Rock the Schools with Citizen Stewart

  • Autor: Podcast
  • Narrador: Podcast
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 120:27:18
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Sinopsis

Rock the Schools is a weekly education reform activism podcast, hosted by Chris Stewart aka Citizen Stewart. Follow on Twitter: @citizenstewart

Episodios

  • Episode 20 | Live from New Orleans, with Ashana Bigard, Parent Activist

    09/12/2015 Duración: 52min

    For the month of July Rock The Schools is recording in New Orleans as part of a future series on the anniversary of post-Katrina school reform. We will speak with parents, educators, and community members about the challenges and successes that have come from rebirth of public education in a city that has a long history of racial caste and a three-tiered system of education. On this episode: School reform in New Orleans is a national story that is often called miraculous by education leaders, but local parents often tell a more mixed story. Our guest Ashana Bigard is one of those parents. She has helped parents navigate NOLA schools and has seen first had the struggles they have had to get the best education for their kids (even after reform). We talk to her as a critical friend, to hear what education reformers should know about the parent perspective. Ashana has been featured on the Edushyster blog and in The Atlantic.

  • Episode 19 | Building A Better School with Greg Gentle, Flex Academy Principal

    09/12/2015 Duración: 52min

    Whether we call it "reform" or not, the effort to improve school isn't solely about fixing public education. It is about discovering new ways to inspire learning, and building better schools. Many good people have invested countless hours in pursuit of education that works for kids. Some have failed, some have succeeded, but few tell their stories. We speak with Gregory Gentle, a long time educator, about his work to start a new school.

  • Episode 18 | With Friends Like These

    09/12/2015 Duración: 01h04min

    Liberals and progressives have traditionally been counted as allies in the struggle of marginalized communities to gain education. Even so, our friends on the left have become the biggest barriers to education reforms that would open up educational options for black people. Is it time to call the question: "are leftist educational politics at odds with our goal of black liberation through education?"

  • Episode 17 | Education Reform From The Outside In

    09/12/2015 Duración: 55min

    Your perspective on education activism changes when you become a leader within a school district after being an activist. Alberto Monseratte shares his journey as an education reformer, activist, and the first Latino board of education member in Minneapolis.

  • Episode 16 | The New School Must Be Just w/ Nekima Levy-Pounds

    09/12/2015 Duración: 58min

    Nekima Levy-Pounds was recently elected as the president of Minneapolis' NAACP. A fierce advocate for justice, and a supportive critic of school reform, she embodies a hopeful "third way" approach to education activism. We talk to her about how focus on schools fit into a broader justice agenda, and how her leadership will differ from other emerging leaders.

  • Episode 15 | Can we have better education if we can't agree?

    09/12/2015 Duración: 59min

    Earlier this year the school reform outfit Better Ed had a dust up with Black Lives Matter Minneapolis, which exposed how disconnected some forms of school reform are from the communities they want to help. I speak with Devin Foley about this and the strange politics of education reform.

  • Episode 14 | Power To Parents & Students

    09/12/2015 Duración: 40min

    We will discuss the need for school reform efforts to be led by the parents and students who are most affected, and the challenges developing parent power in the movement.

  • Episode 13 | A Contract for Student Achievement

    09/12/2015 Duración: 54min

    Rock The Schools with Citizen Stewart - A Contract for Student Achievement, featuring special guests Lynne Mickelson And MinnPost's Beth Hawkins. We will discuss how mysterious the process of negotiating between teachers and school districts has been, and what it looks like when citizens and media get inside.

  • Episode 12 | Caging The Black Mind, with Lee-Ann Stephens

    09/12/2015 Duración: 01h01min

    Caging the black mind, with guest Educator and 2006 Minnesota Teacher of the Year, Lee-Ann Stephens

  • Episode 11 | Is public schooling dead? with Justin Cohen

    09/12/2015 Duración: 59min

    Over many years school reformers have labored to improve public schools so that more children succeed academically. After years of reform, American public education looks remarkably like it did a century ago. With the rapid pace of change that has accelerated innovations in every area of life, can we continue to support a fossilizing system of mass, compulsory education that seems doomed by its irrelevance? Is it time to ask if public education in its current form is dead? Justin Cohen joins Rock The Schools to discuss his ideas about how obsolete public education has become

  • Episode 10 | When the system hurts kids, Tiffany Wilson-Worsely

    09/12/2015 Duración: 50min

    A recent study called "Two Strikes: Race and the Disciplining of Young Students," experimental studies that showed that teachers are likely to interpret students' misbehavior differently depending on the student's race. At the same time schools are under pressure to rethinking student discipline and improve racialized academic outcomes. Focus is on teachers, teaching, and learning. That raises an issue: students increasingly taught by a work force is mostly female, educated, middle-class, and "strikingly white." Teachers are younger, less experienced, and more educated than ever, even as students are poorer and browner. Many believe this causes cultural problems that impact student achievement. Tiffany Wilson-Worsley joins Rock The Schools to share her experience supporting black students in both suburban and urban public schools.

  • Episode 8 | A Student of Unusual Potential

    09/12/2015 Duración: 56min

    Listening to the journey of one young black woman from Chicago Public Schools, to a mostly white Minnesota college, to nine countries in study of social justice, we learn how schools need to provide enough options for each student to find their unique calling.

  • Episode 9 | Dr. Thelma Jackson

    09/12/2015 Duración: 57min

    Recent news coverage shows that Seattle is a hotbed for anti-testing sentiment. This is underscored by a recent press conference held by the president of the NAACP and local educators. We talk with Dr. Thelma jackson about the testing opt-out movement in Seattle, its implications, and the actors who are driving it. As an educator, former school board members, and leader of the Black Strategy Roundtable's education effort Dr. Jackson schools us on local and national education politics.

  • Episode 7 | Dividends of Belief

    09/12/2015 Duración: 49min

    Belief is a powerful agent to shape the lives of children. Too many of our kids fall into a belief gap created by the adults in their lives. Addressing this requires school reformers and community members to think more broadly about the holistic needs of children.

  • Episode 6 | The black movement for better schools

    09/12/2015 Duración: 01h15min

    Black people have a long tradition of fighting for education, but that gets lost in the education reform movement. We discuss the unique claim that black activists and communities have on the effort to transform American public schools.

  • Episode 5 | The [un]racist history of charter schools

    09/12/2015 Duración: 59min

    A sloppily written article by Christopher Bonastia that invents a "racist" origin of charter schools is making the rounds through progressive media. Joe Nathan from the Center of School Change and Bill Wilson, founder of Higher Ground Academy, join me to discuss the true history of charter schools and the role they play in giving marginalized families educational options.

  • Episode 4 | Suspensions: The K12 Offramp

    08/12/2015 Duración: 59min

    National advocates are pushing for more restorative justice policies to replace zero tolerance discipline in public schools. But not everyone agrees. Some think these new policies break down order in schools. We speak with Marika Pfefferkorn, an advocate of Solutions, Not Suspensions.

  • Episode 3 | A Movement Of Our Own

    08/12/2015 Duración: 56min

    Is education reform too white to do any good? Some say yes. We discuss the need for a new movement, led by people of color, that advances the cause of betters schools. We are joined by Nekima Levy-Pounds, a civil rights attorney and educational justice advocate.

  • Episode 2 | The White Progressive Problem in Education

    08/12/2015 Duración: 01h07s

    In this episode, Chris and his guests share observations about how race and politics impact attempts to improve education, and share experiences with challenging - or being challenged by - white progressives.

  • Episode 1 | The Ed Movement We Need Now

    08/12/2015 Duración: 59min

    After years of advocating for better schools and real education we find ourselves still trying to convince people in and out of our community that the public schools have serious issues. The "reform" movement is dominated by white voices. The anti-reform movement too. The more the two "sides" argue, the more they gain power and keeps us disenfranchised. So, what is the movement we need now to save our kids from these schools?

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