Free Range Humans

Jal Mehta, Rod Allen

Free Range Humans is a podcast that explores "how we can make schools fit for human consumption." Hosted by Jal Mehta, professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and Rod Allen, former district superintendent and Assistant Deputy Minister with the BC Ministry of Education.

  1. Jul 7

    Belonging Is the Foundation of Great Schools

    Dr. Leyton Schnellert is a Professor in the University of British Columbia's Department of Curriculum & Pedagogy and Co-Director of the Canadian Institute for Inclusion and Citizenship. Dr. Schnellert is also the Pedagogy and Participation research cluster lead in UBC’s Institute for Community Engaged Research (ICER) and co-chair of BC’s Rural Education Advisory. His community-based collaborative work contributes a counterargument to top-down approaches that operate from deficit models, instead drawing from communities’ funds of knowledge to build participatory, place-conscious, and culturally sustaining practices. Highlights from his conversation with Rod and Jal include: why discussions around inclusion need to start with strengths instead of deficits; strategies for creating student, teacher and whole class profiles – and how those profiles can drive goal setting and accountability; how teachers can intentionally design learning for diverse learners; why project-based, place-based, and community-connected learning continues to be one of the most powerful ways to engage students; why belonging and "mattering" are important in the classroom, how the work of inclusion and belonging has adjusted to a polarizing political landscape; what it means to think big and start small; and one of the fastest lightning rounds ever!  Questions? Thoughts? Feedback?  Email us at freerangehumanspod@gmail.com or Tweet us at @jal_mehta and @Rodroad219

  2. Jun 15

    Are Schools Preparing Kids for a World That No Longer Exists?

    Ted Dintersmith is an education advocate, author, filmmaker, and former venture capitalist whose work focuses on preparing young people for a rapidly changing world. After a successful 25-year career as a partner at Charles River Ventures and service on the U.S. delegation to the United Nations focused on education and entrepreneurship, he turned his attention to reimagining schooling for the innovation era. Ted is the executive producer of the acclaimed documentary Most Likely to Succeed and the author of What School Could Be, drawing on visits to hundreds of schools across all fifty states. Through his writing, films, philanthropy, and public speaking, he has become a leading voice for educational experiences that cultivate creativity, purpose, agency, and real-world problem solving rather than standardized test performance alone. Highlights from the episode include: an opening plug for Rod and Jal's new "Deeper Learning Alliance," a growing community of school leaders learning together, experimenting together, and transforming education—guided by Harvard's Deeper Learning Institute; Ted's shift from the venture capital to the education space; an introduction to the "PEAK" framework for meaningful learning experiences; what we can learn from how Finland values and prepares their teachers; examining the skills schools reward versus the skills modern life demands; why schools seem to be overvaluing the wrong types of math; the connection between education, democracy, and civic life; and a lightning round that examines the world of gambling! Learn more about the Deeper Learning Alliance Questions? Thoughts? Feedback?  Email us at freerangehumanspod@gmail.com or Tweet us at @jal_mehta and @Rodroad219

  3. Jun 8

    What Latvia Can Teach Us About Deeper Learning

    Zane Olina is passionate about creating meaningful learning opportunities for both young people and adults. She has an MEd and PhD in Learning and Instructional Technology from Arizona State University, and her career spans classroom teaching, curriculum reform, leadership development, international education initiatives, and deep involvement in OECD Learning 2030 work. Currently, Zane works as Head of Professional Support at the Ogre Municipality Education Authority serving about 10,000 kids in Latvia. Highlights from her conversation with Rod and Jal include: what it was like growing up in the Soviet Union, and the idea of "learning between the lines" in a somewhat restrictive environment; why meaningful learning requires more than memorization and tasks for the sake of doing tasks; how extracurricular activities model a better approach to true learning and growth – and what could possibly translate back to the classroom; how educators can help students develop expertise, perseverance, and the confidence to tackle problems whose solutions are not immediately obvious; the importance of showing progress and promoting students' self-efficacy; where AI may or may not fit in the classroom; a powerful example of adults shadowing students to better understand the day to day learning experience; and a lightning round that will leave you wanting to play some board games!  Questions? Thoughts? Feedback?  Email us at freerangehumanspod@gmail.com or Tweet us at @jal_mehta and @Rodroad219

  4. May 29

    Lose the Bubble Wrap – Making a Case for Self-Directed Learning

    Dr. Tyler S. Thigpen has worked in innovative district, private, and charter schools in Georgia, as well as national and regional nonprofits. Tyler is co-founder of The Forest School: An Acton Academy in south metro Atlanta, founder and executive director of the Institute for Self-Directed Learning, and instructor at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education. He also holds a doctoral degree in education leadership from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, a master’s in public administration from the Harvard John F. Kennedy School of Government, and a master’s in theological studies from Regent College of the University of British Columbia. Highlights from the conversation include: why students need meaningful ownership over their learning; a deep dive on the pros and cons of traditional assessment mechanisms; exploring alternative forms of assessment including badges, public exhibitions, and student-led governing councils; the importance of celebrating growth beyond just grade advancement and test scores; why schools should use less "bubble wrap" and allow students to experience and learn from natural consequences; a plethora of sports metaphors; and a lightning round that covers motorcycle rides, beach volleyball, and a push for Free Range Humans swag!  Read Tyler's recent article on high school redesign efforts. Questions? Thoughts? Feedback?  Email us at freerangehumanspod@gmail.com or Tweet us at @jal_mehta and @Rodroad219

  5. May 22

    Teaching Power: What Schools Communicate About Authority and Democracy

    Jason E. Glass. Ed.D., has more than 25 years of leadership experience in public education, spanning classroom teaching, district and state-level leadership, and executive roles in higher education, and currently holds the title of Superintendent of the Laguna Beach Unified School Distrirct. Prior to joining LBUSD, Dr. Glass served as Associate Vice President of Teaching and Learning at Western Michigan University, held the title of Commissioner of Education for the Commonwealth of Kentucky, where he led statewide efforts centered on deeper learning, equity, and student well-being, and also served as Chief State School Officer for the State of Iowa, focusing on literacy and support for the teaching profession. Highlights from the conversation include: understanding the distinction between macro and micro level changes in school systems; why compliance-driven leadership has its limits; the importance of listening before leading; how schools shape students’ understanding of authority and democracy; why arts education may hold some of the deepest lessons about learning; the role of trust, voice, and shared decision-making in healthy systems; Jason's experience as a choir singer; and a lightning round that has producer Gino "thoughtfully" fired up!  Read Jason's Article: Teaching Power: What Schools Teach About Authority and Democracy Questions? Thoughts? Feedback?  Email us at freerangehumanspod@gmail.com or Tweet us at @jal_mehta and @Rodroad219

  6. May 6

    Courage is Contagious: Leading for Equity in a Time of Backlash

    LaShawn Routé Chatmon is the founding CEO and President of the National Equity Project, leading the organization’s transition from the Bay Area Coalition for Equitable Schools (BayCES).  Under her leadership, the National Equity Project has catalyzed a movement to revitalize our country’s approach to equity in education. Tom Malarkey is the director of strategic consulting at the National Equity Project. He works with leaders within school systems on equity-centered instructional change, collaborative learning and teams, and organizational and systems change. Highlights from their conversation include: hearing about Jal's recent red eye flight that resulted in little sleep but a lot of reading; why equity work must begin with self-reflection and move outward; what it means to lead for equity in today’s political climate; how, despite our differences, we all tend to want the same thing for our children and their future; understanding that listening—real, intentional listening—is one of the most powerful tools leaders have; how public education remains one of the last truly shared civic spaces where solidarity can still be built; and a lightning round that deviates from the "short snapper" format to remind us that we can all play a role in shaping the future.  Learn more about the National Equity Project Questions? Thoughts? Feedback?  Email us at freerangehumanspod@gmail.com or Tweet us at @jal_mehta and @Rodroad219

5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Free Range Humans is a podcast that explores "how we can make schools fit for human consumption." Hosted by Jal Mehta, professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and Rod Allen, former district superintendent and Assistant Deputy Minister with the BC Ministry of Education.

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