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EdSurge Podcast
A weekly podcast about the future of learning. Join host Jeff Young and other EdSurge reporters as they sit down with educators, innovators and scholars for frank and in-depth conversations.
Total 499 episodes
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How Can Colleges Break Out of the Funk of Low Morale?

How Can Colleges Break Out of the Funk of Low Morale?

Low morale of professors and college leaders is turning out to be one of the biggest issues in higher ed this year. We talked with a college leader who has been writing about educator burnout and demoralization for EdSurge, Kevin McClure, about how higher education can get out of its current funk.
26:5414/12/2021
When the SAT Feels Like a Lock, Not a Key. Bootstraps, Ep. 5

When the SAT Feels Like a Lock, Not a Key. Bootstraps, Ep. 5

The SAT can feel very different to different students. While it can give any college applicant stress, some low-income and minority students see it as evidence that selective colleges don't want them. Can the rise of test-optional policies lead to a new, more equitable era of college admissions? | Guest reporter: Eric Hoover, of The Chronicle of Higher Education
35:5607/12/2021
Sal Khan's Quest to Make 'Mastery Learning' Mainstream

Sal Khan's Quest to Make 'Mastery Learning' Mainstream

Khan Academy has grown from a grassroots phenomenon on YouTube to a non-profit with a mission to change education. Its big idea is to promote a notion of mastery learning, where students don't move on until they understand each step through a curriculum. We asked Sal Khan how that broader goal of making mastery learning mainstream is going, and what's next for Khan Academy.
24:0430/11/2021
What If Education Was ‘Competency-Based’?

What If Education Was ‘Competency-Based’?

Could the pandemic be a moment that competency-based education catches on more widely. It's an approach where colleges award degrees based on what students can show they know, rather than how long they've spent in a classroom. Paul LeBlanc, president of Southern New Hampshire University, talks about his new book about the approach, called Students First: Equity, Access and Opportunity in Higher Education.
28:5123/11/2021
Kids Don’t Always Believe in Climate Science. Are Schools ‘Miseducating’ Them?

Kids Don’t Always Believe in Climate Science. Are Schools ‘Miseducating’ Them?

Scientists agree that climate change is real and extremely pressing. But many kids in the U.S. aren’t so sure—even ones who have experienced its effects firsthand. The problem may be what’s taught (or isn’t taught) in today’s schools. Climate author Katie Worth takes us through her new book “Miseducation,” and what successful schools are doing to combat misinformation.
21:0716/11/2021
What If Free Online Courses Weren’t Inside Walled Gardens?

What If Free Online Courses Weren’t Inside Walled Gardens?

Free online courses have become big business in recent years, offered by companies that work to upsell learners to paid products. But that's not how they started out. Stephen Downes, a pioneer of open online education, argues for eliminating things like free registration to get to free course materials, to better spread the ideas.
29:4709/11/2021
Breaking Down the Early Childhood Education Crisis — and What Might Be Done About It

Breaking Down the Early Childhood Education Crisis — and What Might Be Done About It

You’re probably hearing a lot about the crisis in early childhood education these days, as Congress is on the cusp the biggest policy change — and investment — in early childhood in decades. On today’s podcast, we want to step back and look at how we got here -- at what the situation means to educators at all levels and for parents, and at what the Biden Administration’s proposals could mean.
28:0402/11/2021
Are Upstart Online Providers Getting Better at Teaching Than Traditional Colleges?

Are Upstart Online Providers Getting Better at Teaching Than Traditional Colleges?

You may remember the hype about 10 years ago when a new approach to online teaching with technology was touted as a possible alternative to traditional college, called MOOCs, or Massive Open Online Courses, led by startups like Coursera. These days you don’t hear much about them, but they never went away—in fact they’ve boomed since the pandemic. So much so that one professor thinks that higher ed should probably be nervous—or at least that colleges should try to learn something from these well-funded efforts.
38:0026/10/2021
Encouraging Teachers To Share Their Mistakes

Encouraging Teachers To Share Their Mistakes

We all make mistakes. But for educators, mistakes can be particularly challenging, since there’s a culture in education that prizes showing teachers at their best, and glossing over some of the biggest challenges. One educator has set out to change that, with a podcast that asks teachers to share their biggest mistake and how they've learned from it.
27:4919/10/2021
The Tyranny of Letter Grades. Bootstraps, Ep. 4

The Tyranny of Letter Grades. Bootstraps, Ep. 4

Our current grading system can be a way for kids to prove themselves and win college scholarships, or admission to selective colleges. It can also be a barrier, in sometimes surprising ways. What might a world without letter grades and GPAs look like?
39:1512/10/2021
Should Robots Replace Teachers?

Should Robots Replace Teachers?

Robots are having a moment—including the announcement last week of a new home robot by Amazon. What could that mean for education? We talked with Neil Selwyn, a research professor at Monash University in Australia and author of the provocative book "Should Robots Replace Teachers?"
40:5205/10/2021
This Educator Tutored Chinese Students Remotely From Her Basement. Then It All Came Crashing Down.

This Educator Tutored Chinese Students Remotely From Her Basement. Then It All Came Crashing Down.

Meet a U.S. educator who has been tutoring students in China for years from her basement closet, only to have a policy change cut her off from her students. On this week's episode, we dig into a drama playing out in the online tutoring market half a world away, and look at how it's having huge repercussions for many educators in the U.S.
27:5528/09/2021
Going Back: What College Teaching Is Like Compared to Last Year

Going Back: What College Teaching Is Like Compared to Last Year

It's hard to generalize about which is “better” for learning — online or in person. Because both clearly have their pros and cons, at least listening to students at one campus adjusting to life back to in-person classes.
26:0321/09/2021
Glitches, ‘Gas Fees’ and Lessons We Learned Selling an NFT

Glitches, ‘Gas Fees’ and Lessons We Learned Selling an NFT

EdSurge has spent the last month auctioning off our first NFT, a digital token on the blockchain, to learn what the process involves and the issues the technology raises. On this week's episode, we share what happened.
39:2614/09/2021
Why The Coming ‘Upheaval’ in Higher Ed May Change Notions of Equity, and Prestige

Why The Coming ‘Upheaval’ in Higher Ed May Change Notions of Equity, and Prestige

Big changes are coming to higher education, and those changes will be bigger and more disruptive than many college leaders and experts realize as online learning grows. That’s the view of longtime education leader Arthur Levine, in a new book called The Great Upheaval: Higher Education’s Past, Present, and Uncertain Future. And that means it's time to think differentLY about equity.
23:2607/09/2021
What the Maps in Our Brain Tell Us About the Learning Process

What the Maps in Our Brain Tell Us About the Learning Process

To fit all the billions of neurons in the human brain into our heads, they're organized so that brain regions are carefully mapped to things like vision and hearing. And understanding those maps can be a key to better understanding how the mind—and how learning—works, according to Rebecca Schwarzlose, a postdoctoral neuroscientist at Washington University in St. Louis, and author of the new book, "Brainscapes."
33:4531/08/2021
How the Pandemic Has Disrupted Global K-16 Online Education

How the Pandemic Has Disrupted Global K-16 Online Education

Online high schools were growing even before the pandemic struck, and some online schools were beginning to have a global reach. Now that the whole world has been forced to experiment more with online delivery, where does that leave the international market for online education at the K-12 level? And what about undergrad?
33:4924/08/2021
What the ‘Educational Underground’ Says About the Future of Learning and Work

What the ‘Educational Underground’ Says About the Future of Learning and Work

This week we're hearing stories from the “educational underground"—the experimental programs and “hidden credentials” people get that aren’t on the traditional straight line of college. It's a conversation with Peter Smith, who has advocated for new models of adult learning for more than 50 years, as a college president and later a U.S. Congressman.
26:4417/08/2021
Could NFTs Play a Role in Education?

Could NFTs Play a Role in Education?

There’s all this buzz about NFTs these days, with artists using the blockchain-based format to sell digital works that are getting snapped up by collectors for hundreds of thousands of dollars. Some students and educators are experimenting with the tech too, and some say they could make a big splash.
25:1010/08/2021
The Strange Past and Messy Future of 'Gifted and Talented.' Bootstraps Ep. 3

The Strange Past and Messy Future of 'Gifted and Talented.' Bootstraps Ep. 3

Sometime early in elementary school, kids are put on one of two paths: regular or gifted. Where did this idea come from? The answer goes back more than a 100 years, to a once-famous scholar named Lewis Terman. And it turns out his legacy, and the future of gifted programs, are still very much under debate.
42:1403/08/2021
We Know How to Diversify STEM Fields. The Challenge is Spreading What Works.

We Know How to Diversify STEM Fields. The Challenge is Spreading What Works.

Freeman Hrabowski is a college president who has long fought for civil rights and racial justice. When he was 12 years old he marched with Martin Luther King, Jr. in Birmingham, Alabama—and got arrested. His program to help students major and persist in STEM fields hsa been shown to work, and several colleges are trying to replicate it.
35:5227/07/2021
How to Continuously Improve Teaching

How to Continuously Improve Teaching

Learning science is always advancing, yielding new insights about how people gain and retain knowledge and skills. How can classroom teachers keep up—and even conduct their very own research to improve their instruction, day-by-day and week-by-week?
40:4620/07/2021
How Antiracism Work is Changing Early Childhood Education

How Antiracism Work is Changing Early Childhood Education

Little kids are curious about race and difference. So how are teachers preparing to help children develop positive social identities, encourage their self-expression and help them feel comfortable and safe? We talk with Dr. Calvin Moore, Jr., CEO of the Council for Professional Recognition, which administers the Child Development Associate National Credentialing Program, the most widely-used credential in early childhood education.
32:3613/07/2021
Encore: How YouTube Star John Green Thinks About His Educational Videos

Encore: How YouTube Star John Green Thinks About His Educational Videos

Just after the pandemic began, we reached out to one of the masters of making educational videos, John Green, for his advice and thoughts on education during this unprecedented time. And he talks about his podcast, The Anthropocene Reviewed, now a bestselling book by the same name.
36:0706/07/2021
That Assignment Where Students Give Someone In Need $1,000

That Assignment Where Students Give Someone In Need $1,000

Teachers around the country have been giving an unusual assignment to their students that goes like this: Think of someone who is in a bit of a financial pinch, make a video about why the person deserves a boost, and then hand-deliver the person a check for $1,000. The money comes from a philanthropic effort called VING, and on this week’s podcast we talk to its founder and hear one of these surprise student gifts in action.
27:0629/06/2021
Why Curiosity Is Key to Detecting Misinformation

Why Curiosity Is Key to Detecting Misinformation

We’re living in a world of big data, but also one where misinformation spreads like never before. On this week's podcast we talk with Tim Harford, author of The Data Detective, about his advice for how to better understand the numbers in our world.
30:1722/06/2021
The Long and Surprising History of ‘Teaching Machines’

The Long and Surprising History of ‘Teaching Machines’

People don’t talk much today about early teaching machines, some of which were made out of wood and brass. And that’s no accident, according to Audrey Watters, a longtime critical observer of edtech who is out with a new book called Teaching Machines: The History of Personalized Learning. On this episode, we’re dusting off these old teaching machines from all the way back to the 1920s, to see what these low-tech devices can teach us about education today.
35:5015/06/2021
Recruiting Black Men to Lead in the Classroom

Recruiting Black Men to Lead in the Classroom

Only two percent of teachers in the U.S. are black men. Markus Flynn, executive director of the nonprofit Black Men Teach, is leading creative efforts to diversify the teaching workforce, and change the culture of schools.
35:2908/06/2021
The Lessons Teen Moms Can Teach Colleges

The Lessons Teen Moms Can Teach Colleges

Today, one in five college students is a parent. Yet few higher ed institutions track parenting status or have programs designed to serve students who have children. For this week’s EdSurge Podcast, we spoke with author Nicole Lynn Lewis about what teen parents need to thrive at college.
30:0101/06/2021
Who Deserves a Seat at the Nation’s 'Best' High School? Bootstraps, Ep. 2

Who Deserves a Seat at the Nation’s 'Best' High School? Bootstraps, Ep. 2

What a debate about the admissions process at one of the best public high schools in the country says about who should get what in education.
33:5025/05/2021
Encore: Should Instructors Rethink Final Exams?

Encore: Should Instructors Rethink Final Exams?

When the pandemic hit, the traditional final exam just didn't seem to fit the moment for one physics professor. So she decided on a community-service project instead, and says it has made a more lasting impact on students than any blue book would have. She's one of several educators replacing final exams with "epic finales." This is an encore of an episode that originally ran in July 2020.
30:5618/05/2021
Who Really Benefits From College Student Diversity?

Who Really Benefits From College Student Diversity?

On this week's episode, we look at how colleges talk about diversity—and about why they embrace it—and how that language ends up affecting students.
30:1611/05/2021
What Can Teachers Learn From Students' Brainwaves?

What Can Teachers Learn From Students' Brainwaves?

What is going on inside the brain as students sit in classrooms? That has always been something of a mystery. So what if you could strap on an EEG machine on students in a classroom setting and analyze brain waves during learning. Researchers are increasingly doing just that, and doing other research at the intersection of Mind, Brain and Education.
28:5404/05/2021
Google Isn’t Making Us Stupid, But Tech Does Have Implications for Teaching

Google Isn’t Making Us Stupid, But Tech Does Have Implications for Teaching

There's plenty of anxiety these days about what the internet and smartphones are doing to our brains, memories and attention spans. But what does learning science say about how technology is impacting the human memory, and about that plays out in teaching? EdSurge talked with Michelle M. Miller a psychology professor at Northern Arizona University and author of a forthcoming book, "Remembering and Forgetting in the Age of Technology."
27:2227/04/2021
How a Professor of Hip-Hop Is Breaking Boundaries With First Peer-Reviewed Rap Album

How a Professor of Hip-Hop Is Breaking Boundaries With First Peer-Reviewed Rap Album

As a high school student, A.D. Carson dreamed of becoming a rapper. And he has, in a way he hopes will inspire others. After being a K-12 English teacher and now a professor, he created the first rap album to be published by a university press.
26:1520/04/2021
The Surprising History of a Very American Idea. Bootstraps, Ep. 1

The Surprising History of a Very American Idea. Bootstraps, Ep. 1

What the odd and surprising history of 'pulling yourself up by your bootstraps' says about educational equity. Introduction to our new Bootstraps podcast series on merit, myths and education.
14:5713/04/2021
Applying to College Has Changed During the Pandemic. This High School Senior’s Podcast Shows How.

Applying to College Has Changed During the Pandemic. This High School Senior’s Podcast Shows How.

Many colleges aren’t asking for SAT and ACT scores this year, and students often can't tour colleges to see what campus is like. A new podcast by a high school senior in New Jersey gives candid reflections on what the college application process is like during the pandemic.
19:3806/04/2021
What Today’s Kids Need for Tomorrow’s World

What Today’s Kids Need for Tomorrow’s World

So what do today’s students, whether in K12 or in college, need to know to be prepared for the world they’ll graduate into? That's the topic of a new book by Stephanie Krauss, called Making It: What Today’s Kids Need for Tomorrow’s World. EdSurge connected with Krauss to ask her about her book, and how it was shaped by her own educational journey.
26:5130/03/2021
Worried About Student Mental Health, a College President Moved Into the Dorms

Worried About Student Mental Health, a College President Moved Into the Dorms

When Norwich University started the spring semester with an outbreak of COVID-19 cases, the campus went on strict lockdown. The university's president, Mark Anarumo, decided to take the unusual step of moving into a dorm on campus, to get a better sense of the mental health effects of social isolation—and it led him to rethink the approach to future pandemic response.
21:1523/03/2021
Encore: What a Forgotten Instructional Fad From the ‘70s Reveals About Teaching

Encore: What a Forgotten Instructional Fad From the ‘70s Reveals About Teaching

In the 1960s and '70s, an experimental form of teaching made a big splash at colleges. It was called PSI, or the Personalized System of Instruction. And it's largely forgotten, says Jonathan Zimmerman, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, author of a new book on the history of college teaching in America. Here's what today's colleges can learn from the fad.
25:3216/03/2021
There Is No Average Student. So How Should Educators Measure Learning?

There Is No Average Student. So How Should Educators Measure Learning?

What if the way we think about testing and how we measure students is broken? That’s the argument made by our guest today, Todd Rose, author of the bestselling "The End of Average," who has researched the history of grades and standardized tests, and argues for a new way to think about them.
24:3309/03/2021
How Shakespeare Can Help Us Rethink Education

How Shakespeare Can Help Us Rethink Education

What is the purpose of education? It's a question that William Shakespeare raises in his comedy "Love's Labour's Lost. And the playwright's own training—in rhetoric, craftsmanship and conversation—reveals the answer. That's the premise of a new book by Scott Newstok, an English professor at Rhodes College.
43:2602/03/2021
More Students Are Using Chegg to Cheat During the Pandemic. Is the Company Doing Enough to Stop It?

More Students Are Using Chegg to Cheat During the Pandemic. Is the Company Doing Enough to Stop It?

Over the past year the pandemic has dramatically altered college teaching, and one side-effect seems to be a rise in exam cheating. In some cases, students are using homework help sites, including Chegg, to get answers during exams. The company has taken steps to respond, but critics say more change is needed. And some say it’s professors who need to change their testing strategies.
24:2823/02/2021
A Social-Emotional Learning Expert Explains Why ‘Unity’ Is So Elusive

A Social-Emotional Learning Expert Explains Why ‘Unity’ Is So Elusive

In his Inaugural Address, Joe Biden spoke at length about unity, calling on Americans to “listen to one another, see one another, hear one another and show respect to one another.” But what would it really take to do that? Mylien Duong, a clinical psychologist and social-emotional learning research scientist, explains why listening and empathy are so complex and elusive.
25:1016/02/2021
Is It Still Teaching When the Professor Is Dead?

Is It Still Teaching When the Professor Is Dead?

An online course at Concordia University is being taught by a legend of Canadian art -- well, by video lectures he recorded years ago. But a student in the course said he was surprised to find that even though the professor died in 2019, he's still listed as the teacher on the syllabus. What can we learn from this unusual moment in online teaching?
14:2309/02/2021
How the Race Between Vaccinations and COVID Variants Affects School Reopening

How the Race Between Vaccinations and COVID Variants Affects School Reopening

With COVID-19 vaccinations rolling out across the country, there's hope that more schools in the U.S. will soon go back to in-person learning. But there is also a sense of added urgency. But new strains of the coronavirus are emerging, bring a new sense of concern. Asaf Bitton, a physician, public health researcher, and executive director of Ariadne Labs, talks about how soon he sees a chance for kids to have "just a regular boring school day" again.
30:1302/02/2021
Teachers Are Going Viral on TikTok. Is That a Good Thing?

Teachers Are Going Viral on TikTok. Is That a Good Thing?

Teachers are becoming stars these days on TikTok, that social media platform for sharing short videos. Some of them say the platform serves as a kind of virtual teaching lounge during COVID. But is it a good thing for the teaching profession that classroom instructors are part of a site known for dance crazes, jokes and other irreverent content?
25:0126/01/2021
Lessons from Students and Professors Who Podcasted Their Campus Lives During the Fall Semester

Lessons from Students and Professors Who Podcasted Their Campus Lives During the Fall Semester

Last semester was historic: the first full term under the shadow of COVID-19, and nobody really knew what to expect or how well various teaching adaptations would work. So what are some lessons from the fall semester? We talked with the professors and students who participated in our Pandemic Campus Diaries podcast series in the fall for their takeaways.
41:2919/01/2021
Are Colleges Partly to Blame for the Riot at the Capitol?

Are Colleges Partly to Blame for the Riot at the Capitol?

This week we talk with a history professor who thinks that not only can colleges do more to encourage civic education that could prevent future crises like the mob storming the U.S. Capitol last week, but that higher education is partly to blame for last week’s events.
26:2013/01/2021
EdSurge Podcast’s Top Moments of 2020

EdSurge Podcast’s Top Moments of 2020

On this episode we’re going to revisit some of the most memorable moments from our podcast in 2020 -- and some bonus material that we wanted to get on but just didn’t quite fit.
33:5206/01/2021