85 episodes

Teaching Tomorrow is a show for educators who earnestly desire to become more awesome at what they do. Middle level educator Celeste Kirsh speaks to experts about the future of teaching and learning so you can get practical ideas that you can literally use tomorrow in your classroom.

Teaching Tomorrow Podcast Celeste Kirsh

    • Education
    • 4.7 • 7 Ratings

Teaching Tomorrow is a show for educators who earnestly desire to become more awesome at what they do. Middle level educator Celeste Kirsh speaks to experts about the future of teaching and learning so you can get practical ideas that you can literally use tomorrow in your classroom.

    83. Literacy as liberation with Nikolai Pizarro of Raising Readers

    83. Literacy as liberation with Nikolai Pizarro of Raising Readers

    How can education be a way to create more belonging and contribution for young people? Today, I have the delight of sharing Nikolai Pizarro of Raising Readers.

    For full show notes, visit:
    https://cohort21.com/teachingtomorrow/2023/07/17/episode83/

    • 50 min
    82. Critical media literacy in action with Erin Oxland

    82. Critical media literacy in action with Erin Oxland

    How might teachers respond when truth seems to be increasingly devalued in what young people read online? I am joined by Erin Oxland to discuss this question and many others along the way.

    Erin Oxland is the First Vice President, Lead Negotiator, and Grievance Officer for the Kawartha Pine Ridge Elementary Teachers Federation of Ontario. Prior to stepping into this fascinating role (which we totally get into, by the way), Erin was a middle school teacher in Port Hope Ontario. In her practice, she prioritized authentic, rich, and relevant learning experiences for her students, which included deeply investigating the intersections of fake news, media literacy, and journalism.

    Whether you are interested in exploring one teacher’s experience with critical media literacy or hearing about her transition from the classroom to being an elected union official, this conversation has something for everyone.

    For full show notes, visit:
    https://cohort21.com/teachingtomorrow/2023/07/04/episode82/

    • 36 min
    81. Teaching Writers Speak: Embracing Digital Multimodal Composing

    81. Teaching Writers Speak: Embracing Digital Multimodal Composing

    This episode was originally published on the Teaching Writers Speak podcast—which is part of the Toronto Writing Project. I am a producer of this show and so it felt necessary to not only formally introduce Teaching Tomorrow listeners to the show, but also to transplant this conversation as a way to explain some of the questions behind the research project I am wading into.

    To check out The Toronto Writing Project:
    https://www.torontowritingproject.com/

    To listen to all of the Teaching Writers Speak podcast episodes:
    https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/teaching-writers-speak/id1615880288

    • 55 min
    80. Nurturing democracy with Ken Boyd from CIVIX Canada

    80. Nurturing democracy with Ken Boyd from CIVIX Canada

    How can educators nurture a functional democracy when young people struggle to find reliable sources of information? To dig into this question, I am joined by Ken Boyd from CIVIX Canada.

    For Full Shownotes, Visit: https://cohort21.com/teachingtomorrow/2023/05/29/episode80/

    Ken Boyd is the Director of Education at CIVIX, a Canadian charity that develops experiential learning programs to help students develop skills and habits of informed citizenship. He researches and develops materials for two programs: PoliTalks, a program that helps students develop the skills needed to have constructive discussions about political and social issues, and CTRL-F, a digital media literacy skills program that helps students identify mis- and disinformation online. He also runs training sessions and workshops with teachers and students to teach them about digital media literacy and how to navigate an increasingly complex online world.

    Ken holds a PhD in philosophy from the University of Toronto. Before moving to the non-profit sector, he taught philosophy at a number of universities across Canada, and was most recently a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Southern Denmark, where he worked on research projects about the barriers to communicating scientific information online. He is also a writer of public philosophy, and a regular contributor to The Prindle Post, a digital publication focused on ethical issues in the news.

    • 53 min
    79. Digital literacy and social justice with Dr. Kristen Hawley Turner

    79. Digital literacy and social justice with Dr. Kristen Hawley Turner

    How is digital literacy related to social justice? Today on the show I have the honour of sitting down with a leading thinker in education, Dr. Kristen Hawley Turner.

    Dr. Kristen Hawley Turner is a professor of education at Drew University and she is the director of the Drew Writing Project, which is a chapter of The National Writing Project. In this conversation we explore the terrain of digital literacy, its links to social justice, and how teachers must reimagine what our essential job descriptions are if we are going to meet the needs of the learners in our classrooms.

    As we are both parents, Kristen and I also get into our roles with our children and what can be done in the home to augment and reinforce critical digital literacy to help our young people thrive.

    I think you will find yourself nodding along in agreement as you listen to Dr. Hawley Turner explains her work and thinking in this conversation that I am so delighted to share with you.

    For Full Shownotes (and all the links to things mentioned), visit:
    https://cohort21.com/teachingtomorrow/2023/05/16/episode79/

    • 44 min
    78. Oh here I am: a solo episode / PhD update

    78. Oh here I am: a solo episode / PhD update

    Back in the fall of 2021, I left my dream job for another dream: to dig deep into questions that I had been just scratching at throughout my classroom teaching experience.

    Well, now almost two years into my PhD program (and over a year since my last update episode–you can find that one on episode 67), I’m here to share the highlights, the challenges, the hiccups, and the mini-victories.

    • 30 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
7 Ratings

7 Ratings

Melissa Arasin ,

Profound, refreshing, and hopeful

Through Teaching Tomorrow, the wonderfully talented Celeste Kirsh covers the relevant topics of our time concerning education, literacy, democracy, society, technology, culture, etc. As I listen to her conversations with other experts, I am awed by the questions Celeste asks that lead to such rich, thoughtful discussions and the sharing of hopeful perspectives about how to educate and empower young people in this beautiful, flawed world of ours.

Katie H. 3561 ,

Professional and helpful

If any educators were curious about expanding their teaching skills and environment, I would recommend the “Teaching Tomorrow Podcast.” This podcast is run by Celeste Kirsh who teaches middle school. She brings speakers on the podcast who are either fellow educators or are educators who have retired. I enjoy how relaxed the podcast is and the professionalism shown by the guests and content.The episode I chose to listen to was episode 58, ‘Sketchnoting for Social Justice.’ The episode opened with the idea that students must be watching the teacher at all times in order to learn what was being taught and then expanded into the various note-taking styles before concluding on the idea of sketchnoting. Sketchnoting refers to the idea that while taking notes people absently sketch. While I agree, from a personal perspective, that absently sketching does help me recall information, the sketches have to be simple. It is misleading to claim that any drawings can help, as too detailed drawings take away attention. As sketchnoting was the main point of the episode, the idea of social justice also appeared. It was explained that cultivating creativity, like sketchnoting, helped social issues by bringing them to the public’s eye. I do not agree that sketchnoting has a part of social justice but I do agree that creativity has a part in it. Overall, I enjoyed this podcast. The main speaker and the guests she brings are informed and qualified to talk about the episode’s subject matter. I also appreciate the speaker’s points of view and how they address the opposing sides to their ideas. The podcast is not biased and openly explores new ideas and teaching struggles and I think that educators could benefit from these topics.

Carliejennifer ,

Helpful and Honest

Celeste brings interesting and kind guests to share their thoughts and opinions with us. But it’s definitely more of a conversation than a “lesson”.

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