From College? Pandemic Campus Diaries Ep. 5
20/10/2020 Duración: 31minThis week we’re focusing on who is disappearing from higher education due to the pandemic, and what professors are doing to try to keep students going in these challenging times. It's kind of a mystery story because it's incredibly difficult to determine who is missing when the people involved don't even see each other in the real world, and everyone is so focused on their own socially isolated bubbles.
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Young People Don’t Always Show Up to Vote. Here’s How Education Can Help.
13/10/2020 Duración: 35minResearch shows young citizens are motivated to vote. But they don’t always make it to the polls. Why not? To find out, we interviewed Sunshine Hillygus, political scientist and co-author of the new book “Making Young Voters.” She shares surprising insights about what kind of K-12 and higher education actually influences youth voting behavior. Hint: It’s not civics class.
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No Study Groups and Cheating Concerns. Are Students Learning? Pandemic Campus Diaries, Ep. 4
06/10/2020 Duración: 43minWhat is studying like this semester when teaching is strained by safety measures like plexiglass barriers and masks in classrooms and online classes taught by so many professors who are new to the format and clearly struggling to figure out what works. Are students learning?
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The Unusual Lengths School Bands Are Going to Keep Practices Safe, and Why It Matters
29/09/2020 Duración: 20minScientists around the country have been teaming up with band educators to test what is and isn’t safe when it comes to music education, and what kind of protective gear or PPE works. We talk to a musician who has worked in so-called clean rooms to measure just what particles come out of various musical instruments.
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During a Pandemic, Can College Be … Fun? Campus Diaries, Ep. 3
22/09/2020 Duración: 36minGetting the balance between safety and openness right is a continuous challenge during the pandemic. And much has clearly been lost in terms of social interaction this fall. Can colleges find a way to stay open and offer meaningful extracurricular activities?
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Is Learning on Zoom the Same as In Person? Not to Your Brain
15/09/2020 Duración: 24minAt this point the Zoom call has almost come to define learning and working in the age of COVID-19. A few months ago, people began realizing that all these video calls were making them tired—exhausted even—more so than a day of in-person class or all-day meetings. The phenomena even has a name: Zoom fatigue. And it’s backed by some pretty interesting brain science.
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Is This College? Pandemic Campus Diaries, Ep. 2
08/09/2020 Duración: 38minClasses are back in session at colleges around the country. Well something like college classes are happening. But in this fall semester like no other, with a pandemic reshaping so many facets of our lives, can colleges pull off effective teaching that’s also safe? And if they can, does it feel like college?
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Howard Gardner on His Theory of Multiple Intelligences, and Lessons for COVID-19 Era
01/09/2020 Duración: 29minHoward Gardner has made a long and influential career exploring the mind and how to think about it. This month Gardner came out with a different kind of book, one where he looks inward. It’s a memoir called A Synthesizing Mind. He argues that we need to encourage more synthesizing thinkers in this challenging moment of polarization and pandemic.
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How Do You Prepare for a Pandemic Semester? Campus Diaries, Ep. 1
25/08/2020 Duración: 43minWe’re doing something different on the podcast this week, and throughout this semester. We’ve enlisted professors and students at 6 colleges, and we’ve asked them to share audio diaries of college life in this unprecedented time. On this first installment of the series: Why this is not just about inconveniences of plexiglass barriers in classrooms and masked teaching. The stakes for this semester are high, and so are tensions.
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Now That the Pandemic Hit, Will Employers Keep Giving Tuition Benefits?
18/08/2020 Duración: 26minLarge employers like Walmart and Chipotle are spending more time, money and effort investing in training programs to prepare workers for what they see as the jobs of the future—at least they were before COVID-19 hit. On this week’s podcast, we hear from Rachel Carlson, CEO and co-founder of Guild Education, a company working to set up these education programs.