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100 episodes
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The Morning Edition SMH & The Age
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- Nyheter
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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The Morning Edition (formerly Please Explain) brings you the story behind the story with the best journalists in Australia. Join host Samantha Selinger-Morris from the newsrooms of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, weekdays from 5am.
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Reading wars: The way children are taught to read is about to change
When Victorian education minister Ben Carroll announced, earlier this month, that his government had mandated a change in the way teachers instruct children to read, he admitted that he was potentially “stepping on a hand grenade”.
He was entering the long-running “reading wars”, which have pitted teachers, principals, and parents against each other.
Today, education editor Robyn Grace, on why one union has ordered its teachers to disobey the government’s mandate.
And whether the new method will help remedy the inadequate reading proficiency of too many Australian children.
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What another four years of Trump would mean for Australia
There's no one quite like Donald Trump.
He has torn up long-standing treaties, threatened to abandon allies, indulged his rivals and shook America's stability as the centerpiece of Western democracy.
So what would another term of Donald Trump in the White House mean for Australia and the global world order?
In a special Monday series, our journalists examine his impact on trade, security, climate change and the economy, as well as who Australia's most influential lobbyists will be.
Today, international editor Peter Hartcher and foreign affairs national security correspondent Matthew Knott on how the long standing relationship between the United States and Australia might be thrown off kilter by a Trump presidency, and how our power brokers should handle Trump's mercurial temperament.
Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/
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Inside Politics: Dutton's nuclear plans 'slightly bonkers', but will it win an election?
This week Opposition leader Peter Dutton unveiled the Coalition’s plans for its nuclear energy policy. In doing so, he drew the battle lines for the next election, with the Albanese government firmly backing in its own plan to lower emissions using renewable energy sources, particularly wind and solar.
Plus, this week Australia hosted a visit from the Chinese Premier Li Qiang. So did the visit improve relations with our largest trading partner, or set them back?Today, chief political correspondent David Crowe, national climate and environment editor Nick O’Malley and national affairs correspondent Matthew Knott, join Jacqueline Maley.
Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/
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Is China trying to buy us off with…therapy pandas?
The Chinese Communist Party has long used unconventional means to improve strained relationships. In the 1970s, this meant sending ping pong players to the United States, to encourage the country to lift its embargo against China. (It worked.)So it was that China pledged, over the weekend, that it would loan one of our zoos two so-called therapy pandas. That’s right, pandas.Today, international and political editor Peter Hartcher, on how this diplomatic strategy went down in Canberra. And the skirmish in Parliament House that highlighted the perennial tensions between Australia and its largest trading partner. Which might take a lot more than therapy pandas to fix.
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Trump and Biden: how do geriatric candidates attract young voters?
There’s less than five months to go until the American presidential election. And the race between Joe Biden and Donald Trump is neck and neck, with one recent poll putting Trump ahead by less than one point.
Both are geriatric candidates. And they face the same challenge. How will they attract the youth vote?
Today, world editor Nick Ralston, on which young celebrities are most likely to sway voters. (A hint: it’s no longer Taylor Swift.) And whether former Neighbours star Holly Valance might influence a political shift to the far right.
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Why can religious schools still fire gay teachers?
A music teacher was fired from her Christian school in Sydney this year - all because a parent discovered she was in a same-sex relationship.
The firing was all perfectly legal, under a law that the Australian government promised - but has so far, failed - to scrap.
The law change aims to protect LGBTQ teachers and students, but also promises to walk a tricky tightrope to allow religious schools the right to hire teachers who accord with their faith.
The issue has dogged successive governments for years with politicians trying, and failing to implement the bill.
Today, federal health reporter Natassia Chrysanthos on why it’s still legal for gay Australians to lose their jobs, because of their sexuality.
Subscribe to The Age & SMH: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Customer Reviews
Excellent podcast
Intelligent, interesting and enlightening.