51 episodes

Teachers are one of the most influential and powerful forces for equity, access and quality in education. They provide children and young people with the knowledge, skills, attitude and tools needed to reach their full potential. Teachers' Voices is a podcast series from BOLD, the digital platform on learning and development. Join Nina Alonso as she shares powerful stories from teachers around the world, talking in their own words about their experiences, and listen in on inspiring conversations with international experts on learning and child development. If you're a parent, teacher, or just someone interested in learning and development, this podcast is for you. For more information, visit bold.expert

Teachers' Voices BOLD and Nina Alonso

    • Education

Teachers are one of the most influential and powerful forces for equity, access and quality in education. They provide children and young people with the knowledge, skills, attitude and tools needed to reach their full potential. Teachers' Voices is a podcast series from BOLD, the digital platform on learning and development. Join Nina Alonso as she shares powerful stories from teachers around the world, talking in their own words about their experiences, and listen in on inspiring conversations with international experts on learning and child development. If you're a parent, teacher, or just someone interested in learning and development, this podcast is for you. For more information, visit bold.expert

    Why students benefit from futures literacy

    Why students benefit from futures literacy

    The final episode of Teachers’ Voices season 3 opens with Sister Zeph, winner of the 2023 Global Teacher Prize, talking directly to teachers. “You are a future maker”, she says. These words inspired the rest of this mini-episode, which explores futures literacy. What is futures literacy? What do students gain from futures literacy? How can teachers incorporate it into their classrooms?
    Former teacher Michelle Blanchet, co-author of the Startup Teacher Playbook and Co-Founder of The Educators’ Lab answers these questions for Nina. Michelle is based in Geneva, Switzerland. Futures literacy is “a way to encourage young people to use their imagination and their agency to adapt, invent, recover, prepare for all the changes that we're experiencing”, Michelle explains.
    Teachers’ Voices will be back for season 4 later this year. 
    Join the Teachers' Voices WhatsApp group and read the community guidelines.
    Guests and resources
    Sister Zeph - LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Global Teacher Prize
    ZWEE Foundation of Sister Zeph - Facebook, Instagram
    Michelle Blanchet - LinkedIn, Twitter/X
    The Educators’ Lab - Twitter/X, Medium, Facebook
    UNESCO - Futures Literacy
    Contact
    Join us on social media: @BOLD_insights and @VoicesTeachers.
    Listen to all episodes of Teachers’ Voices.
    Subscribe to BOLD’s newsletter.
    Stay up to date with all the latest research on child development and learning at bold.expert.
    Get in touch with us: podcastteachersvoices@gmail.com.

    • 7 min
    How to support children’s mental health in school

    How to support children’s mental health in school

    Why is it important to make sure children have words to name their emotions? How can teachers promote mental health and wellbeing? Is it possible to remove academic pressure from school?
    In this episode, Nina first meets Sarah Griffiths, a Senior Research Fellow at University College London and Co-Director of the Wellbeing and Language Lab in UCL’s department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology. “Language, particularly words for emotions, are critical for understanding emotions,” Sarah explains. Emotion understanding is not innate, children learn about emotions through conversations.
    Next, Nina meets Riffat Arif, known as Sister Zeph, winner of the 2023 Global Teacher Prize. Sister Zeph talks to Nina from Gujranwala in Pakistan. She has given thousands of marginalized children and women access to learning. “Mental wellbeing has always been my priority”, Sister Zeph says. The children at her school are traumatised from poverty, hunger, and physical and mental violence, and Sister Zeph provides them a safe space.
    Nina speaks to Virna Talarico, a teacher working in primary education in Zurich in Switzerland. Virna shares that they talk about emotions in the classroom - children have the right to feel emotions and other children have to respect that. “It is important that the children feel they are taken seriously”, she says.
    Nina’s final guest is Joyce Mininger, Learning Director of the LearnLife primary years hub near Barcelona in Spain. “We take away the pressure of school”, Joyce explains. At their school, they reduce academic pressure to support children’s wellbeing. They also foster healthy relationships between learners, and work on teacher wellbeing too, which impacts children’s wellbeing.
    Join the Teachers' Voices WhatsApp group and read the community guidelines.
    Guests and resources
    Sarah Griffiths - Lab, Twitter/X, UCL
    Sister Zeph - LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Global Teacher Prize
    ZWEE Foundation of Sister Zeph - Facebook, Instagram
    Joyce Mininger - LinkedIn
    LearnLife, LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter/X
    Dr Ross Greene explains Plan B, a technique to solve problems collaboratively with children
    Virna Talarico
    Contact
    Join us on social media: @BOLD_insights and @VoicesTeachers.
    Listen to all episodes of Teachers’ Voices.
    Subscribe to BOLD’s newsletter.
    Stay up to date with all the latest research on child development and learning at bold.expert.
    Get in touch with us: podcastteachersvoices@gmail.com.

    • 32 min
    Why physical activity in schools helps children thrive

    Why physical activity in schools helps children thrive

    What types of physical activity benefit students? Can bringing movement and play into different academic classes help children learn? How can spaces and classes for movement be inclusive?
    Nina first meets Fotini Vasilopoulos, a Postdoctoral researcher at the University of Sydney in Australia. “Physical activity is important for physical health, for mental health, and it also can drive behaviours for learning.” Fotini suggests giving children different types of experiences - not just sports, but also play and dance, which can foster inclusivity.
    Next, Nina speaks to Saumil Majmudar in the Himalayas, India. Saumil is the founder of Sportz Village, India's largest youth sports platform. “We do something very simple,” Saumil says, “we just get kids to play”. The Sportz Village approach is to give children the time and space to play safely with others their own age. 
    Nina also hears from Tanya Sheckley, founder of the Up Academy and host of the Rebel educator podcast. Tanya is based in California in the US. Tanya’s school incorporates movement and play into classroom time, and students can have breaks from work on a large monkey bar structure.
    Join the Teachers' Voices WhatsApp group and read the community guidelines.
    Guests and resources
    Fotini Vasilopoulos
    Saumil Majmudar - LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Facebook
    Sportz Village - LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Facebook
    Tanya Sheckley – LinkedIn, Facebook, Rebel Educator podcast
    UP Academy - Twitter/X
    Contact
    Join us on social media: @BOLD_insights and @VoicesTeachers.
    Listen to all episodes of Teachers’ Voices.
    Subscribe to BOLD’s newsletter.
    Stay up to date with all the latest research on child development and learning at bold.expert.
    Get in touch with us: podcastteachersvoices@gmail.com.

    • 27 min
    How can schools embrace variability in learning?

    How can schools embrace variability in learning?

    In what ways do students differ from each other in their learning? How does one student vary in their own learning from day to day? How can schools embrace these types of learning variability?
    In this episode, Nina talks to Julia Leonard, Assistant Professor of Psychology at Yale University. Learning variability, Julia explains, is both “my learning might be different than your learning” and “my learning one day might be different from the other day”. It is also that “my learning in one class might be different than another class”. Julia’s research asks how educators can create contexts that bring kids to the top of their potential.
    Nina also meets Guyot Betoto, a secondary school teacher from Madagascar. Guyot teaches large groups of students and is always looking for ways to adapt to student variability. He explains how he moves around the group and identifies learners’ needs, and empowers students to lead and motivate others in the group: “They do it with pleasure”.
    Next, Nina speaks to two edupreneurs from LearnLife in Barcelona, where students’ interests and passions are at the centre of their learning. Emma Buckle, Community Partnerships & Development Director, explains that the LearnLife approach is a “truly personal model that helps learners focus on and find their own personal passion”.
    Devin Carberry, LearnLife’s Barcelona Hub Lead, tells Nina about the way students direct their own learning. “Amazing projects come out of this because we give learners a space to reconnect with learning how they like to do it.”
    Join the Teachers' Voices WhatsApp group and read the community guidelines.
    Guests and resources
    Julia Leonard - Lab website, Twitter/X
    Guyot Betoto
    Emma Buckle - LinkedIn, Twitter/X
    Devin Carberry - LinkedIn
    LearnLife - website, Facebook, YouTube
    Contact
    Join us on social media: @BOLD_insights and @VoicesTeachers.
    Listen to all episodes of Teachers’ Voices.
    Subscribe to BOLD’s newsletter.
    Stay up to date with all the latest research on child development and learning at bold.expert.
    Get in touch with us: podcastteachersvoices@gmail.com.

    • 34 min
    How to bring social entrepreneurship to schools

    How to bring social entrepreneurship to schools

    How can teachers help students make a positive change in their communities? How can schools better connect education with the future of work?
    In this bonus mini episode of Teachers’ Voices, Nina hears practical tips from last episode’s guests Alison Yang, Barbara Bilgre, Maud Seghers, and Larisa Akrofie. Nina is also joined by Tanya Sheckley, an edupreneur and host of the podcast Rebel Educator. All share their tips and inspiring resources for instilling an entrepreneurial mindset and preparing students for the future of work.
    Join the Teachers' Voices WhatsApp group and read the community guidelines.
    Guests and resources
    Alison Yang - LinkedIn, website
    Barbara Bilgre - LinkedIn
    Global Issues Network
    Round Square
    African Leadership Academy
    Maud Seghers - LinkedIn
    VVOB - website, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Facebook
    Larisa Akrofie - LinkedIn, Twitter/X
    Tanya Sheckley - website, Rebel Educator podcast
    Contact
    Join us on social media: @BOLD_insights and @VoicesTeachers.
    Listen to all episodes of Teachers’ Voices.
    Subscribe to BOLD’s newsletter.
    Stay up to date with all the latest research on child development and learning at bold.expert.
    Get in touch with us: podcastteachersvoices@gmail.com.

    • 8 min
    Nurturing entrepreneurial mindsets at school

    Nurturing entrepreneurial mindsets at school

    What is an entrepreneurial mindset? Why should educators nurture entrepreneurial mindsets in young people? What entrepreneurial projects have teachers developed in classrooms around the world?
    In this episode, Nina first speaks to Maud Seghers. Maud is a global education advisor at VVOB in Belgium, an international organisation devoted to education development. An entrepreneurial mindset is not just about starting and managing projects, programs, and businesses that generate wealth, Maud says, as a lot of entrepreneurs and young people also want to “maximise benefits to society and the environment”.
    Next, Nina meets Larisa Akrofie in Ghana. Larisa is Lead of Skills and Education at the Mastercard Foundation and believes that building entrepreneurial attitudes in the growing young population in Africa is really important. “High rates of entrepreneurial skills will go a long way to empower young people to create their own opportunities and contribute to the diversification of economies and address social challenges”, Larisa says.
    Nina then speaks to Alison Yang, an international school teacher in Hong Kong who specialises in entrepreneurship. Alison explains that students often acquire skills and knowledge but don’t necessarily know how to apply them outside the classroom. “That's why we have the entrepreneur project”, she explains, to explicitly show students how to apply their “knowledge and interest to create something that's useful”.
    Finally, Nina hears from Barbara Bilgre, a marine biologist and science teacher in India. Barbara believes that “if you're going to be setting up a business, you should have in mind a purpose for social improvements and social justice”. Barbara tells Nina about the benefits of connecting schools with social entrepreneurs who are working to improve the environment.
    Join the Teachers' Voices WhatsApp group and read the community guidelines.

    Guests and resources
    Maud Seghers - LinkedIn
    VVOB - website, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Facebook
    Larisa Akrofie - LinkedIn, Twitter/X
    Plugging African Youth - WhatsApp Channel
    Alison Yang - LinkedIn, website
    IB Middle Years Programme - Twitter/X
    Barbara Bilgre - LinkedIn
    Contact
    Join us on social media: @BOLD_insights and @VoicesTeachers.
    Listen to all episodes of Teachers’ Voices.
    Subscribe to BOLD’s newsletter.
    Stay up to date with all the latest research on child development and learning at bold.expert.
    Get in touch with us: podcastteachersvoices@gmail.com.

    • 30 min

Top Podcasts In Education

The Mel Robbins Podcast
Mel Robbins
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
The Rich Roll Podcast
Rich Roll
Mick Unplugged
Mick Hunt
TED Talks Daily
TED
The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast
Lauryn Bosstick & Michael Bosstick / Dear Media