• Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching

  • De: Sean Delaney
  • Podcast
Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching  Por  arte de portada

Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching

De: Sean Delaney
  • Resumen

  • An Irish perspective on education for all who value teaching
    Copyright © 2023 Sean Delaney. All rights reserved.
    Más Menos
Episodios
  • Inside Education 430, Perry Share on Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Teaching (4-6-24)
    Jun 4 2024

    Presented and produced by Seán Delaney.

    On this week's podcast my guest is Perry Share, who is Head of Student Success at Atlantic Technological University. Among the topics we discuss are:

    • The impact of taking a module with Hilary Tovey on rural sociology and a module with Brian Torode and Barbara Bradby on language, discourse and French theory.
    • Perry’s belief that artificial intelligence is a catalyst that helps us better understand and question contemporary practices around teaching, learning and assessment.
    • Artificial intelligence forces us to ask questions like "What does it mean to assess students?" "How can we teach in ways that are engaging and productive for students?"
    • In education, the arts and the humanities, we take text as a representation of what is in students’ heads and tend to make assumptions about the knowledge, understanding or learning held by the student. The foundation is taken out of this when we don’t know where the text comes from.
    • Problems are outlined with the take-home assignment, oral assessments and standard written exams but the “unsolvable” problems may constitute a productive space for educators.
    • The likes of ChatGPT can be used effectively in fields where you have knowledge. An area of concern in higher education is in relation to fields where people are just beginning to acquire knowledge and understanding. In addition, artificial intelligence threatens opportunities to learn on internships in professional placements.
    • Perhaps the role of “learned” knowledge becomes increasingly important for novices in a field whereas in recent years the importance of critical thinking has been lauded.
    • It is likely that resources will need to shift from activities we currently value to new – yet-to-be-determined – resources at secondary and higher education levels.
    • What prompt engineering is.
    • Ethan Mollick’s book Co-Intelligence.
    • Examples of good and not-so-good prompts.
    • How Perry is using ChatGPT in his own work: summarising large documents; combining documents; Brainstorming; Outlining a proposed structure of a document or presentation. It has been used for computer programming and other tasks.
    • Data protection implications may need to be considered in relation to some uses.
    • In the future it may be used to grade and provide feedback for public exams.
    • Various kinds of data on the results would be available almost immediately.
    • Decline in language learning in many countries due to the dominance of English and due to the availability of translation tools.
    • The days of the academic essay may be numbered.
    • Simulations may be a future direction of assessment in professional settings but these too are not without complications.
    • Can we avoid interacting with artificial intelligence?
    • Impact on equity in education.
    • If students can teach themselves, where does that leave the teacher? There is a job of imagination for teachers to start thinking about how they will work alongside artificial intelligence.
    • The impact of artificial intelligence on what (and who) we can trust.
    • People Perry respects on the topic of artificial intelligence: Anna Mills, a lecturer in academic writing in the United States; Charles Knight who works for Advance HE; Maha Bali at the America University of Cairo on critical artificial intelligence (environmental, commercial and ethical impacts).
    • The purpose of school.
    • Daryl Nation
    • Raewyn Connell’s book The Good University.

    Perry's own expanding list of resources on artificial intelligence is available here.

    Más Menos
    59 m
  • Inside Education 429, Gene Mehigan on The Master by Bryan MacMahon (4-5-24)
    May 4 2024

    Presented and produced by Seán Delaney.

    The format of this podcast differs a bit from the usual one in that I am joined by my colleague in Marino Institute of Education, Dr. Gene Mehigan to discuss a book that influenced him on his journey as a teacher and teacher educator. The Book is The Master by Bryan MacMahon, published by Poolbeg Press in 1992. Among the topics we discuss are the following:

    • How a book about teaching in Rural Ireland from the 1930s to the 1970s could speak to a teacher in a DEIS band 1 school in Darndale in the 1980s and 1990s.
    • The consequences of poverty on children in schools.
    • The “stain” of large classes (and their impact on children with language difficulties in particular).
    • The importance of reading
    • How Bryan MacMahon encouraged children to collect words (red notebook) and Gene Mehigan’s variation of it (jar on teacher’s desk).
    • Stages in a reading lesson as outlined by Bryan MacMahon (who noted that they are not rigid and may need modern modification):
      • Arousal of interest (day before)
      • Introduction (before lesson begins to heighten interest in the text)
      • Examination of matter expressed in the text (Comprehension)
      • Examination of matter implied in the text (Comprehension)
      • Write difficult words on blackboard (Tier 1, 2 and 3 words today)
      • Teacher models reading
      • Children read aloud or silently
      • Isolate phrases for composition usage
      • Informed organic chat (in style of everyday conversation)
      • Dramatisation of the text (Reader’s theatre today)
      • Committal to rote “not to be scorned on special occasions”
    • Why a teacher needs to back down in a confrontational situation with a pupil
    • Characteristics of a good teacher;
      • Dedication
      • Sense of humour
      • Clear penetration in the timbre of the teacher’s speaking voice
      • A love of learning
      • Versatility of approach to a lesson
      • A congenial monotony (that can be departed from)
      • Occasional informal language
      • Good blackboard use and being able to sketch
      • Act in harmony with the traditions and culture of the school area
    • Bringing the extraordinary into your teaching.
    • The teacher’s job is to help each child find their special gift.
    • Bryan MacMahon: “I realised that each child had a gift, and that the ‘leading out’ of that gift was the proper goal of teaching. To me a great teacher was simply a great person teaching.”
    • Thoughts on a school library, access to books and encouraging children to read.
    • Trying to entice children to read by tidying books. Buddy reading – to help beginning or reluctant readers but also helping older children consolidate their interest it reading. Helping a teacher narrow down who in a class might have dyslexia
    • How Brian MacMahon practised an early version of “home-school liaison”
    • Contemporary resonances – children from Germany fostered by local families during World War II.
    • How Bryan MacMahon recruited children to look after other children who were vulnerable in some way
    • Resonances with Johathan Haidt’s book The Coddling of the American Mind (preparing the child for the road and not the road for the child).
    • How learning tables enthusiastically helped a pupil later excel as an emigrant
    • “A school is nothing if it is not a place of laughter and song.”
    • Sources of creativity in education
    • The importance of a teacher being a philomath.
    Más Menos
    50 m
  • Inside Education 428, Hugh Catts on Reading Comprehension and Dyslexia (25 April 2024)
    Apr 25 2024

    Presented and produced by Seán Delaney.

    In this episode I interview Hugh Catts from the Florida State University about reading comprehension, dyslexia and more. People interviewed on previous Inside Education podcasts are mentioned in this episode: Jerome Kagan, Daniel T. Willingham and Tim Shanahan.

    Among the topics raised on the podcast are:

    • How his interest in educational research grew from problems members of his family, including himself, had in learning to read.
    • The benefits of having knowledge of phonetics and linguistics in studying reading difficulties
    • His thoughts on whether someone with reading difficulties can teach reading well
    • How he became interested in comprehension
    • Why thinking about comprehension as a skill is unhelpful in teaching reading
    • Comprehension is a complex set of behaviours or cognitive processes that is more like listening. It is the interaction between the reader and the text they’re reading to construct meaning between what is written in the text and what the reader already knows about the topic.
    • Comprehension needs to be taught within the context of the subject matter we want the reader to understand.
    • Quote from Daniel Willingham: “Memory is the residue of thought.”
    • “Comprehension is essentially changing your understanding of the topic based upon the text.”
    • “The more you learn about a topic, the more interested you are in learning more about the topic because you feel comfortable with it.”
    • The “simple view of reading” claims that reading comprehension is a two-stage process where you decode/recognise the word and thereby turn print into language; this is followed by turning the meaning of words into the larger meaning of the text. Decoding can be learned over a number of years whereas the language comprehension part is learned over a lifetime. The view has advantages and disadvantages.
    • We’re missing a good curriculum “in some cases by focusing in early reading on reading rather than focusing on subject matters to where you can gain the knowledge at the same time as you’re gaining knowledge about reading.”
    • Questions teachers can ask to help develop children’s comprehension. (E.g. what are you thinking about? How does this relate to what you already know? What experiences have you had that are related to this?
    • Assessing comprehension. It’s not easy to measure!
    • “You cannot reduce comprehension down to a single score because it’s not a single thing.”
    • Comprehension should be tested within texts on the subject matter upon which children have been provided with instruction.
    • Benefits and shortcomings of cloze procedure to test comprehension
    • Evaluating psychologist Jerome Kagan’s stance on dyslexia.
    • Comparing the neurological basis of dyslexia with someone who has little musical ability.
    • There is no consistent brain-based marker for dyslexia.
    • The difference between someone who has dyslexia and who does not have dyslexia is evident in how much you struggle to read when provided with quality instruction.
    • How dyslexia and comprehension difficulties could co-occur or could occur independently
    • Consequences of having dyslexia
    • The causes of dyslexia are multi-factorial, some relate to risk and some to resilience
    • The probability that a child might have reading problems can be determined before a child has reading problems.
    • Dyslexia cannot be diagnosed until the end of first class/beginning of second class.
    • Intensive, systematic, supportive and scaffolded instruction from an early stage can help students who are at risk of having dyslexia.
    • Having dyslexia is not a categorical phenomenon – it exists on a continuum.
    • How he finds time to write.
    • He likes the work of Daniel T. Willingham, Tim Shanahan, and Natalie Wexler

    Más Menos
    1 h y 6 m

Lo que los oyentes dicen sobre Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching

Calificaciones medias de los clientes

Reseñas - Selecciona las pestañas a continuación para cambiar el origen de las reseñas.