Have You Heard

Have You Heard
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Jan 3, 2019 • 33min

#56 The Farce of School Reform

The smartest book Have You Heard has encountered on the limits of school reform in ages is a novel. Roxanna Elden's hilarious and pointed Adequate Yearly Progress is packed with real insights into what self-styled education reformers miss about the complex ecosystems of schools, and the complicated lives of teachers. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll buy the book!
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Dec 4, 2018 • 37min

#55 Unreal Results in Education Research

Can listening to When I'm 64 make you younger (or smarter)? Have You Heard looks at the replication crisis in the social sciences and why education research is particularly susceptible to the problem of illusory results. Special guest: Hunter Gehlbach
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Nov 15, 2018 • 31min

#54 Closing Time: In a Gentrifying City, Are Some Students Expendable?

Boston recently announced plans to begin rebuilding its schools. But in a fast-gentrifying city, who will these new schools be for? Jennifer travels to a school on the chopping block: McCormack Middle School in Dorchester to talk to teachers and students who are fighting to keep their school community together.
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Oct 31, 2018 • 37min

#53 The Zombie: Undying Attacks on Ed Schools

Have You Heard digs up the original "zombie" issue in education: schools of education and their [insert criticism here]. Jack and Jennifer are joined by education historian Lauren Lefty to explore why this particular zombie can never be slayed.
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Oct 19, 2018 • 32min

#52: Teachers are Running for Office - And to Save Public Education

Teachers are running for office this year in unprecedented numbers. Have You Heard talks to some of them and looks at why this educator-turned-candidate phenomenon represents a unique phenomenon. Hint: it's not just teachers who are on the ballot but the future of public education.
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Oct 4, 2018 • 35min

#51 Win/Win: Why Billionaire Philanthropists are Bad at School Reform

Have You Heard talks to Anand Giridharadas about his new book, Winners Take All, a scathing indictment of billionaire change makers who seek to "disrupt" public education while leaving the structures of inequality untouched.
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Sep 21, 2018 • 23min

#50 On the Bus: What One City Can Teach Us About School Desegregation

In 1977, Have You Heard co-host Jennifer Berkshire climbed aboard a school bus headed for a soon-to-be integrated school. In this episode she explores what did - and didn't happen - in Springfield, Illinois, and why our vision of what's possible today seems so much smaller than it did 40 years ago.
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Sep 6, 2018 • 32min

#49 Fast, Cheap and Out of Control: Selling Short Cuts in American Education

Americans are big believers in the power of education. But they are also a national of hustlers. Have You Heard explores the intersection of the two with Bob Hampel, author of Fast and Curious: a History of Short Cuts in American Education.
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Aug 16, 2018 • 29min

#48 A Star-Powered Promise: LeBron Takes a Shot at School Reform

Have You Heard explores LeBron James' partnership with the Akron Public Schools - and what makes it different from other high wattage education reform ventures. Rann Miller, who is an educator, writer and expert in all things LeBron, joins the convo.
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Aug 2, 2018 • 29min

#47 Janus and the Future of Teachers Unions

What will the Supreme Court's recent Janus ruling mean for the future of teachers unions? Jon Shelton, author of Teacher Strike! Public Education and the Making of a New American Political Order, joins Jennifer to "unpack" this complicated political moment.

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