Reframe From Miami University

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 26:59:58
  • Mas informaciones

Informações:

Sinopsis

Reframe features stories about those who are striving to build a better society by embracing fresh perspectives and new ideas. Music: Tech Toys by Lee Rosevere.

Episodios

  • Make Youth Sport About Children. Not Adults | Ep.57

    16/07/2019 Duración: 23min

    There was a common saying that once went along with youth sport. “It’s all about the kids.” Today, critics say youth sports has become much more about the adults. Which has led to a hyper-competitive culture that’s pushing kids to become elite athletes at younger and younger ages. In their recent book, Best Practice for Youth Sport, Miami University professors Melissa Chase and Robin Vealey, explore just how much youth sport has changed. On this episode, we talk to Melissa Chase about some of these trends, and about what parents and coaches can do about it. Music: Tech Toys by Lee Rosevere.

  • No-Nonsense Nurturing With Kristyn Klei Borrero & Noah Borrero | Ep.56

    11/06/2019 Duración: 27min

    Kristyn Klei Borrero is the CEO and co-founder of CT3, which is now used by K-12 schools across the country to help teachers quickly connect with young learners. She is also the author of the new book, Every Student, Every Day: A No-Nonsense Nurturer Approach to Reaching All Learners. Noah Borrero is a full professor of teacher education at the University of San Francisco and an associate with CT3. Both Kristyn and Noah are also graduates of Miami University, and they joined us here to talk about the work and mission of CT3, how it’s challenging several long-standing educational paradigms, and more. Music: Tech Toys by Lee Rosevere.

  • When Work And Family Life Collide | Ep.55

    21/05/2019 Duración: 17min

    On this episode, we talk about the challenges, social expectations, and the cultural biases that many women still experience when trying to balance work and family life. Dr. Hassan Raza also discusses his research in this area, as well as how both women and employers can help reduce the conflicts that can arise when work and family collide. Music: Tech Toys by Lee Rosevere. Transitioning by Lee Rosevere.

  • Changing The Way School Works | Ep.54

    23/04/2019 Duración: 09min

    Frederick Douglass Elementary serves grades K-6 in the Cincinnati Public School District. The school Principal and Miami University graduate, Jeffery Hall has set higher expectations and is offering more opportunities, through several key programs, partnerships, and approaches.

  • Representing War in a Whole New Way | Ep.53

    26/03/2019 Duración: 23min

    Bob De Schutter is the lead designer on a new game called Brukel, which is designed around the recollections of his grandmother, who, as a teenager, found herself on the front lines at her family's farmhouse in Belgium.  In Brukel, the setting is not only accurate. But every piece of historical audio is also authentic. Which leads to an artfully crafted interactive experience that shows how gaming technology can be used to archive meaningful stories, as well as to provide a captivating counter narrative to the way war is so often portrayed.

  • How Autism Affects Family Life | Ep.52

    11/03/2019 Duración: 06min

    A disability can affect entire families in ways that are not yet well understood. While much has been done to understand how people as individuals are impacted, some researchers are now starting to look at how a single diagnosis or a disability can spread outward, to impact the lives of everyone in a family.

  • The Social Emotional Sides Of Teaching | Ep.51

    26/02/2019 Duración: 17min

    As an award-wining teacher, Benjamin Walker is interested putting what he calls the “human side of the child first,” which means caring about their social and emotional well-being, as well as their academic performance.

  • When Academic Advising Gets Personal | Ep.50

    13/02/2019 Duración: 16min

    Planning for the future can be fun and exciting, but it can also be intimidating and overwhelming. Sometimes it’s all of these things at once, especially for college students, who are continually plotting a course into the unknown. But that is where Ashleigh Dubois comes in. As a Miami graduate with a degree in family studies, Ashleigh is now an academic advisor at Northeast Lakeview College. She is also a recent recipient of the prestigious 18 of the Last 9 Award, which honors Miami alumni who have made outstanding contributions to their field.

  • School Decline | Episode 49

    29/01/2019 Duración: 18min

    When we talk about struggling schools, or schools in decline, we often talk only about the challenges of certain schools in certain neighborhoods. But Meredith Wronowski, Miami University visiting assistant professor of educational leadership, is exploring this idea of school decline in a much broader way.

  • Critical Literacy | Episode 48

    17/01/2019 Duración: 11min

    Hear from Katherine Batchelor about how critical literacy can help future teachers take a step back, and get a clearer look at a bigger cultural picture. And she’ll also talk about some new research that helping students see the world in new and sometimes eye-opening ways.

  • Urban Cohort Inspires Radical Empathy and Social Change | Episode 47

    02/01/2019 Duración: 10min

    Empowerment is for everyone. This idea is championed by those who take action, get involved, and try to make a difference. And at Miami, these ideals are embodied by a program called the Urban Cohort. And what makes this program so unique is how it’s grounded in community life in very, very real ways.

  • Amid A Teenage E-Cigarette Epidemic | Episode 46

    17/12/2018 Duración: 17min

    Electronic cigarettes are spreading like a wave across this country. Just three years after hitting the market, e-cigarettes are being used by teenagers almost everywhere. Even the FDA has recently called it an epidemic.

  • Comic Books Promote Public Health | Episode 45

    03/12/2018 Duración: 11min

    Even though we have a better understanding of what’s healthy. And what’s not. Improving public health is still tremendously difficult. Because changing attitudes and behaviors is never easy. After all, how do you get people to first pay attention to accurate and relevant information, and then actually get them to do something about it? So in this episode, we’ll hear about how a local community is making a calculated and creative public health initiative to try and communicate the right message, to the right audience, at the right time.

  • How Fifth-Grade Students Became Citizen Activists | Episode 44

    19/11/2018 Duración: 21min

    Back when Brian Schultz was a 5th-grade teacher in a struggling urban school, he asked his students to name some issues they could address through a class project. But when his students decided that they really needed was a whole new school building, no one could have predicted how the project would have unfolded from there. But their efforts soon attracted national media attention and, eventually, even inspired a book called Spectacular Things Happen Along the Way, which now in its 2nd edition. Brian Schultz is now a Miami University professor of teacher education, and today he’s here to talk about this incredible project, the new edition of his book, the lasting impact it’s had on some of this students, and more.

  • Bringing More Diversity to the World of Robotics - with Katie Henry | Episode 43

    06/11/2018 Duración: 08min

    What do you know about building a robot? It’s not a subject that most people would claim to know a lot about. And even despite the growing opportunities across many engineering and computer science-related fields today, there are still many barriers that prevent so many people -- especially younger students who come from families or schools that lack the proper resources – from learning about robotics, and why that’s now so important. But this is exactly what one former teacher is working very hard to change.

  • Are Students Prepared to Thrive in a Knowledge Economy? - with Marc Nachowitz | Episode 42

    15/10/2018 Duración: 09min

    Are Students Being Prepared to Thrive in a Knowledge Economy? In this episode, we explore the complex answer to this simple question, especially as it relates to the literacy skills students now need today.

  • Being Open and Honest About Sexuality (Part 2)- with Richelle Frabotta | Episode 41

    01/10/2018 Duración: 17min

    In our last episode, we began to explore the complex subject of human sexuality, as well as why it’s still so challenging for educators to provide a proper sexuality education. And so, this time we continue our conversation with certified sexuality educator Richelle Frabotta. We’ll talk about the direction society seems to be moving on this issue, and we’ll learn about what Miami’s new Sexuality Education Studies Center will do for the campus and the community.

  • Being Open and Honest About Sexuality (Part 1) - with Richelle Frabotta | Episode 40

    14/09/2018 Duración: 23min

    We’ve all heard the phrase: Sex sells. And while that may be true, it also creates controversy. But for all the attention this subject commands, it is surprising how little we actually understand it. Sexuality is not something many people are comfortable speaking about openly. But Richelle Frabotta is not one of them. As one of the few certified sexuality educators in the country, she teaches openly and frankly from a sex positive perspective about what have traditionally been very challenging issues. She is also at the forefront of the new Sexuality Education Studies Center here at Miami, and today she’s here to talk about the importance of sexuality education, and much more.

  • Exercise Science. Move More. Live Longer | Episode 39

    04/09/2018 Duración: 16min

    Everybody knows that exercise is good. But that is not the whole story. It’s not just that exercise is good. It’s also that not exercising is actually so much worse. A general lack of physical activity can lead to many diseases and even cancer. So in this episode, we speak with Kyle Timmerman and Kevin Ballard. Two accomplished exercise science researchers who have just been named Fellows in the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM). Their work explores the mechanisms behind exercise science and how living a much healthier life might not actually be that hard for most people.

  • College Admissions Explained – with Susan Schaurer | Episode 38

    15/08/2018 Duración: 31min

    In this episode, we speak to Susan Schaurer, Miami University Assistant Vice President for Enrollment Management, who is here to break down the college admissions process. What to do, what not to do, and where to even begin.

página 3 de 5