7 episódios

The Teaching Flashpoint Podcast is produced and hosted by NBCT, Danny Hollweg, a high school English teacher. In this monthly series, we discuss ideas revolving around transformational teaching and an innovative classroom. With guests, stories, and insight, we explore some ins-and-outs around the classroom.

These podcast episodes supplement blog posts from the Teaching Flashpoint, a collection of ideas and stories around education.

@Profhollweg on Twitter

Teaching Flashpoint Danny Hollweg

    • Educação

The Teaching Flashpoint Podcast is produced and hosted by NBCT, Danny Hollweg, a high school English teacher. In this monthly series, we discuss ideas revolving around transformational teaching and an innovative classroom. With guests, stories, and insight, we explore some ins-and-outs around the classroom.

These podcast episodes supplement blog posts from the Teaching Flashpoint, a collection of ideas and stories around education.

@Profhollweg on Twitter

    Where's Your Student Voice?

    Where's Your Student Voice?

    Establishing student voice in and out of the classroom is an evergreen idea: we can think about it, talk about it, try different strategies to amplify it, and give students opportunity express it. With many digital tools out there and many students finding themselves in an environment where they are learning remotely or have access to technology in a 1:1 setting (Student:Chromebook, for example), we explore a few ideas I've attempted in the classroom to leverage some of these tools. 

    We hear 9th and 12th grade students in real time working through these strategies, un-muting, and sharing the ideas, thinking, and finding a voice in the English classroom. 

    How To Use Google Jamboard (YouTube)

    What School Could Be (Ted Dintersmith)

    PowerUp (Neebe and Roberts)

    Philosophical Chair (Edutopia)

    You can read more on the Teaching Flashpoint blog: "Where's Your Student Voice? Jamboards, Philosophical Chairs, and Chat Blasts"

    As always, if you like the podcast be sure to share it and continue to find us on Apple Podcast, Spotify, and anywhere else you stream your audio. You can follow me on Twitter: @profhollweg

    • 21 min
    Physical Education Reimagined

    Physical Education Reimagined

    Sitting on a patio with several teachers put me next to Middle School PE teacher, Riley Hubbard. This first year teacher described a lesson to me for her class, and I was fascinated. This is PE? So she and another educator took me through their thinking in transforming Physical Education.

    So here’s what I learned. P.E., in their minds, is about Movement; it’s about Inclusivity and Empathy; it’s about Conversation and Community; it’s about Access, Self-Agency, and Reflection. And I thought, Oh, this is Physical Education reimagined. That's what you will find here in this episode, as we follow the story of Kendra Vair and Riley and how they hook kids and embed social emotional learning, giving access to all of their students.

    You can read more on the Teaching Flashpoint blog: "Physical Education Reimagined"

    As always, if you like the podcast be sure to share it and continue to find us on Apple Podcast, Spotify, and anywhere else you stream your podcasts. You can follow me on Twitter: @profhollweg

    • 21 min
    The Art of Flashpoint

    The Art of Flashpoint

    I heard Alison Myers speak, a middle school art teacher from a nearby school district. Alison showcased a website she was working on; samples of her students’ artwork from painting, drawing, and graphic designs they had completed remotely during her district’s distance learning hiatus in the spring; how she was communicating with these students and curating their work, facilitating and inspiring their creativity–and doing much of this type of work for the first time. She admitted she didn’t know technology well…yet, but she was giving it a shot.

    I sat their watching on my laptop during this Zoom conference as she exhibited all of this, smiling and thinking, this is art class? This is rad! (I tend to say “rad” quite a bit–child of the ’80s and all.) So we take this opportunity to sit down with Allison and her thoughts on teaching art to today's students which she breaks down into some simple aspects: Self-direction; Student Ownership; Creativity; and walking into the studio Thinking and Behaving like an artist.

    You can read more on the Teaching Flashpoint blog: "This is an art class? This is rad!

    As always, if you like the podcast be sure to share it and continue to find us on Apple Podcast, Spotify, and anywhere else you stream your podcasts..

    • 15 min
    Transformation Flashpoint

    Transformation Flashpoint

    It’s always inspiring to talk with fellow teachers about possibilities in the classroom and hear their stories. We all have that moment, right? For me it was GravityTank: That place and that team came at the perfect time for me. They were the ones who were at the heart of my shift in teaching in 2013. A phrase comes to mind, stolen from Aaron Sorkin and his show The Newsroom: “We just decided to.”

    There’s just a moment when you decide that your classroom and the experience your students have in there is just going to be something more. In this episode, we sit down with former math teacher and current CTE teacher, Mike Pintaric, and get his thoughts on the transformation in teaching and the skills kids need for this 21st Century. We even give Ron Howard's Apollo 13 a nod for its classic moment of innovation and creativity. 

    As always, if you like the podcast be sure to share it and continue to find us on Apple Podcast and Spotify. You can follow the Teaching Flashpoint blog for other musings about education. 

    • 38 min
    The Mentor Beach: Guiding New Teachers

    The Mentor Beach: Guiding New Teachers

    There’s nothing like a ThinkTank, particularly an objective ThinkTank that isn’t concerned with what you are teaching or how your classroom looks, but is concerned with you finding yourself, guiding you before any sort of "burn out" sets in. In this episode I wanted to explore the mentoring of new teachers, supporting those who are new to the profession before they leave, never really having gotten started. I always half-jokingly say how in my first 3 years of teaching I was terrible. There was so much, so fast; so many students to try and manage; there is grading and meetings, and you just have to hold on. It’s difficult to find out who you are as a teacher in those early years.

    So we sit down with educator, David Popp, who has an idea that is an echo of a mastermind group, but aimed at new teachers to help them figure out who they really want to be in the classroom; to help them take risks; to help them realize their talent and stick with the profession. 

    As always, if you like the podcast be sure to share it and continue to find us on Apple Podcast and Spotify.

    You can read more about David's idea of mentoring on the Teaching Flashpoint blog, "Walks Along the Mentor Beach".

    Additional Reading:

    "Why Every Teacher Needs a Mastermind Group" by John Spencer

    "Creating a Teacher-Driven Professional Development Program" by Laura McCullogh

    • 24 min
    Just Play: Podcasting and Community

    Just Play: Podcasting and Community

    One of the podcasts I definitely wanted to produce was a sit down with student producers who brainstorm, develop, and record podcasts for their high school show, The Peak of Existence.  These kids began developing stories and officially publishing them in December 2019; and although they were learning still, they were now live, streaming on Apple Podcasts and Google Play and Spotify. The local newspaper picked up this story of what the students were doing in a high school studio, our district supported and promoted this through social media and newsletters, and there was no turning back. Scary but exhilarating.

    In this episode of the Teaching Flashpoint podcast, I sit with several student producers and local podcaster, Greg Haddock. The students, Greg, and I discuss storytelling and the popularity and momentum of this medium, as Greg leaves us all with the advice to "just play around" because "this medium isn't going anywhere."

    As always, if you like the podcast be sure to share it and continue to find us on Apple Podcast and Spotify.

    You can read more in depth about this experience on the Teaching Flashpoint blog: "Just Play: Connecting with the Community"

    • 31 min

Top podcasts em Educação

Flow Podcast
Estúdios Flow
Psicologia na Prática
Alana Anijar
6 Minute English
BBC Radio
Top Áudio Livros
Top Áudio Livros
Espresso English Podcast
Shayna Oliveira
Inglês do Zero
Jader Lelis