School of Practice

Edutopia

School of Practice, the first podcast from the team at Edutopia, brings you ready-to-use strategies to improve your teaching today. Join us for 15-minute episodes filled with smart, pedagogy-shifting advice—backed by research and test-driven by teachers just like you.

Episodes

  1. 5 HRS AGO

    How to Talk About (and Normalize) Learning Accommodations

    It’s a tricky (but very common) classroom dilemma: How do you talk about—and normalize—learning accommodations in class without singling anyone out in front of peers?  Unfortunately, many teachers aren’t trained to have these sensitive conversations, so they’re figuring it out on the fly. But we’re here to help! In this episode of School of Practice, we chat with Daniel Vollrath, a veteran high school special education teacher, and elementary teacher Jeremiah Kim. They’ll share excellent, teacher-tested tips for talking with individual students (and your whole class) about learning supports in age-appropriate ways, establishing classroom norms that make space for different learning needs, and managing privacy without making disability a taboo topic. Related resources: It’s Important to Talk About Learning Accommodations With Your Students—Here’s How to Do It A One-Page Chart to Support Every Student Every Day  Equity vs. Equality. What Does Fair Look Like in the Classroom 2024? Talking to Students About Their Learning Differences: A Guide for Teachers Neurodiversity-Affirming Schools: Transforming Practices So All Students Feel Accepted & Supported (2025) The Purpose-Driven Classroom (2024) Stigma Consciousness Among Adolescents With Learning Disabilities: Considering Individual Experiences of Being Stereotyped (2018) Stigma and Stratification Limiting the Math Course Progression of Adolescents Labeled with a Learning Disability (2016) Empowering Students with Hidden Disabilities (2016) Redefining Disability, Re-imagining the Self: Disability Identification Predicts Self-esteem and Strategic Responses to Stigma (2012)

    22 min
  2. 2025-12-17

    The Most Significant Education Research of 2025

    Are you curious what the latest research reveals about everything from brain breaks to groundbreaking research on AI, cell phones, and handwriting in the classroom? Then you won’t want to miss this special year-end bonus episode based on one of our most popular feature articles of the year.  In the latest episode of School of Practice, Edutopia’s research editor Youki Terada and editor-in-chief Stephen Merrill walk us through the latest research on the impact of cell phone bans on classroom learning, why more recess time is critical for learning, how adept problem solvers tackle thorny math word problems, and how microbreaks powerfully impact focus and attention. Plus, we’ll share practical tips for bringing these findings right into classrooms today.  Related resources: The 10 Most Significant Education Studies of 2025 Sustaining Student Concentration: The Effectiveness of Micro-Breaks in a Classroom Setting (2025)  Highlight, Write, Elaborate: Note-Taking Strategies to Master Reality-Based Mathematical Tasks (2025)  The Impact of Cellphone Bans in Schools on Student Outcomes: Evidence from Florida (2025)  Removing Phones from Classrooms Improves Academic Performance (2025)  Ill Communication: Technology, distraction & student performance (2016) The Impact of Recess on Chronic Stress Levels in Elementary School Children (2025)  The Impact of Handwriting and Typing Practice in Children’s Letter and Word Learning: Implications for Literacy Development (2025)  Your Brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of Cognitive Debt when Using an AI Assistant for Essay Writing Task (2025)  Generative AI Can Harm Learning (2024) IEPs in the Age of AI: Examining IEP Goals Written with and Without ChatGPT (2025)

    28 min
  3. 2025-12-09

    How To Improve Student Note-Taking in 3 Smart Steps

    When students take notes during a lesson, research shows they get just about 30 to 45 percent of the important information right on the first try.  High school teacher Benjamin Barbour discovered this disturbing problem after taking a quick peek at his students’ notes midway through whole-group instruction. What he saw stopped him in his tracks.  “While some students had terrific notes, others had a big list of facts from the lecture or from the book,” Barbour says. “There was no rhyme or reason. Maybe there was a date but no information attached. And I realized: My students can’t even use these notes.” In this episode of School of Practice, we take a look at Barbour’s three-step process for teaching better note-taking and substantially improving study skills. Just a few minutes of practice each day, Barbour says, can yield big gains for student learning. Plus, he explains the brilliant strategy he uses to incentivize better note-taking and study habits in his classroom. Related resources: Teaching Students What to Do With the Notes They Take  How Testing Students Twice Can Improve Note-Taking Skills  Neuroscientists Say Don’t Write Off Handwriting  Research: Typed Versus Handwritten Lecture Notes and College Student Achievement: A Meta-Analysis  Research: The Importance of Cursive Handwriting Over Typewriting for Learning in the Classroom: A High-Density EEG Study of 12-Year-Old Children and Young Adults Research: Revising lecture notes: how revision, pauses, and partners affect note taking and achievement  Research: The Pen Is Mightier Than the Keyboard: Advantages of Longhand Over Laptop Note Taking

    21 min

About

School of Practice, the first podcast from the team at Edutopia, brings you ready-to-use strategies to improve your teaching today. Join us for 15-minute episodes filled with smart, pedagogy-shifting advice—backed by research and test-driven by teachers just like you.

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