Beyond The Syllabus

Aidan McDowell

Welcome to Beyond The Syllabus, a podcast about reimagining education from the inside out. Every week, we sit down with the people doing the real work: superintendents, curriculum leaders, district innovators, those who are pushing against outdated models to build something more human. Because learning should feel personal. Relevant. And grounded in who a student is.

  1. Wonder, Curiosity & the Purpose of Education with Joseph S. Piccirillo

    Jun 24

    Wonder, Curiosity & the Purpose of Education with Joseph S. Piccirillo

    In this episode of Beyond the Syllabus, host Aidan McDowell sits down with Dr. Joseph S. Piccirillo, Superintendent of Newton Public Schools in New Jersey. Drawing from his journey as a music teacher, administrator, and educational leader, Dr. Piccirillo shares a thoughtful perspective on curiosity, wonder, leadership, and the deeper purpose of education. Together, they explore what it means to educate the whole child in a rapidly changing world, why schools must prioritize the true, the good, and the beautiful, and how leaders can create systems that cultivate both excellence and human flourishing. The conversation dives into educational philosophy, the role of technology and AI, the importance of long-term thinking, and how communities can build meaningful opportunities for students. From leadership lessons to reflections on curiosity and lifelong learning, this episode offers a refreshing look at what schools can become when relationships, purpose, and human dignity remain at the center. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why curiosity and wonder are essential to meaningful learningHow great educators inspire students to pursue what is true, good, and beautifulWhy leadership is about service, mission, and long-term growthThe importance of balancing academic achievement with character developmentHow technology and AI are reshaping learning and information accessWhy schools must create space for student curiosity instead of suppressing itThe role of educational philosophy in modern leadership decisionsHow community partnerships expand opportunities for studentsWhy developing good people should remain education’s highest goalKey Moments02:02 From Music Teacher to Educational Leader 06:13 Sparking Curiosity Through Meaningful Learning 07:36 Finding Beauty in Every Area of Learning 15:17 Leadership Through Service and Collaboration 18:08 Leading with Mission and Vision 23:24 Long-Term Growth Over Quick Wins 27:18 Technology, AI, and Instant Information 29:58 Curiosity, Inquiry, and Discovery 32:02 Wonder, Humility, and Lifelong Learning 41:49 How Schools Can Suppress Curiosity 44:41 The True Purpose of Education 46:00 Misaligned Incentives in Education 54:38 What Makes Newton Public Schools Unique 57:34 Community Partnerships Expand Opportunities Connect with GuestLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-joseph-s-piccirillo-38571238/ Website: https://www.newtonnj.org/ Connect with UsHost’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowell Website: https://uniqlearn.co/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearn  If this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more authentic conversations with education leaders your way.

    54 min
  2. Building Future-Ready Learning Through AI, Personalization & Student Purpose with Josh Satterfield

    Jun 17

    Building Future-Ready Learning Through AI, Personalization & Student Purpose with Josh Satterfield

    In this episode of Beyond the Syllabus, host Aidan McDowell sits down with Josh Satterfield, Assistant Superintendent of Curriculum at Woodhaven-Brownstown School District in Michigan. With experience as a teacher, coach, technology leader, and district administrator, Josh shares how his district is building systems that prioritize student learning, teacher collaboration, and meaningful innovation. From MTSS and personalized learning to AI literacy and student engagement, Josh offers practical insights into what it takes to support over 5,400 students across eight schools. The conversation explores how schools can balance technology with human connection, create effective intervention systems, and empower students to become active participants in their learning. Josh also reflects on the importance of purpose, discovery-based learning, and why the future of education must move beyond passive consumption toward student ownership and real-world problem solving. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why relationships and coaching experiences inspired Josh’s journey into educationHow Woodhaven-Brownstown approaches MTSS and skill-based interventionsThe challenge of balancing remediation with grade-level learningHow districts can thoughtfully implement AI without sacrificing critical thinkingWhy AI literacy is becoming an essential skill for students and educatorsPractical strategies for building personalized learning experiencesThe importance of giving teachers time to collaborate and plan effectivelyHow schools can create meaningful student engagement beyond complianceWhy purpose evolves over time and how educators can help students discover itWhat future-ready learning environments may look like over the next 50 yearsKey Moments03:38 Supporting Learning Across Eight Schools 04:53 Building Effective MTSS Systems 06:47 Balancing Acceleration and Remediation 07:29 Early AI Conversations in Schools 09:42 Teaching AI Literacy and Responsible Use 12:18 Building Teacher Capacity Around AI 15:17 Technology as a Tool for Personalization 17:24 Balancing Screen Time and Learning 19:45 Defining Personalized Learning 21:13 The Importance of Teacher-Student Interaction 23:24 Giving Teachers Time to Collaborate 25:56 What Student Engagement Really Means 29:22 Helping Students Discover Purpose 34:56 Discovery-Based Learning for the Future Connect with GuestLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshsatterfield Website: https://www.mywbsd.org/ Connect with Us Host’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowell Website: https://uniqlearn.co/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearn  If this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more authentic conversations with education leaders your way.

    35 min
  3. Leading with Relationships, Resilience & Real-World Learning with Dan Stecken

    Jun 8

    Leading with Relationships, Resilience & Real-World Learning with Dan Stecken

    In this episode of Beyond the Syllabus, host Aidan McDowell sits down with Dan Stecken, Superintendent of Seneca Township High School District 160 and founder of Stress Leaders. A lifelong educator, former coach, and small-town superintendent, Dan shares how relationships, authenticity, and meaningful experiences shape both his leadership style and Seneca’s uniquely personalized approach to learning. From building student success plans that start in 8th grade, to launching bold community initiatives like a district-led housing development, to supporting burned-out leaders through writing, retreats, and coaching, Dan offers a candid look at what it means to lead with heart in high-pressure roles, and why relationships still matter most in an AI-accelerated world. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why coaching and teaching are deeply connected, and how relationships outlast titles and trophies How leadership changes as you move away from the classroom—and how to stay authentic anyway The challenge of being both liked and responsible as a superintendent How Seneca personalizes learning through Student Success Plans and real-world pathways Why meaningful experiences matter more than perfect lesson plans What it looks like when a school district takes bold risks to protect programs and enrollment How AI is reshaping learning—and why relationships remain the constant The importance of supporting stressed leaders so they can stay in the game How writing, reflection, and community help leaders sustain themselves long-term Key Moments 05:15 "Greatest Rewards of Teaching" 09:33 "Advice for Struggling Leaders" 10:51 Balancing Leadership and Authenticity 14:29 Land Purchase for School Development 18:47 "Personalized Education and Leadership Growth" 21:30 "Rethinking Learning Through Technology" 23:20 "Meaningful, Tailored Learning Matters" 27:18 "Creating Supportive Frameworks for Leaders" 31:23 "AI and Education Entrepreneurship" 33:30 "Truly Individualizing Student Education" 37:51 "Pride in Education and Community" Connect with Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-stecken Website: https://www.senecahs.org/  Connect with Us Host’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowellWebsite: https://uniqlearn.co/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearn If this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more authentic conversations with education leaders your way.

    40 min
  4. Leading with Student Voice, Systems Thinking & Personalized Pathways with Daniel Smith

    Apr 17

    Leading with Student Voice, Systems Thinking & Personalized Pathways with Daniel Smith

    In this episode of Beyond the Syllabus, host Aidan McDowell sits down with Dr. Daniel Smith, Superintendent of Stafford County Public Schools. With over two decades of experience as a teacher, principal, chief of staff, and now superintendent, Dr. Smith shares how a coaching mindset, strong relationships, and intentional systems design are shaping a district of over 5,500 employees. From student advisory boards and shadowing experiences to specialty career centers and AI literacy, he offers a comprehensive look at how districts can move toward truly student-centered, future-ready education systems. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why leadership in education starts with relationships over positional authorityHow a coaching mindset can drive continuous improvement across an entire districtThe power of student voice—and how to actually operationalize it (not just talk about it)How Stafford builds structures for feedback across students, staff, parents, and communityWhat it looks like to design career-connected pathways aligned with real workforce demandWhy exposure matters as much as outcomes—helping students learn what they don’t wantHow to track and nurture student interests from elementary through post-secondaryPractical ways to build AI literacy and digital responsibility into K–12 systemsWhy personalization is the future—and how districts can move beyond one-size-fits-all models Key Moments 04:54 Building Relationships Drives Leadership 09:18 Connecting with the Student Experience 10:36 Listening and Acting on Feedback 14:58 Expanding Educational Pathways 18:51 Career Exploration Begins Early 19:43 School Programs and Opportunities 23:20 Holistic Framework for Understanding Students 27:24 Fostering Student Leadership Growth 32:01 Preparing Kids for an AI Future 33:16 Personalized Paths for Student Success Connect with Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danielwsmith2 Website: https://www.staffordschools.net/  Connect with Us Host’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowellWebsite: https://uniqlearn.co/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearn If this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more authentic conversations with education leaders your way.

    35 min
  5. Equity, Pathways, and Personalized Learning at Scale with Dr. Anthony Mays

    Feb 25

    Equity, Pathways, and Personalized Learning at Scale with Dr. Anthony Mays

    In today’s episode, host Aidan McDowell sits down with Dr. Anthony Mays, Superintendent of Alief ISD in Southwest Houston, where nearly 40,000 students learn across one of the most diverse districts in the country. From growing up as a highly mobile student in Fort Worth to becoming Alief’s first African American superintendent, Dr. Mays shares how his own experience with inequitable classrooms shaped a leadership philosophy rooted in access, rigor, and community. Under his leadership, Alief ISD has expanded personalized learning pathways, launched career-focused academies, and invested deeply in both fine arts and CTE so students don’t face “dead ends” after 12 years in public education. Dr. Mays explains why every graduate should leave with something tangible in hand, whether that’s college credit, an industry certification, or both. You will also hear how Alief is responding to declining enrollment and funding challenges with creativity rather than retreat, from a voter-approved tax rate election that restored competitive teacher compensation to the launch of an all-girls leadership school. Along the way, Dr. Mays shares a grounded, practical view on AI in schools, the logistics of real personalized learning, and why servant leadership and equity are non-negotiable for systems-level change. In this episode, you’ll learn: How Dr. Mays’ experience moving between schools and classrooms exposed deep inequities and fueled his drive to lead for access and opportunity. Why he believes every student who gives 12 years to public education should leave with credentials that support a livable wage and future options. How Alief is aligning dual credit, CTE, and industry-based certifications so students can work, study, and build stacked credentials over time. What it looks like to start acceleration early with elementary robotics, coding, and enrichment that’s both rigorous and fun. How the district is addressing enrollment declines, perceptions of safety, and rigor by listening to families and designing schools of choice in arts, innovation, and leadership. Concrete examples of personalized learning that respond not just to reading levels, but to students’ lives, schedules, and community responsibilities. How a large, diverse district is approaching AI through a cross-functional committee, cautious policy work, and a focus on safe, purposeful use. The leadership values that guide Dr. Mays: community, servant leadership, equity, and collaboration across a 40,000-student system. Why Alief is opening an all-girls leadership school and how philanthropy and board alignment made it possible. Key Moments 00:02 From playing school at home to leading Alief ISD 03:12 Seeing inequity from “downstairs to upstairs” in the same building 07:29 Designing career pathways that don’t end at graduation 09:44 Starting acceleration and enrichment in elementary school 12:38 Facing declining enrollment, perceptions of safety, and rigor 16:10 Creating arts and innovation choice schools in response to family voice 19:28 What personalized learning really means in a diverse, working-class community 22:52 Leading in one of the most diverse regions in the country 26:29 Building an AI committee and moving carefully, not fearfully 31:55 Servant leadership, equity, and collaboration as core leadership pillars 35:12 Launching an all-girls leadership school in Alief ISD Connect with Guest: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-anthony-mays-75a5984 Website: https://www.aliefisd.net/ Connect with Us: Host’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowellWebsite: https://uniqlearn.co/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearnIf this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more meaningful conversations your way.

    38 min
  6. Systems, Literacy, and Metacognition in San Jacinto USD with John Roach

    Feb 18

    Systems, Literacy, and Metacognition in San Jacinto USD with John Roach

    In today’s episode, host Aidan McDowell sits down with John Roach, Assistant Superintendent of Educational Services in San Jacinto Unified School District in California. With over 28 years in education, John brings a rare blend of deep instructional expertise, systems thinking, and a data-informed, student-centered mindset. From elementary teacher to principal, assessment lead, and now cabinet-level leader, John has seen almost every angle of K–12. His work in a high-needs district, where roughly 90% of students are unduplicated, is driven by a simple vision: if students cannot read, they do not have access. Together, Aidan and John dig into what it means to define high-quality instruction, avoid “permanent scaffolds,” design systems that actually change classroom practice, and help students become independent, metacognitive learners in a world of AI. In this episode, you’ll learn:How John’s own K–12 experience, including a third-grade teacher who turned the classroom into a solar system, shaped his beliefs about engagement and hands-on learning. How athletics influenced his leadership approach, especially around grit, iteration, and embracing failure as “first attempt in learning.” Why San Jacinto Unified built a clear, quantifiable model of “quality first instruction” rather than relying on isolated pockets of excellence. How the district is tackling foundational literacy in a high-needs community, and why reading is framed as the non-negotiable gateway to opportunity. What it looks like to use scaffolds well—and why leaving them in place too long turns them into part of the permanent structure. How John thinks about intervention as fluid, not a life sentence, so students can move in and out of supports as they grow. Why he believes in “defined autonomy” and thinking creatively inside a well-designed box, instead of chasing endless new strategies that don’t match the research on how people learn. How metacognition and student ownership show up in classrooms, from welding programs to academic tasks, and why those skills matter for postsecondary success. What role AI and the SAMR model play in his long-term vision, and why AI must remain a tool for deeper thinking, not a permanent crutch.Key Moments 00:57 From Idaho to Southern California: John’s path into education 04:38 Lessons from athletics: grit, failure, and iteration 09:01 High-needs context and the focus on quality first instruction 11:02 “If you can’t read, you don’t have access” centering literacy 14:46 Scaffolds as temporary supports, not permanent structures 17:21 Rethinking intervention as a fluid, dynamic process 19:39 Systems, structures, and moving beyond pockets of excellence 25:27 Thinking “inside the box” and defined autonomy for teachers 28:54 Metacognition and students owning their learning 33:35 AI as a tool and the SAMR model 38:15 Evidence of systemic growth and what’s next for San Jacinto Connect with GuestWebsite: https://www.sanjacinto.k12.ca.us/ Connect with Us Host’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowellWebsite: https://uniqlearn.co/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearn If this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more authentic conversations with education leaders your way.

    40 min
  7. Belonging, Equity, and Systems of Care with Yolanda Conaway

    Feb 11

    Belonging, Equity, and Systems of Care with Yolanda Conaway

    In today’s episode, host Aidan McDowell sits down with Dr. Yolanda Conaway, Assistant Superintendent of Equity and Student Affairs at Palo Alto Unified School District. With more than 25 years in education and the Outstanding Leadership in Education Award from the California African American Superintendents and Administrators Association, Dr. Conaway has dedicated her career to rethinking how systems serve students who have historically been pushed to the margins. From an alternative education program in Newport News, Virginia, to leading equity and student wellness work in one of the most academically high-performing (and high-pressure) communities in the country, she has seen up close what happens when schools ask students to assimilate to the system instead of reshaping the system to meet students’ needs. Together, Aidan and Dr. Conaway dig into what it means to center belonging, redesign MTSS as a true equity engine, rethink mental health supports, and move beyond labels so every student feels seen, valued, and able to thrive. In this episode, you’ll learn: How an early job in an alternative education program shifted Dr. Conaway from law school aspirations to a life in education and equity work. Why she describes many students as being “rejected by school” and how traditional systems privilege those who already know how to navigate them. Why she believes schools were not built for equity—and what it looks like to redesign them so demographics no longer predict outcomes. How Palo Alto Unified is reframing success beyond GPAs and college lists to include well-being, inclusion, sense of belonging, and equity. How MTSS is being used as a proactive, data-informed framework to support individual students instead of just reacting to crisis. The role of strong Tier 1 instruction in equity work, and why intervention must be fluid rather than a permanent label. Why the district moved away from external mental health providers to build an internal ecosystem of care with wellness centers and on-site professionals. How student feedback has reshaped Palo Alto’s approach to mental health, relationship-building, and teacher involvement. Dr. Conaway’s long-term vision for more organic, real-world, culturally responsive learning that teaches students, not just subjects. Key Moments 00:50 How education “found” Dr. Conaway and why she walked away from law school 02:13 Working in alternative education and seeing students rejected by the system 05:16 “The system was not built for equity” and who schools really serve today 09:38 Challenging how we define success beyond GPAs and elite college admissions 12:11 Conditions for thriving, not just learning, and why grades aren’t enough 15:54 What MTSS really means in Palo Alto and how it’s tied to equity 17:02 Using Panorama and data to ensure no struggling student falls through the cracks 22:47 Rethinking mental health: moving from outside providers to an internal ecosystem of care 25:10 What students actually said about outside therapists and trust 26:53 Balancing wellness centers with deep teacher–student relationships 30:09 Dr. Conaway’s dream for more organic, real-world, and culturally responsive learning 33:12 How labels, tracks, and pull-outs can unintentionally limit students’ futures 36:07 Teaching students, not just subjects, and keeping the joy of learning from K through 12 Connect with Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yolanda-lana-conaway-447267243Website: https://www.pausd.org/ Connect with Us Host’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowellWebsite: https://uniqlearn.co/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearn If this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more authentic conversations with education leaders your way.

    37 min
  8. AI Fluency, Whole-Child Learning, and Rethinking K–12 with Dr. Michael Matsuda

    Jan 28

    AI Fluency, Whole-Child Learning, and Rethinking K–12 with Dr. Michael Matsuda

    In today’s episode, host Aidan McDowell sits down with Dr. Michael Matsuda, Superintendent of Anaheim Union High School District since 2014 and founder of the National AI K12 Summit. Widely recognized for his innovation and advocacy, Mike has earned national awards for promoting democracy in public schools, advancing bilingual education, and redesigning systems to better serve all students. Mike shares how AUHSD went from a traditional 7–12 district to a nationally watched model for AI integration, industry partnership, and whole-child learning. From 120 corporate and nonprofit partners, to Google career certificates, to neuroscience-informed reflection practices, his leadership centers on one goal: preparing every student to thrive in a world where entry-level jobs are disappearing and AI is reshaping opportunity. Together, Aidan and Mike explore what it takes to build AI fluency, elevate student purpose, and redesign school so students graduate with the skills, agency, and experiences that matter most. In this episode, you’ll learn: How AUHSD became a national leader in reimagining K–12 through AI, workforce pipelines, and whole-child learning. Why Michael believes AI literacy is no longer enough and why fluency across content areas is essential for every student and teacher. How AUHSD built 120+ corporate, nonprofit, and higher ed partnerships to create pathways in cybersecurity, biotech, AI, and more. What Google saw in AUHSD led to a districtwide partnership and thousands of students earning Google career certificates during the school day. Why reflection, neuroscience, and “transcendent thinking” are central to AUHSD’s instructional model. How the district uses the Career Preparedness Systems Framework to integrate the five Cs, hard skills, and student purpose. How AI-powered mentoring, personalized tasks, and co-created learning experiences are shaping the future of AUHSD classrooms. Why Mike believes the U.S. must rethink talent development—and what schools can learn from baseball’s farm system. Leadership insights on change management, ecosystem building, and preparing students for a world where the “step up” in skills is now five steps, not one.Key Moments 00:57 Why Mike announced his retirement after 11 years 03:24 Becoming early adopters of generative AI 06:07 The urgency behind AI fluency for all students 09:13 Building common-sense AI policies and teacher readiness 12:32 The five Cs and whole-child learning in an AI world 17:30 Reflection, neuroscience, and transcendent thinking 20:16 Rethinking K–12 as a talent pipeline 23:21 Google partnership and the rise of certificate pathways 27:05 Entrepreneurship and problem-solving across content areas 34:58 AI mentors and personalized pathways for student careers 37:45  Making learning relevant through purpose and agency 40:08  What’s next and what Michael hopes endures after he retires Connect with Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-matsuda-709215236 Connect with Us Host’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aidan-mcdowellWebsite: https://uniqlearn.co/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/uniqlearn If this episode sparked new thinking, please follow, rate, and review Beyond the Syllabus on your favorite podcast platform. It helps us grow and bring more authentic conversations with education leaders your way.

    41 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Welcome to Beyond The Syllabus, a podcast about reimagining education from the inside out. Every week, we sit down with the people doing the real work: superintendents, curriculum leaders, district innovators, those who are pushing against outdated models to build something more human. Because learning should feel personal. Relevant. And grounded in who a student is.