Edsurge On Air

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 253:33:51
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

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.

Episodes

  • Power, Prestige and the World's Most Famous Scholarship. Bootstraps, Ep. 6

    01/03/2022 Duration: 44min

    The Rhodes Scholarship was designed to forge a network of people who would go on to rule the world. So who gets this opportunity? And how is the oldest and best-known graduate scholarship dealing with the legacy of its founder, who used ruthless and racist practices to build the diamond empire that funded the effort?

  • Is Autocorrect Enhancing Our Brains or Eroding Our Humanity?

    22/02/2022 Duration: 38min

    Philosopher and historian of technology Justin E. H. Smith has been diving into the past to see where our dreams about the internet have come from. And he has a warning for what he thinks is going wrong in how things have evolved in recent years — and what tech might be doing to us as learners and thinkers. Understanding that past, he argues, can help make a course correction.

  • Educators Have Pointed Advice For Tech Companies Building the Metaverse

    15/02/2022 Duration: 32min

    Even though the metaverse is not really here yet, some educators are already trying to get ahead of the curve to help influence what kinds of education products and services emerge in this new, more-immersive internet.

  • Who Will Pay for ‘Inclusive Excellence’ at Universities?

    08/02/2022 Duration: 40min

    There are universities aiming to do top-notch research and serve large numbers of students of color and low-income students. This goal—what some campus leaders call ‘inclusive excellence’—challenges common assumptions about prestige in education. And according to the authors of the book “Broke,” it’s hard to accomplish in a time of reduced state support for public colleges.

  • Clay Shirky Wants to Reframe the Conversation About How Colleges are Changing

    01/02/2022 Duration: 36min

    Clay Shirky has long been an influential voice on how technology is impacting society. These days the NYU professor has been weighing in on where higher ed is headed, with a newsletter called "The (Continual) Transformation of Higher Education."

  • Remote School Meltdowns? A Closer Look at Student Well-Being During the Pandemic

    25/01/2022 Duration: 33min

    A group of researchers at Harvard have a unique window into student well-being during the pandemic, following a group of a couple thousand families with young children in Massachusetts. They're seeing more behavior issues in kids during remote learning, and they have advice for educators on how to manage shifts back and forth between online and in-person teaching.

  • How Will COVID-19 Impact School Reform Movements?

    18/01/2022 Duration: 24min

    A polio outbreak in 1937 may have been the first time tech made emergency remote learning possible. There was no Internet, of course, so schools used the big medium of the day: radio. But did that leave any lasting impact on schooling? That's one question explored by education historian Larry Cuban in his new book, Confessions of a School Reformer.

  • A New Perspective on 'Supercharging' the Brain

    11/01/2022 Duration: 30min

    An evolutionary biologist who studies the physiology of aging has some surprising advice about brain health. And it has implications for schools and colleges—and anyone interested in learning.

  • Scenes From Campus Life During the 'Delta Semester'

    04/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    Last semester has been described as a kind of limbo—with fewer COVID health restrictions and more in-person classes and activities, but still under the cloud of a stubborn pandemic. We asked students on five campuses around the country to share moments that epitomized this unusual time on college campuses.

  • Encore: The Strange Past and Messy Future of 'Gifted and Talented.'

    28/12/2021 Duration: 45min

    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.

  • The Surprising History of Google's Push to Scan Millions of Library Books

    21/12/2021 Duration: 31min

    Back in 2004 Google made a splash with a plan to scan nearly the entire book collections of some of the world's largest libraries. But soon it became clear the actual plan would turn out to be far more controversial than its organizers probably ever imagined.

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

    14/12/2021 Duration: 26min

    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.

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

    07/12/2021 Duration: 35min

    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

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

    30/11/2021 Duration: 24min

    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.

  • What If Education Was ‘Competency-Based’?

    23/11/2021 Duration: 28min

    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.

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

    16/11/2021 Duration: 21min

    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.

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

    09/11/2021 Duration: 29min

    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.

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

    02/11/2021 Duration: 28min

    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.

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

    26/10/2021 Duration: 38min

    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.

  • Encouraging Teachers To Share Their Mistakes

    19/10/2021 Duration: 27min

    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.

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