Have You Heard

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 110:26:33
  • Mais informações

Informações:

Sinopse

Occasionally funny and periodically informative, Have You Heard features journalist Jennifer Berkshire and scholar Jack Schneider as they explore the age-old quest to finally fix the nation's public schools, one policy issue at a time.

Episódios

  • #26 Divided by Design: Race, Neighborhoods, Wealth and Schools

    27/09/2017 Duração: 35min

    The claim that "your zip code shouldn't determine your education" is made by education experts of every stripe. And yet as Have You Heard guest Richard Rothstein, author of the Color of Law, explains here, our racially segregated zip codes were created by design, the result of federal housing policy. The legacy of those policies today is not just segregated schools but a stark racial wealth gap. And the solution to the problem isn't choosing schools, argues Rothstein, but integrating neighborhoods.

  • #25 Big Philanthropy, Small Change: Inside the Gates Foundation's Small Schools Experiment

    12/09/2017 Duração: 33min

    Bill Gates spent a fortune to remake high schools across the country into small learning communities. Michael Hobbes' Seattle alma mater was one of these, and he takes us deep into the story of his school. As Hobbes recounts, what happened at Hale High, and Gates' efforts to supersize the small schools experiment, is also a story of what education reform gets wrong - and why reformers make the same mistakes again and again.

  • #24 Schools Can't Fix Poverty (So Why do We Keep Insisting They Can?)

    29/08/2017 Duração: 26min

    Have You Heard talks to historian Harvey Kantor about how education came to be seen as THE fix for poverty. Hint: it all starts in the 1960’s with the advent of the Great Society programs. Fast forward to the present and our belief that education can reduce poverty and narrow the nation’s yawning inequality chasm is stronger than ever. And yet education, argues Kantor, is actually exacerbating income inequality.

  • #23: The Mismeasure of Schools: Data, Real Estate and Segregation

    14/08/2017 Duração: 27min

    In this episode, Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider discuss how test scores and other current metrics distort our picture of school quality, often fostering segregation in the process. What would a better set of measures include? Our intrepid hosts venture inside an urban elementary school to find out.

  • #22: The Long Crusade Against Public Schools: A Conversation with Nancy MacLean

    31/07/2017 Duração: 25min

    Jennifer Berkshire talks to Nancy MacLean, author of the best selling Democracy in Chains, about the Right's long crusade against what they call "government schools."

  • #21: 'I Quit' - Teachers Are Leaving and They Want to Tell You Why

    11/07/2017 Duração: 20min

    In this episode of Have You Heard, we hear from teachers who left their jobs - and wanted to tell the world why. They left "kicking and screaming" as Oklahoma Teacher of the Year Shawn Sheehan explains. These very public resignations are a form of activism, a way for teachers to articulate how and why teaching needs to change.

  • #20: Putting the 'i' in School: Personalized Learning and the Disruption of Public Education

    24/06/2017 Duração: 35min

    The push to "personalize" education is on, with more Silicon Valley disrupters jumping into the big money fray every week. But as Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider discuss with guest Bill Fitzgerald, the search for a technological cure for what ails our public schools goes way back. And by failing to heed the past, the new breed of disrupters--Mark Zuckerberg, Reed Hastings, et al--are poised to repeat it.

  • #19: Buying Influence: Big Money and School Board Elections

    06/06/2017 Duração: 31min

    How did school boards became the must-have accessory of wealthy donors? Scholar Rebecca Jacobsen walks us through who and what is behind this big money trend. And by "big," we mean REALLY BIG. The recent school board election in Los Angeles was the most expensive in history, totaling some $17 million, much of it via untraceable "dark money" donations.

  • #18 DNA Test: the Ancestry of Charter Schools

    23/05/2017 Duração: 27min

    Did you hear the one about how charter schools were the brainchild of Albert Shanker, the legendary teachers union head? Writer Rachel Cohen did, but when she began tracing the tale back to its origins, she found that the real "father" of charter schools looks a lot like their biggest fans today: market-oriented reformers who aren't crazy about public institutions or labor unions.

  • #17: Where Have All the Black Teachers Gone?

    05/05/2017 Duração: 30min

    A big new study finds having just one Black teacher makes it far more likely that Black students will remain in school. But there’s a problem. The percentage of Black teachers, particularly in urban areas, has been sinking like a stone. Guest Terrenda White explains the role that education reform has played in reducing the number of Black teachers, and why recruiting Black students to be future teachers is such a challenge when school can feel a lot like jail.

  • #16: Truth in Edvertising

    19/04/2017 Duração: 26min

    School marketing is a fast growing - and completely unregulated - byproduct of the education marketplace. Jack Schneider and Jennifer Berkshire explore the world of "edvertising" with researcher Sarah Butler Jessen. To market, to market!

  • #15: Tax Credit Scholarships: A Laundromat for Tax Dollars

    04/04/2017 Duração: 34min

    Tax credit scholarships are a complex, controversial way of sending taxpayer dollars to private religious schools, allowing wealthy donors and corporations to reap huge windfalls in the process. Jack Schneider and Jennifer Berkshire explore the the origins of the wall between public money and private schools that these “neo vouchers” are intended to circumvent. They're joined by tax policy expert Carl Davis who They’re joined by tax policy expert Carl Davis who explains that tax credit scholarships have more in common with money laundering than with charitable giving.

  • #14 For Profit U: Tressie McMillan Cottom on the rise of for-profit colleges

    22/03/2017 Duração: 36min

    Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider talk to Tressie McMillan Cottom about the rise of for-profit colleges, and *risky* higher ed that saddles low-income students with debt and questionable credentials. And we discuss the growing push to make K-12 similarly risky. Cottom is the author of Lower Ed and her sharp, insightful take on why markets and schooling don't match is a must hear.

  • #13 - School Choice Meltdown in Motown

    11/03/2017 Duração: 14min

    Have You Heard heads to Detroit to hear from parents about how they're faring in the city's "education marketplace." We listen in as they describe neighborhoods that have become school deserts, and the chaos of dealing with schools that suddenly close their doors.

  • #12 Rate My Teacher: A Conversation with Michelle Rhee

    07/03/2017 Duração: 35min

    Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider talk to Michelle Rhee about the use of student test scores to evaluate teachers, whether the policies she's pushed for have led to teacher shortages, and what's next for the education reform movement in these Trumpian times.

  • #11: You're Fired

    22/02/2017 Duração: 42min

    The idea that schools can be fixed by firing teachers has become a fixation. Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider look at where the idea comes from and hear from three Boston teachers whose schools are about to be turned upside down. As scholar Tina Trujillo explains, the turn-and-churn model of school reform reflects a larger erosion of the idea that public education is public good.

  • #10 Vouchers: a Love Story

    10/02/2017 Duração: 40min

    The conservative love affair with vouchers dates back decades, held in check only by a skeptical public. Now with the GOP running, well, just about everything, school vouchers are back, baby. Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider discuss the history of the voucher movement and its strange bedfellows, and mix it up with Travis Pillow, a voucher superfan.

  • #9 - Montessori Schools: They're Not Just for Rich White Kids Anymore

    17/01/2017 Duração: 12min

    When Maria Montessori developed a new teaching method for society’s “lost” children in the early 1900s, she had no idea it would become one of the go-to ways rich white parents educate their toddlers. But now, public urban Montessori schools are catching on in a big way and challenging some deeply held beliefs about how urban kids should be educated.

  • #8 - Georgia's Got Something on Its Mind

    22/10/2016 Duração: 15min

    When Georgia voters go to the polls, they'll be deciding whether to create a statewide school district to take over troubled schools. But while the question is being sold as a way to help kids, the devil is in the details. Have you Heard heads to Atlanta to hear from voters and parents about why Amendment One has become the hot topic in Georgia politics.

  • #7 How Ethnic Studies Works

    27/09/2016 Duração: 13min

    Have You Heard heads west to visit a San Francisco high school where ninth grade social studies students are diving deep into a topic that concerns them directly: school lunch. They're part of a new ethnic studies curriculum that allows them to engage in their education in hopes that they’ll be more invested in school. And it's producing big results: the kind that have researchers salivating more than a kid excited for chicken nugget day in the cafeteria.

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