Education Evolution Podcast

The Reformist Pipeline

The Education Evolution Podcast is your hall pass to the real world of learning, growth, and transformation. From navigating the leap from classrooms to careers, to embracing lifelong learning as a mindset, to exploring the cutting edge of tech evolution shaping education and work—we cover it all. Each episode is unscripted, authentic, and rooted in real stories and strategies to help educators, leaders, and learners thrive.

  1. 6D AGO

    Cash Envelopes at Age 10. Million Dollar Deals at 14. #NIL

    🎓 Welcome to The Education Evolution — and you're listening to Hall Pass to the Real World. This is a podcast for the thinkers, the doers, and those who understand that the most important lessons aren't always learned in school — but they always affect it. It is March Madness season. Billions of dollars are moving through college athletics. Student athletes are signing NIL deals. And most people think this conversation stops at the college level. It doesn't. Last summer, the New York Times profiled Kaden Coleman-Bennett — a 14-year-old student athlete from Washington D.C. who was already signing NIL brand deals in middle school. But the story that stopped us wasn't the deal. It was what happened four years earlier, when youth football coaches were pressing envelopes full of cash into his mother's hands to recruit a 10-year-old. NIL didn't create money in youth sports. It just made it legal. In this episode, we discuss: What NIL is, why it was a long time coming, and why the math never made sense before itHow NIL has moved from college campuses into high school and middle school hallwaysThe story of Kaden Coleman-Bennett and what it reveals about youth sports culture in D.C.Why access to money without protection is just another form of vulnerabilityHow Coach Mike Sharrieff built a model of financial literacy and academic accountability that schools everywhere should be paying attention toWhat happens to the student athletes who don't have the right people in their cornerWhy March Madness is actually a signal — and why education has an opportunity to respond right nowThis is not just a March Madness story. This is not just a sports story. It is a story about our kids. And what we owe them before the money arrives. 📺 Subscribe and help us reach 600 subscribers so these conversations can keep growing. 💬 Join the discussion in the comments: Should middle school athletes be allowed to sign NIL deals? Should financial literacy be mandatory for student athletes — not optional, mandatory? Is NIL expanding opportunity for young people — or accelerating pressure on kids who are already carrying enough? Awareness is the first step toward change. #MarchMadness #NIL #StudentAthletes #EducationPodcast #YouthSports #NILDeals #FinancialLiteracy #DMV #CollegeAthletics #HallPassToTheRealWorld #EducationEvolution

    15 min
  2. FEB 18

    Screen Time Is Rewiring Our Brains (Babies, Teens & Adults)

    🎙️ Welcome to The Education Evolution — and you’re listening to Tech Evolution.This is a podcast for the thinkers, the doers, and those who understand that the most important lessons aren’t always learned in school… but they always affect it. In today’s episode, we’re taking a different approach. Instead of highlighting a specific tech tool, we’re talking about something far more embedded in our daily lives: Screen time. Screens aren’t going anywhere.And this isn’t about shame. It’s about awareness. Because screens are shaping: 🧠 Babies and early language development 📱 Teen mental health and sleep cycles 🧑‍💼 Adult attention spans and patience thresholds In this episode, we explore: The impact of passive screen time on early childhood development How fast-paced content affects attention and emotional regulation The link between social media and teen anxiety Dopamine conditioning and shortened focus spans How adults model screen habits (whether we realize it or not) Why deep thinking feels harder than it used to This conversation sits at the intersection of parenting, education, neuroscience, and culture. Not to villainize screens.But to ask better questions about how we’re using them. 💬 This week, reflect on this: Where are screens helping you?Where are they hurting you?And what small boundary could you realistically set? 📺 If you’re watching on YouTube: What boundaries have you set around screen time? Should schools address digital habits more directly? 🎯 Help us reach 600 subscribers by hitting that subscribe button and sharing this episode with someone who might need the reminder to look up. Screens aren’t going anywhere. But how we use them? That’s still in our control.

    10 min
  3. FEB 11

    Define Before You Decide: Fact vs Opinion in the Social Media Age

    🎙️ Welcome to The Education Evolution — and you’re listening to Lifelong Learning.This is a podcast for the thinkers, the doers, and those who know the most important lessons aren’t always learned in school. In this episode, we slow things down to examine something foundational: How do we tell the difference between fact, fiction, and opinion in a world that rewards confidence over evidence? From viral clips to short-form commentary, the way we consume information has changed dramatically. But has our understanding kept pace? In today’s conversation, we explore: Why “I did my own research” doesn’t always mean what it used to The difference between fact, fiction, and opinion (and why precision matters) How social media reshapes how we encounter news and information What happens when confidence travels faster than evidence The danger of anti-process thinking A practical framework — P.E.R.C.H. — to help you stay grounded This episode isn’t about telling you what to think. It’s about helping you slow down how you think. Because lifelong learning isn’t about having answers —it’s about developing discernment. If this conversation made you pause, share it with someone navigating change or trying to think clearly in a loud world. 📺 If you’re watching on YouTube, tell us in the comments:Which step of the P.E.R.C.H. framework feels most necessary right now? 🎯 And help us reach 600 subscribers this February by subscribing and sharing.

    10 min
  4. FEB 4

    When Immigration Policy Walks Into the Classroom

    🎓 Welcome to The Education Evolution — and you’re listening to Hall Pass to the Real World.This is a podcast for the thinkers, the doers, and those who understand that the most important lessons aren’t always learned in school—but they always affect it. In this episode, we examine what happens when immigration policy enters a school community—and how educators, students, and families are left to carry the emotional and logistical aftermath. Using a recent case involving a five-year-old student and immigration enforcement, this conversation explores how policies made far from classrooms show up in very real ways inside them. In this episode, we discuss: How immigration enforcement impacts school safety and attendance Why fear disrupts learning long before academics are addressed The emotional toll on students, teachers, and administrators How districts like LAUSD, Chicago, NYC, and Denver are preparing and responding Why schools are often asked to manage crises they did not create The connection between emotional safety, stability, and learning outcomes This episode is not about politics. It’s about humanity. It’s about recognizing that learning does not happen in isolation—and that children cannot be asked to focus, grow, or thrive when their sense of safety is under threat. 📺 If this episode made you think differently, subscribe and help us reach 600 subscribers so these conversations can keep growing.💬 If you’re watching on YouTube, join the discussion in the comments: How should schools balance safety, policy, and learning? What responsibility do education systems have when external policies impact students? Awareness is the first step toward change.

    11 min
  5. JAN 28

    Are Your Goals Building Freedom—or Just Burning You Out?

    🎙️ Welcome to The Education Evolution!You’re listening to Unscripted — where we drop the notes, skip the scripts, and have real conversations about growth, learning, and life beyond the classroom. In this episode, hosts Hady (Mr. Jihad) and Lindsay (Ms. Black) reflect on what it really means to reset — not just for a new year, but for a new season of life. We’re talking about goals, discipline, burnout, and freedom — and questioning whether the way we’ve been taught to “work hard” is actually setting us up for the lives we want. In today’s conversation, we unpack: The difference between goals that move you forward and goals that just keep you busy Why discipline matters more than motivation — especially in your 30s Jill Scott’s take on working hard vs. working smart across different life stages Using health, benefits, and routines as tools for longevity — not punishment Why birthdays can be just as powerful as New Year’s when it comes to personal resets Letting go of hustle culture and redefining what success looks like now This episode is for anyone feeling the tension between ambition and exhaustion — and wondering how to build a life that feels intentional, sustainable, and free. Whether you’re setting goals, rethinking old ones, or giving yourself permission to start over (again), this conversation is a reminder that growth doesn’t have to be loud — it just has to be aligned. 📺 Subscribe on YouTube to help us reach 600 subscribers this month and be part of a growing community that believes learning doesn’t stop at school. 📱 Follow us on Instagram and tell us what stood out for you this week. We appreciate you being here — and we’ll see you soon… virtually.

    40 min
  6. JAN 21

    CES 2026 & Education: What Tech Actually Belongs in the Classroom (And What Doesn’t)

    🎙 You’re tuned in to The Education Evolution—and this is Tech Evolution. What if the biggest changes coming to classrooms aren’t being decided in schools—but at tech conferences like CES 2026?Which education technologies actually support learning—and which ones quietly make it harder?And what happens when innovation moves faster than educators are invited into the conversation? In this episode, Mr. Jihad breaks down the education and learning technologies showcased at CES 2026 and what they signal for classrooms, students, and educators. CES isn’t an education conference—but the tools unveiled there often reach schools long before teachers have a seat at the table. Drawing on experience as a former Special Education teacher, this episode examines: AI as a conversational learning partner (not a shortcut) Why hands-on and physical learning still matters in a tech-driven world Where robotics and AI tools belong—and where they don’t How poorly designed tech can increase cognitive load and widen equity gaps Why educators must stay in the driver’s seat as learning tools evolve This conversation isn’t about hype or flashy gadgets. It’s about design, access, attention, and learning science. Every tool raises the same question:Who is this built for—and what problem is it actually solving? If you care about AI in education, education technology, learning science, or the future of classrooms, this episode will help you think more critically about what innovation should actually look like. 📌 Subscribe to support our goal of 600 YouTube subscribers💬 Drop your thoughts in the comments—what tech do you think does or doesn’t belong in classrooms?📤 Share this episode with an educator, parent, or school leader navigating tech decisions Learning doesn’t stop at school—and neither does its impact.

    10 min
  7. JAN 14

    How to Use LinkedIn When You’re Ready for a Career Pivot

    🎙 You’re tuned in to The Education Evolution—and this is Lifelong Learning.This podcast is for the thinkers, the doers, and everyone who knows the most important lessons aren’t always taught in school. Are you currently looking for a new job?Does 2026 feel like the year for a career pivot—but you’re not sure where to start?Have you ever wished you knew how to use LinkedIn to your actual benefit instead of just scrolling? In this episode, Lindsay (Ms. Black) walks through how to intentionally use LinkedIn as a tool for growth, visibility, and opportunity—rooted in lived experience, not theory. After spending 11.5 months unemployed, she had to learn how to make the platform work for her, and this conversation breaks down what actually helped. We talk about optimizing your headline, using the “Open to Work” feature without shame, engaging and posting with purpose, building authentic connections, spotting job opportunities that aren’t always formally posted, and when LinkedIn Premium may be worth the investment. This episode is for the curious minds, the constantly evolving, and the lifelong learners who are ready to be honest about wanting change—even when the process feels humbling. If this conversation made you think differently or gave you language for something you’ve been feeling, share it with someone who’s been talking about leaving their job or trying to get unstuck. And if you’re watching on YouTube, drop a comment and let us know which tip resonated most. Until next time—keep learning, keep evolving, and keep showing up for yourself.

    15 min
  8. JAN 7

    Why Everything Feels Harder Now — And What Discipline Has to Do With It

    🎙 You’ve joined The Education Evolution—and you’re listening to Hall Pass to the Real World.This is a podcast for the thinkers, the doers, and everyone who knows the most important lessons aren’t always taught in school. 💭 When did it start feeling harder to focus—even on things you actually care about?💭 When did boredom stop being neutral and start feeling unbearable?💭 And how did “hard” quietly become synonymous with “not worth it”? In the first Hall Pass episode of the new year, Mr. Jihad connects what’s happening in schools, workplaces, and everyday life to a deeper shift we’re all experiencing: declining focus, lower frustration tolerance, and a growing resistance to anything that requires patience or sustained effort. This episode explores: Why national and international data show declines in reading depth, comprehension, and cognitive stamina How convenience and technology have slowly outsourced core thinking skills What happens when discomfort is treated like a flaw instead of part of growth Why discipline isn’t punishment—it’s preparation How frustration tolerance shapes critical thinking, learning, and long-term success Through research, reflection, and cultural context—including a powerful reframe on discipline as capacity—this episode challenges us to rethink what we’ve been avoiding and what that avoidance might be costing us. This isn’t about shaming distraction or rejecting technology.It’s about asking better questions—about attention, endurance, and the kind of thinkers our environment is shaping. If this episode made you pause, sit with discomfort, or rethink how you approach “hard” things—that’s the work. 📅 New Hall Pass episodes drop weekly.🎥 Watch on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts

    10 min
4.8
out of 5
51 Ratings

About

The Education Evolution Podcast is your hall pass to the real world of learning, growth, and transformation. From navigating the leap from classrooms to careers, to embracing lifelong learning as a mindset, to exploring the cutting edge of tech evolution shaping education and work—we cover it all. Each episode is unscripted, authentic, and rooted in real stories and strategies to help educators, leaders, and learners thrive.