94 Episodes

  1. The Premortem on AI in Education with Rebecca Winthrop

    Published: 4/15/2025
  2. The Challenges AI Poses for Learning How to Write

    Published: 3/28/2025
  3. Needed: Real Experiences, Real People

    Published: 3/16/2025
  4. How AI Could Lead to a Massive Productivity Boost in Education

    Published: 3/2/2025
  5. Why AI Doesn’t Think Like Us

    Published: 2/21/2025
  6. Democratizing Access to Expertise: AI in Education

    Published: 2/6/2025
  7. Our ‘Biases’ About AI

    Published: 1/22/2025
  8. We’re Back—with Job Moves

    Published: 12/3/2024
  9. What the Science Shows a Mentorship Mindset Can Do for Student Motivation

    Published: 8/6/2024
  10. Concerning Trends in Philanthropy for Education Reform

    Published: 6/10/2024
  11. Tackling All That K12 Schools Try to Do: The Solutions (Part 2)

    Published: 5/31/2024
  12. Tackling All That K12 Schools Try to Do: The Challenges (Part 1)

    Published: 5/16/2024
  13. In Conversation on College: Weighing in on Two Investors’ Diagnoses and Proposals for Higher Ed Part II 

    Published: 3/16/2024
  14. In Conversation on College: Weighing in on Two Investors’ Diagnoses and Proposals for Higher Ed Part I

    Published: 3/16/2024
  15. Changing the Equation: How to Make Math Class More Meaningful

    Published: 3/1/2024
  16. Providing a Human-Centered, Self-Actualizing Education to Every Student 

    Published: 2/15/2024
  17. The Future of DEI: A Humanity-, Freedom-, and Dreams-Based Approach

    Published: 2/1/2024
  18. Beyond ‘College or Bust’: Apprenticeship as a Postsecondary Path to Opportunity

    Published: 1/20/2024
  19. 2023 in Review: AI, New Assessments, “The American Dream,” and More

    Published: 12/21/2023
  20. How America’s Oldest Nonprofit Aims to Drive the Future of Education

    Published: 12/12/2023

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The coronavirus pandemic disrupted education across the U.S. and changed our assumptions about what it means to go to school. When kids return to the classroom, things won’t be the same. Diane Tavenner and Michael Horn answer questions from parents and talk with educators and leading thinkers about how we can approach teaching and learning differently to better meet the needs of all students.