Now on Teacher Voice: Compassion | In this episode of Teacher Voice: The Podcast, we contemplate compassion: for our students, for our classrooms, for each other and for ourselves. | 2023 |
On Harry Potter and Whose Stories are Told | While taking a class about Harry Potter, I realized that teaching any subject—even science—is subjective. | 2021 |
Now on Teacher Voice: Affinity Groups | In this episode of Teacher Voice: The Podcast, we learn about affinity groups from educators in the Knowles community and how their participation has impacted them. | 2020 |
Now on Teacher Voice: Changing Careers, Part Two | In this episode of Teacher Voice: The Podcast, we revisit stories from teachers who have come to teaching from another profession. Hear how the experiences they had in their previous professions inform what they prioritize in their teaching today. | 2020 |
Now on Teacher Voice: Changing Careers | In this episode of Teacher Voice: The Podcast, we talk with teachers who have come to teaching after having a different career. What was it that drew these career changers to the teaching profession? | 2020 |
I am from Not Knowing When Her Car will Come Through the Snow | Tracing my strengths as a teacher back to an inflection point in my own adolescence. | 2019 |
Now on Teacher Voice: After the Story’s Out | In this episode of Teacher Voice: The Podcast, teachers talk about what happened for them after their writing was published. | 2019 |
Now on Teacher Voice: Process, Process, Process | In this episode of Teacher Voice: The Podcast, Knowles Fellows discuss the crucial nature of collaborators in writing impactful stories. Join Kaleidoscope staff members as they explore the impact of a published article and discuss how writing can be an act of leadership. | 2018 |
Now on Teacher Voice: An Inquiry into Good Teaching | In this episode of Teacher Voice: The Podcast, Knowles Fellows share their thinking around good teaching: What can good teaching look like? How can we recognize it in ourselves & others? How do we sustain ourselves as we strive to become good—and better—teachers? | 2018 |