13 episodes

Conversations with the World Bank Teachers team.

World Bank Teachers Podcast World Bank Teachers Podcast

    • Education
    • 5.0 • 5 Ratings

Conversations with the World Bank Teachers team.

    Teacher Directed Vs. Student Centered Instructional Approaches: New Insights

    Teacher Directed Vs. Student Centered Instructional Approaches: New Insights

    In the latest episode of the World Bank’s Teachers Podcast Elaine Ding, Analyst for the Teachers Thematic Group in the Educational Global Practice at the World Bank hosted a conversation on teacher-directed vs. student-centered pedagogical approaches with Lucy Crehan, an international education consultant, researcher, and author. Lucy is the author of ‘Cleverlands: the secrets behind the success of the world's education superpowers’, one of The Economist’s books of the year in 2016, as well as a book on teacher career structures for the International Institute for Educational Planning and UNESCO. Lucy has also advised foreign governments on education reform at the Education Development Trust.  

    In this episode, Elaine and Lucy discuss the debate about teacher-directed vs. student-centered instructional approaches to teaching and learning. Lucy provides firsthand insights about some of the benefits and drawbacks of implementing and sustaining these kinds of approaches in different educational systems, and highlights insights that have emerged from large-scale international student assessments. She also shares her own experiences in high-performing classrooms and discusses how teaching and learning can be organized to be most successful. 

    • 19 min
    How to Facilitate Effective 1-1 Coaching Sessions: Insights from a Teacher Training School in Finland

    How to Facilitate Effective 1-1 Coaching Sessions: Insights from a Teacher Training School in Finland

    This episode utilizes findings from the Facilitating Effective 1-1 Coaching Sessions technical guidance note (and summary slides) as a starting point to discuss how education systems can support pedagogical leaders in training and coaching teachers. Rita Almeida, Practice Manager for Europe and Central Asia at the World Bank, leads an engaging discussion on the importance of coaching relationships being rooted in trust and teacher autonomy, emphasizing how this research translates into reality in Finland. During the episode, Tracy Wilichowski, a member of the World Bank’s Teachers Team, discusses how the note can provide guidance to country teams on the key components of high-quality coaching sessions. To complement the evidence, Reetta Niemi, a teacher trainer in Finland, provides firsthand insights on some of the challenges in implementing and sustaining this model in practice. For information, you can check out the Coach webpage and the complementary tools and resources.

    • 31 min
    Putting Teachers at the Center: Celebrating World Teachers’ Day 2022 (Special Episode)

    Putting Teachers at the Center: Celebrating World Teachers’ Day 2022 (Special Episode)

    In celebration of the World Teachers’ Day 2022, the Teachers Thematic Group at the World Bank brought together policymakers, practitioners, and international education leaders to underscore the essential role of teachers in accelerating learning recovery efforts, and to discuss how to best support them with a strong focus on their well-being, motivation, and empowerment.

    • 1 hr 27 min
    Designing Inclusive Curricula for Multicultural Classrooms

    Designing Inclusive Curricula for Multicultural Classrooms

    In this episode of the Teachers Podcast, Elaine Ding, Analyst with the Education Global Practice at the World Bank spoke with Dr. Keishia Thorpe, English Teacher at the International High School Langley Park in Maryland, USA and the winner of the prestigious 2021 Global Teacher Prize. Keishia received this award from UNESCO and the Varkey Foundation for her devotion to preparing young immigrants and first-generation Americans to succeed at her school. Keishia’s work to incorporate culturally relevant learning content into her school's curriculum helped her students connect with the material being taught on a deeper level and improved their overall classroom performance. In this episode, Elaine and Keishia discuss how this kind of curriculum change can lead to greater levels of student motivation in the classroom as well as assess how teachers and administrators can support the creation of similar educational environments.

    • 20 min
    Intrinsic Motivation and its Impact on Student and Teacher Classroom Performance

    Intrinsic Motivation and its Impact on Student and Teacher Classroom Performance

    There is now a fair bit of evidence to suggest that a financial insentive by itself does not always lead to better teacher performance. So what does? In this episode of the Teachers podcast, we discuss intrinsic motivation and its impact on student and teachers’ performance. The guests on this episode share their thoughts on how to develop educational environments that encourage intrinsic motivation. Tara Beteille, a Senior Economist in the World Bank’s East Asia Pacific Region and the Human Development Program Leader for Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar hosts this discussion with John McIntosh, Director of Design and Program Readiness at STiR Education, an international NGO that supports governments to foster intrinsic motivation in teachers, school leaders and education officials across multiple countries and Shwetlena Sabarwal, a Senior Economist with the Education Global Practice and a Global Lead on Education and Climate Change. This conversation addresses the best ways for educational administrators and policymakers to motivate students and teachers to enhance overall performance in the classroom.

    • 33 min
    Quality Coaching: A Conversation on How-to Facilitate Effective 1-1 Support

    Quality Coaching: A Conversation on How-to Facilitate Effective 1-1 Support

    The evidence is clear: effective teacher professional development (TPD) needs to include ongoing and individualized support to teachers in order to impact teachers’ instruction, and subsequently student learning. However, what is less clear are the details of what effective coaching looks like in practice, especially in low-and-middle country settings.

    This episode tries to answer these questions, building on the World Bank’s new “Facilitating Effective 1-1 Support Technical Guidance Note." This note provides guidance on how pedagogical leaders can effectively carry out coaching sessions to support teacher learning and improvement. Through implementation tips, case studies, and contextual considerations for policymakers, the note demonstrates how 1-1 coaching can be adapted to a variety of educational contexts. In this episode, Safaa El Tayeb El-Kogali, Practice Manager for South and East Africa at the World Bank, facilitates a dynamic conversation on the opportunities and challenges in utilizing the note's findings as part of government dialogue and implementation of TPD reforms. Safaa is joined by Dr. Philippa Cordingley, Chief Executive of Centre for the Use of Research and Evidence in Education, Dahlia Elhefnawy, Educational Consultant with Egypt’s Ministry of Education and Technical Education, and Gabrielle Arenge, Doctoral Researcher at the University of Cambridge and co-author of the guidance note.

    Blog: https://lnkd.in/gKjdRDbq

    Guidance Note: https://lnkd.in/gd5rN3bA

    • 41 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
5 Ratings

5 Ratings

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
The Daily Stoic
Daily Stoic | Wondery
Digital Social Hour
Sean Kelly