Edsurge On Air

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

  • Should Chatbots Tutor? Dissecting That Viral AI Demo With Sal Khan and His Son

    04/06/2024 Duration: 55min

    Should AI chatbots be used as tutors? Sal Khan, founder of Khan Academy, has become one of the most vocal proponents of the idea, and he and his son are featured in a recent demo of ChatGPT’s latest version. But some teaching experts say tutoring should be reserved for humans who can motivate and understand the students they work with. For this week’s EdSurge Podcast, we talked with Khan to hear more about his vision of AI tutors and the arguments from his recent book.

  • How Instructors Are Adapting to a Rise in Student Disengagement (Encore Episode)

    28/05/2024 Duration: 30min

    Professors are finding that they can’t just go back to teaching as they did before the pandemic and expect the same result. It takes more these days to hold student attention, and convince them to show up. This week we’re rebroadcasting this episode that was reported from the back of large lecture classes to see how teaching is changing. The episode recently won a national award from the American Society of Business Publication Editors.

  • What Brain Science Says About How to Better Teach Teenagers

    21/05/2024 Duration: 42min

    One author who spent years researching what brain science says about adolescent learners says their behavior shouldn’t be seen as “deviant” or “immature,” but as a “time of possibility.” And this researcher, Ellen Galinsky, has strong feelings about how to address phones and social media in schools. Read a partial transcript and see show notes at EdSurge: https://www.edsurge.com/news/2024-05-21-what-brain-science-says-about-how-to-better-teach-teenagers

  • High School Students Want Answers Before Heading to Campus (Doubting College, Ep. 4)

    14/05/2024 Duration: 25min

    Today’s high school students are asking more skeptical questions about whether to go to college, or when to go. For this week’s podcast, we visited a career fair at one public high school to ask about the changing ways that high school counselors and education leaders are presenting those choices, and what these students think about their options.

  • Can ‘Linguistic Fingerprinting’ Guard Against AI Cheating?

    07/05/2024 Duration: 47min

    Some educators are trying a different approach to guarding against AI cheating — a “linguistic fingerprinting” technique that borrows a page from the playbook of criminal investigations.

  • A Scholar Hopes to Diversify the Narrative Around Undocumented Students

    30/04/2024 Duration: 47min

    Felecia Russell was born in Jamaica but moved to Los Angeles as a kid. It wasn’t until she started to apply for college that she learned that she was undocumented, which she worried could derail her dreams. She tells her story in a new book, “Amplifying Black Undocumented Student Voices in Higher Education,” which she hopes will help “diversify the narrative” about immigration and education.

  • Why a New Teaching Approach is Going Viral on Social Media (Encore Episode)

    23/04/2024 Duration: 01h06min

    When a professor’s research showed that standard methods of teaching problem-solving weren’t working, he set out to figure out what led to more student thinking. His resulting approach is spreading through classrooms, helped by teachers sharing examples on social media. This is a reissue of an episode that first ran in November.

  • Whatever Happened to Building a Metaverse for Education?

    16/04/2024 Duration: 43min

    Two years ago the metaverse was getting all the buzz in education circles (and hardly anyone was talking about AI). We checked back in with two educators at the forefront of building a virtual realm for education to see where they see things going now that the hype has faded.

  • How VR Can Be an ‘Empathy Machine’ for Education

    09/04/2024 Duration: 51min

    The biggest reason to use VR in education is to tap into a student’s emotional response through immersive experiences, argues Maya Georgieva, director of The New School’s Innovation Center and a leading voice about where VR is headed. Hear her insights in this new interview. Find more details and show notes at: https://www.edsurge.com/news/2024-04-05-how-vr-can-be-an-empathy-machine-for-education

  • Is It Time for a National Conversation About Eliminating Letter Grades?

    02/04/2024 Duration: 43min

    There’s a growing movement to drop letter grades in favor of new systems that focus on mastery of material rather than chasing points. But opponents worry about losing rigor. A new book hopes to start a national conversation about the issue. More details and show notes at: https://www.edsurge.com/news/2024-04-02-is-it-time-for-a-national-conversation-about-eliminating-letter-grades

  • Could AI Give Civics Education a Boost?

    26/03/2024 Duration: 56min

    Social studies has been ‘deprioritized’ for decades, in favor of STEM fields, according to some educators. Could AI essay grading help improve the quality of civics and social studies education in schools?

  • What New Research Says About Fostering a ‘Sense of Belonging’ in Classrooms

    19/03/2024 Duration: 54min

    There are key junctures in education that are especially important for helping students feel they belong in school or college. And new research points to better ways to strengthen student-teacher relationships and a sense of belonging, argues Greg Walton, a psychology professor at Stanford University.

  • How Is the ‘College Is a Scam’ Narrative Influencing Who Goes to Campus? (Doubting College, Ep. 3)

    12/03/2024 Duration: 01h04min

    There’s growing skepticism of higher education, complete with popular memes on social media that “college is a scam.” Experts in policy and marketing have some suggestions on how to counter that narrative.

  • An Educator’s Podcast Aims to Be an Antidote to School Culture Wars

    05/03/2024 Duration: 57min

    A longtime educator worries that the raging culture wars in education create toxic environments that hurt academic learning. He’s started a podcast that brings together people with deeply different views on issues that are most dividing school communities these days and uses depolarizing techniques to try to model repairing such breaches.

  • Can VR Help Preserve and Teach Indigenous Culture?

    27/02/2024 Duration: 38min

    Could virtual reality be the key to teaching indigenous ways of knowing to a broad population of students? Jared Ten Brink, a doctoral student in education, is trying to record and teach some key practices of his tribal elders using VR video.

  • How Growing Skepticism of College Is Making Students Savvier Edu Shoppers (Doubting College, Ep. 2)

    20/02/2024 Duration: 34min

    In part two of our podcast series Doubting College, which explores the growing skepticism of higher ed, we talk to students and counselors at a public high school about how students are thinking through their choices after graduation.

  • AI Is Disrupting Professions That Require College Degrees. How Should Higher Ed Respond?

    13/02/2024 Duration: 45min

    A recent study ranked the top professions that are likely to be disrupted by ChatGPT and other new AI technologies, and most of them require college degrees. How does higher ed need to change what it teaches to respond?

  • What If Myths, Metaphors and Riddles Are the Key to Reshaping K-12 Education?

    06/02/2024 Duration: 48min

    Did the education theories that drive today’s schools and teaching practices get off track and do they need a reset — one that gets back to earlier days of oral storytelling? That was the argument of philosopher Kieran Egan, whose educational writings have recently gotten attention.

  • How Classroom Technology Has Changed the Parent-Teacher Relationship

    30/01/2024 Duration: 27min

    It can be harder than ever for teachers to manage their relationships with parents, even though digital tools make interactions more frequent. This week’s EdSurge podcast looks at why.

  • Inside the Push to Bring AI Literacy to Schools and Colleges

    23/01/2024 Duration: 53min

    There’s a growing push to add AI literacy as a subject in schools and colleges. But what exactly is AI literacy, and can educators promote curiosity about the subject amid their own concerns, and in some cases fear, around ChatGPT and other generative AI?

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