Listening to Learn

Pacific Crest

We believe that fostering authentic, student-centered learning is an ongoing process of discovery. It requires us to listen deeply—to our students, to our colleagues, and to the principles that guide effective educational practices. Our monthly podcast, Listening to Learn, will help you do just that! Each month, we will explore a different facet of Process Education, translating its powerful principles into practical strategies for your classroom, institution, and self! From fostering self-growth and metacognition to designing quality learning experiences, we will do our very best to provide you with fresh perspectives and insights you can put to work increasing student success. (Built with the help of Google Notebook LM's Deep Dive.)

Episodes

  1. Empowering the Life-Long Learner: Moving Beyond "Just Doing"

    JAN 19

    Empowering the Life-Long Learner: Moving Beyond "Just Doing"

    For those of us dedicated to the craft of teaching, we know that the most profound growth occurs when we—and our students—stop "sleepwalking" through routines and start asking "why". In this episode of our podcast, we dive deep into the concept of metacognition, or "thinking about our own thinking". When we step back from the act of "just doing" to examine how and why we perform certain tasks, we fundamentally strengthen our capacity for growth. Our discussion centers on a transformative framework: The Methodology for Generalizing Knowledge (MGK). We often see students struggle to apply what they have learned in one week to a new challenge the next, leading to the familiar refrain, "We've never seen this before!". This happens because knowledge remains "fragile" when it is tied to a single context. To counter this, the MGK provides a nine-step pathway to move from basic comprehension to working expertise, where knowledge can be transferred across any context at will. In this episode, you will hear: The Parable of the Ham: A cautionary tale about how easily we inherit processes without understanding their purpose.The Buddha’s Boat: An exploration of why generalizing knowledge is superior to merely transferring it—learning how to build a boat for any river rather than lugging the same boat across land.The 9-Step Journey: A walkthrough of how to move learning from familiar contexts to totally unfamiliar ones. We use the practical example of "Perla," who applies these steps to clothing repair to illustrate how shifting from simple mending to creative upcycling requires a grasp of underlying principles.The Power of Contextual Prompts: Insights into why high-quality problem solving depends on our ability to discern the "prompts" in a new situation that activate our existing knowledge.As educators, our goal is to help learners move from "thinking they know" to "knowing they know" through rigorous metacognitive checks and self-assessment. Tune in to discover how you can use the MGK to ensure that the knowledge you share is never fragile, but is instead a versatile tool your students can use to navigate any "river" they may encounter.

    13 min
  2. Grading Doesn't Teach Students How to Improve

    10/27/2025

    Grading Doesn't Teach Students How to Improve

    This episode kicks off with the amusing revelation that Pablo Picasso, in his later years, sometimes required supervision in galleries because he had been caught trying to "touch up his own paintings"—a perfect, if eccentric, example of the "constant human drive we have to make things better". This impulse to refine, even our best work, serves as the springboard for a deep dive into the crucial distinction between evaluation and assessment. We explore why relying solely on evaluation, which delivers a judgment or grade right at the end and often lacks the necessary roadmap, risks getting students stuck in a cycle of repeated attempts hoping for a different outcome. Crucially aimed at educators trained primarily as evaluators, the episode details the shift required to adopt the assessment mindset, which involves focusing only on the performance characteristics—not the person—and valuing the assessee’s goals first. We define the MEA (measurement, evaluation, assessment) framework and then tackle the "final frontier" for self-improvement: self-assessment, arguing that it is exponentially harder because we instinctively evaluate ourselves rather than objectively assessing the work. Tune in to learn why the ultimate goal is consciously becoming your own mentor, not your own judge, complete with a structured roadmap for setting genuinely important criteria (like sophistication of argument, rather than just word count) and developing both short-term and long-term action plans for sustainable growth.

    15 min
  3. Shifting Your Classroom Culture from Traditional to Transformational

    09/23/2025

    Shifting Your Classroom Culture from Traditional to Transformational

    Based on the article Impact of Higher Education Culture on Student Mindset and Success by Apple, Jain, Beyerlein, and Ellis, published in the International Journal of Process Education (June 2018, Volume 9 Issue 1) https://www.ijpe.online/2018/culture.pdf This insightful deep dive explores the subtle yet powerful impact of educational culture, contrasting traditional approaches with transformational cultures that actively cultivate student success in higher education, rather than merely managing it. Using a comprehensive framework, it reveals how your faculty mindset and daily practices are not just influential, but causal, directly impacting student mindsets and behaviors and offering immense power to mitigate conditional risk factors. By examining crucial aspects like academic challenge, cognitive complexity, learner ownership, and the student-faculty relationship, the discussion illustrates how intentional shifts—from 'making things easy' to truly empowering students through challenge, fostering deep understanding, nurturing self-direction, and building supportive mentorships—can lead to students becoming resilient, self-motivated, critical-thinking intellectual explorers. This is more than just adopting new techniques; it's about embracing a fundamental cultural shift that empowers every student to believe in their potential, discover their own strength, and become the architect of their own success, creating lasting ripple effects far beyond your classroom.

    21 min
  4. Connecting Beyond the Classroom: The Power of Human-to-Human Relationships

    08/26/2025

    Connecting Beyond the Classroom: The Power of Human-to-Human Relationships

    Our second episode focuses on the article “Human-to-Human Relationship Model as a Strategy for Student (and Teacher) Success" by Romann-Aas and Hintze, publishing in the International Journal of Process Education in June 2025. The article highlights that true student success stems not just from techniques, but from authentic human-to-human relationships. Inspired by nursing theorist Joyce Travelbee, it encourages educators to move beyond "teacher" and "student" roles, instead seeing each person as a unique individual. When teachers genuinely connect with students as whole human beings, fostering an "I-You" bond, it profoundly impacts achievement, growth, and willingness to learn. The authors detail a five-phase process for building these impactful relationships: from the initial "Original Encounter" where we move beyond roles, through "Emerging Identities" where we recognize uniqueness, to "Empathy" and "Sympathy" (understanding and desiring to help), culminating in "Rapport"—a state of experienced relatedness. This approach aligns perfectly with Process Education's focus on the "whole person" and fostering environments ripe for active learning, where students feel valued and engaged. Compelling evidence shows that strong teacher-student relationships directly correlate with not only academic success, but personal growth…on the part of both teacher and student! This isn't about adding more to your plate; it's about rediscovering the profound humanity at the core of our educational journey.

    18 min

About

We believe that fostering authentic, student-centered learning is an ongoing process of discovery. It requires us to listen deeply—to our students, to our colleagues, and to the principles that guide effective educational practices. Our monthly podcast, Listening to Learn, will help you do just that! Each month, we will explore a different facet of Process Education, translating its powerful principles into practical strategies for your classroom, institution, and self! From fostering self-growth and metacognition to designing quality learning experiences, we will do our very best to provide you with fresh perspectives and insights you can put to work increasing student success. (Built with the help of Google Notebook LM's Deep Dive.)