Episodios

  • S2 Episode 2: Whose well-being? Deep ecological and posthuman perspectives on 'world worth living in'
    Sep 10 2024

    In this episode, interviewer Mervi Kaukko speaks with Rauno Huttunen and Hannu L. T. Heikkinen about the importance of seeing 'living well in a world worth living in for all' as crucial for the full community of life, not just for humans.

    They discuss praxis as planetary wisdom and position human well-being as being intertwined with planetary well-being, including the well-being of present humans, future humans, and nonhuman nature.

    For more, read Chapter 3: Whose well-being? Deep-ecological and posthuman perspectives on 'world worth living in' by Rauno Huttunen and Hannu L. T. Heikkinen

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    24 m
  • S2 Episode 1: Introduction, Drawing the future into the present
    Aug 22 2024

    Welcome to Season 2 of the World Worth Living In podcast! We are so glad you are joining us for another season of conversations about education's two main purposes: #1 to help us to live well and #2 to create a world worth living in for all.

    In this season we hear about global projects that are imagining - and bringing into being - transformed futures. All of the projects are featured in Volume 2 of the book series.

    In this first episode, Sally Windsor joins in conversation with Kristin Reimer and Kathleen Mahon - they are three of the editors of the Education for a World Worth Living In book series. They provide an overview of Volume 2, discuss how it's connected to Volume 1 and explore its unique focus on the future.

    For more, read Chapter 2: Drawing the future into the present by Stephen Kemmis, Kristin Reimer and Kathleen Mahon.


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    22 m
  • Season 2: Trailer
    May 13 2024

    A sneak peek at the amazing folks featured in Season 2 of the World Worth Living In podcast!

    Join us for another season of conversations about education's two main purposes: #1 to help us to live well and #2 to create a world worth living in for all.

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    3 m
  • S2 Episode 15: Conclusion: Forging future worlds worth living in for all
    May 13 2024

    In this episode - the last episode of the project, Kristin Reimer reflects on the project with co-editors, Stephen Kemmis, Mervi Kaukko and Sally Windsor.

    We reflect on the origins of the phrase - to live well in a world worth living in for all - and the power of it to focus us in on the critique and hope of education. We discuss how the world worth living in project has changed and is changing us, our ideas, our practices and the future.

    We are so grateful for the time and space to engage with one another and with you.

    For more, read Chapter 16: Conclusion: Forging future words worth living in for all by Sally Windsor, Mervi Kaukko and Stephen Kemmis


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    26 m
  • S2 Episode 14: Learning through change: What the pandemic has taught us about living well in a world worth living in
    May 13 2024

    In this episode, interviewer Sally Windsor speaks with Susanne Francisco and Ela Sjølie about experiences of academics during the COVID-19 pandemic. In their research, they explored how academics in both Norway and Australia tried to make the most of the changes that occurred because of the pandemic, and how they thought through other changes they might create going forward. They also looked at how practice architectures might support the changes that the academics envisaged.

    For more, read Chapter 15: Learning through change: What the pandemic has taught us about living well in a world worth living in by Susanne Francisco and Ela Sjølie.

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    18 m
  • S2 Episode 13: 'Living well and teaching well': Exploring how beginning teachers enact good pedagogical praxis in their everyday practices in historically hard-to-staff schools
    May 13 2024

    In this episode, interviewer Mervi Kaukko speaks with Stephanie Garoni about the Nexus program, a social-justice oriented, alternative pathway into secondary teaching for historically hard-to-staff secondary schools in Victoria, Australia. Stephanie reports on research that she conducted, along with co-authors Jo Lampert and Lutz Hoff, that explores how beginning teachers balance their commitment to creating socially just and equitable spaces for learning with the realities of contemporary schooling.

    For more, read Chapter 14: 'Living well and teaching well': Exploring how beginning teachers enact good pedagogical praxis in their everyday practices in historically hard-to-staff schools by Stephanie Garoni, Jo Lampert and Lutz Hoff.

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    27 m
  • S2 Episode 12: Aboriginal curriculum enactment: Stirring teachers into the practices of learning from Country in the city
    May 13 2024

    In this episode, interviewer Sally Windsor talks with Cathie Burgess who, along with co-authors Katrina Thorpe and Christine Grice, wrote a chapter about the arrangements that enable and constrain early career teachers as they apply Aboriginal curriculum and pedagogies. The teachers in the study completed Aboriginal community-led ‘Learning from Country’ (LFC) electives at university. Teachers focused on strengths-based learning approaches and developing relationships with Aboriginal communities, creating solidarity between local Aboriginal communities and the teachers.

    For more, read Chapter 13: Aboriginal curriculum enactment: Stirring teachers into the practices of learning from Country in the city by Katrina Thorpe, Cathie Burgess and Christine Grice

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    27 m
  • S2 Episode 11: Education that makes life manageable, comprehensible and meaningful: Experiences of the Monash Access Program
    May 13 2024

    In this episode, interviewer Mervi Kaukko speaks with Kristin Reimer about her work with students from the Monash Access Program (MAP), an alternative entry into university. The students in MAP have had educational disadvantage in their lives and offer their perspectives into education's role. Kristin talks about the potential for formal education to provide us with experiences of manageability, comprehensibility and meaningfulness in order to create a world where we are able to thrive individually and collectively.

    For more, read Chapter 12: Education that makes life manageable, comprehensible and meaningful: Experiences of the Monash Access Program, a university alternative entry pathway by Kristin Reimer

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    21 m