Innovating Education

Dr. Riley Williams

Innovating Education is a weekly conversation with the thinkers, builders, and boundary-pushers reshaping the future of teaching and learning. Hosted by Dr. Riley Williams, the show brings together superintendents, system designers, researchers, EdTech founders, policy leaders, and visionary practitioners whose work is redefining what’s possible for students and educators. Each episode dives deep into the shifts transforming schools today—human-centered leadership, learning science, equity-driven design, continuous improvement, technology innovation, and bold district-level redesign. Our guests don’t just admire challenges; they show us how they’re tackling them through research-backed strategy, creative problem-solving, and real-world implementation. Whether it’s rethinking assessment, scaling deeper learning, building supportive adult cultures, redesigning systems for equity, or leveraging emerging technologies responsibly, Innovating Education surfaces the insights leaders need now. If you’re an educator, administrator, policy maker, or change agent committed to building a more innovative, just, and future-ready education system—this is your community, your toolkit, and your weekly dose of inspiration.

  1. Erin Thorkilsen: Humanizing Classroom Practice Through Learning Science

    01/12/2025

    Erin Thorkilsen: Humanizing Classroom Practice Through Learning Science

    In this episode of the Innovating Education Podcast, we sit down with Erin Thorkilsen—educator, professor, and founder of Heart in Education, a professional development initiative focused on the human and relational dimensions of teaching. With over two decades of experience and deep grounding in learning science, Erin helps educators navigate complexity, strengthen classroom culture, and teach in ways that honor both student and teacher wellbeing. This conversation dives into the psychology of learning, emotional regulation, and what really happens in the brain when students—and adults—become dysregulated. Erin shares practical, emotionally grounded tools for designing learning experiences that honor curiosity, emotion, and multisensory engagement. She also reframes classroom management through a lens of compassion, co-regulation, and teacher self-awareness—moving beyond “fixing” behaviors toward supporting whole humans. Key takeaways from this episode: Why emotion is the engine of learning—and how to design lessons that leverage attention, memory, movement, and joy.How to shift from “rescue boat” to “lighthouse” when students experience big feelings.Practical strategies for building regulation skills, both for students and for teachers in difficult moments.How to support classroom management by meeting students’ needs for play, novelty, and connection—especially during tricky transitions.Why letting go of outcome can open the door to presence, clarity, and stronger relationships.A glimpse into Erin’s Refresh Your Toolkit workshop and her self-inquiry approach to helping educators move from stuckness to insight.Referenced frameworks & resources: Dan Siegel’s Hand Model of the BrainShelburne Farms’ Cultivating Joy and WonderBlue School’s creative learning modelHeart in Education’s regulation and relational teaching toolkitConnect with Erin Thorkilsen: 🌐 Website: heartineducation.org 📸 Instagram: @heartineducation

    37 min
  2. Eleni Soler: How Entrepreneurial Thinking Can Transform K–12 Education

    29/11/2025

    Eleni Soler: How Entrepreneurial Thinking Can Transform K–12 Education

    In this episode of the Innovating Education Podcast, Dr. Riley Williams talks with Eleni Soler—founder of Eleni’s Edge, educator, systems strategist, and certified coach—about how entrepreneurial thinking can inform the design of K–12 learning in a volatile, uncertain world. The conversation examines how inquiry-based learning, AI-powered ideation, and coaching practices can increase student agency while supporting educators and leaders to redesign their roles without burnout.​​ Key takeaways: An explanation of what an entrepreneurial mindset looks like in K–12 settings and why it matters for all students, not only future business founders.​Specific approaches for fostering curiosity, risk-taking, and psychological safety in classrooms, including using story to teach math, silence as a thinking tool, and clear structures to keep creative environments from becoming chaotic.​​Considerations for using generative AI in ways that support critical thinking, and for applying coaching conversations to strengthen culture, feedback, and distributed leadership.Resources: Learn more about Eleni’s coaching, speaking, and consulting: https://www.elenisedge.com​Book Eleni for workshops or keynotes: eleni@elenisedge.com​Also mentioned: The Courage to Teach by Parker Palmer; the “VUCA” concept (Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, Ambiguity); using silence as a thinking tool; three paradoxes for structuring creative classrooms without chaos.

    41 min
  3. How Ruthe Farmer is Redesigning the Pipeline—and the Payoff—for STEM Students

    29/11/2025

    How Ruthe Farmer is Redesigning the Pipeline—and the Payoff—for STEM Students

    In this episode of the Innovating Education Podcast, Dr. Riley Williams talks with Ruthe Farmer—founder and CEO of the Last Mile Education Fund, former Senior Policy Advisor for Tech Inclusion in the Obama White House, and a national leader in the CSforAll movement—about what it truly means to design tech pathways that don’t leave low-income and underrepresented students behind. From scaling national computer science initiatives to funding students who are one unexpected bill away from dropping out, Ruthe connects policy, philanthropy, and lived experience into a clear, urgent call for action.​ The conversation surfaces the real barriers students face in the “last mile” of a STEM degree—unpaid internships, lost housing, food insecurity, or a broken laptop—and how Last Mile provides rapid, targeted support so potential is not derailed by circumstance. It is a direct look at how relatively small investments can change individual lives and reshape the future tech workforce.​ Key takeaways: Why traditional scholarships and financial aid often fail students in the final stretch of STEM degrees—and how “last mile” funding closes that gap.​How tech inclusion work from the White House and CSforAll laid the groundwork for systemic approaches to equity in computer science and engineering.​​What educators and policymakers can do right now to identify students at risk, remove hidden barriers, and connect them with flexible, fast support.​Support and connect: Last Mile Education Fund – donate, partner, or refer students: https://www.lastmile-ed.org​Apply / share with students: https://www.lastmile-ed.org/apply​LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ruthefarmer/​

    42 min

À propos

Innovating Education is a weekly conversation with the thinkers, builders, and boundary-pushers reshaping the future of teaching and learning. Hosted by Dr. Riley Williams, the show brings together superintendents, system designers, researchers, EdTech founders, policy leaders, and visionary practitioners whose work is redefining what’s possible for students and educators. Each episode dives deep into the shifts transforming schools today—human-centered leadership, learning science, equity-driven design, continuous improvement, technology innovation, and bold district-level redesign. Our guests don’t just admire challenges; they show us how they’re tackling them through research-backed strategy, creative problem-solving, and real-world implementation. Whether it’s rethinking assessment, scaling deeper learning, building supportive adult cultures, redesigning systems for equity, or leveraging emerging technologies responsibly, Innovating Education surfaces the insights leaders need now. If you’re an educator, administrator, policy maker, or change agent committed to building a more innovative, just, and future-ready education system—this is your community, your toolkit, and your weekly dose of inspiration.