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The What And Who Of EDU

The What And Who Of EDU

Macmillan Learning

Education
Education

Frequency: 1 episode/14d. Total Eps: 33

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The What & Who of EDU brings together instructors, experts, and thought leaders to share the teaching strategies that actually work. From building classroom confidence and teaching critical thinking to navigating AI in education, we help educators tackle the challenges that don't always come with a handbook.
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10 Teaching Strategies Teachers Once Doubted & Now Swear By

Season 1 · Episode 22

mercredi 3 décembre 2025Duration 25:01

Some teaching ideas feel a little too trendy, too techy, or too fluffy… until they're not.
Today we're counting down 10 teaching strategies educators once doubted and now swear by. From the surprising power of silence to the glow-up of structured lectures, these are the classroom moves that went from "no thanks" to "never teaching without it."

You'll hear from instructors across English, psychology, chemistry, economics, math, and biology as they share the moments that changed their minds and their classrooms. Along the way, we explore what actually boosts student engagement, strengthens learning, and saves instructors time and energy.

Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

  • Lectures can be boring. So give yours a glow-up.
  • Enjoy the Sound of Silence. Pauses are where learning happens.
  • Scaffold. Rome wasn't built in a draft, and neither are great essays.
  • Doubting the five-page paper? Go with short writing to build stronger thinking.
  • Ungraded work still counts. Students need a point, not a point system.
  • Now be a good robot. Tech doesn't replace teachers, it frees them up to teach.
  • Flip the script. Move content home so class time focuses on context.
  • Turn the discussion bored into a discussion board. The right prompt can transform 120 posts into 120 perspectives.
  • Learn together, better. Group work isn't chaos, it's collaboration with a plan.
  • Multiple choice isn't the easy way out. Done right, it's practice for the real-world exams ahead. 

Dr. Margaret Holloway is an Assistant Professor of English and the Composition Coordinator in the English & Modern Languages Department at Clark Atlanta University. My research is rooted in the rhetoric and composition discipline, and I have nine years of college-level teaching experience.

Dr. Ryan Herzog is an Associate Professor of Economics, Program Coordinator, and Faculty Fellow at Gonzaga University, where he has been teaching for 16 years. His work focuses on macroeconomics, financial markets, and public policy.

Jennifer Duncan is an Associate Professor of English at Georgia State University's Perimeter College. She has been teaching English literature and composition for twenty-five years and specializing in online teaching for fifteen.

Dr. Kendra Thomas is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Hope College. She has been teaching human development courses for 12 years. She is a mother of two and researches adolescents' perceptions of justice and how hope changes over time.

Dr. Christin Monroe is an Educational Research Associate at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign. She previously taught Principles of Chemistry, Intro to Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, and Biochemistry at Landmark College, with a focus on supporting neurodivergent learners.

Dr. Daniel M. Look is the Charles A. Dana Professor of Mathematics at St. Lawrence University. He's spent over 25 years trying to convince students that math is not only useful, but occasionally fun. He authored Math Cats: Scratching the Surface of Mathematics (Running Press, Oct 2025), an illustrated exploration of mathematical ideas through the lens of cats.

Mary Gourley is a psychology instructor at Gaston College with over 16 years of teaching experience. She also teaches gender, human sexuality, and social psychology courses at New Mexico State University's Global Campus.

Julie Moore has been teaching writing and literature in Higher Education for 35 years, and is currently working as a Senior Online Academic Advisor and First-Year Composition Instructor for Eastern University. She's authored four collections of poems, with several notable prizes including the Donald Murray Prize from Writing on the Edge.

Betsy Langness is the Psychology Department Head at Jefferson Community and Technical College, where she has worked for 20+ years. She currently teaches psychology courses in a virtual, asynchronous environment. Previously, she worked as a counselor and  worked as Senior Academic Advisor for the Honors Program at the University of Louisville.

Dr. Jennifer Ripley Stueckle has spent the past 17 years as a Teaching Professor and Non-Majors Biology Program Director at West Virginia University. She has taught introductory biology, immunology and human physiology. She also created biology courses offered through dual enrollment at West Virginia high schools.

Dr. Amy Goodman is a Senior Lecturer in the Mathematics Department at Baylor University, where she has taught since 1999. In addition to teaching, she is also a course designer, author, teaching mentor, and learning analytics researcher. Her pedagogy is founded on the belief that all students can be successful at math.

☎️ Join the Conversation

If this episode gave you something useful, or just made you nod while grading, pass it along to a colleague or that one friend who still says "I'm staying ahead this semester." (We believe in you.)

Got a tip of your own? Send us an email at TheWhatAndWhoOfEDU@Macmillan.com or leave us a voicemail at (512) 765-4688 & your strategy might just make it into a future episode.

From Grades to Grit: What Psychology Authors Drs. Dave Myers and June Gruber Want Every Student to Know

Season 1 · Episode 21

mercredi 19 novembre 2025Duration 25:54

What do sleep, gratitude, and emotional chaos have in common? Psychology.

In this student-focused episode of The What and Who of EDU, Dr. Dave Myers and Dr. June Gruber return to explore how psychology can help students live better, not just learn better. From stress and self-compassion to gratitude, emotional diversity, and the paradox of happiness, they unpack the research behind what really helps students thrive, both inside and outside the classroom.

You'll hear how to use stress as a tool for growth, why chasing happiness can backfire, and how simple habits like gratitude and reflection can build lasting resilience. Whether you're a student navigating college life or an educator supporting them, this episode delivers practical, science-backed strategies for managing emotions, staying grounded, and finding meaning in the messy middle of it all.


Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

What You'll Learn in This Episode
  • How studying psychology can improve your life beyond the classroom
  • The difference between healthy and harmful stress
  • Why emotional diversity supports mental health
  • How gratitude and self-compassion build resilience
  • Why chasing happiness can backfire
  • How to use evidence, not anecdotes, to make better choices
  • What the research says about optimism, flow, and human growth
Featured Guests

Dr. David Myers – Professor of Psychology at Hope College and author of the world's best-selling psychology textbook. His research spans behavior genetics, social psychology, and public understanding of science.

Dr. June Gruber – Associate Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of Colorado Boulder and Director of the Positive Emotion & Psychopathology Lab. Her research explores emotion science, mental health, and the science of well-being.

Resources

More about Dave & June

🎧 Missed the first two episodes in this series?

Check out Episode 1: The Psychology of Psychology on AppleSpotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Check out Episode 2:  Teaching Like a Psychologist on on AppleSpotify or wherever you listen to podcasts

Resources

 

EP 12: Advice New Teachers Actually Need: 10 Tips From Educators Who've Been There

Season 1 · Episode 12

mercredi 16 juillet 2025Duration 25:04

Remember your first semester teaching? The syllabus was hot off the printer, you weren't sure how to curve grades, and someone just called you "professor" for the first time. The next generation of instructors is now feeling all of that, hardcore. This episode brings real talk from educators who've been there, survived that, and even enjoyed office hours. Maybe…

🎧 In this episode: Surviving flop assignments, balancing feedback, and remembering that even Slytherins need support.

Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

🎓 Key Takeaways

(01:11) Be One Day Smarter:  Start small and build confidence. 

(03:10) Don't Take It Personally: Student feedback is about growth, not perfection.

(05:48) Find Your Inner Goldilocks:  Balance change with consistency.

(09:11) Just Pick One: Incorporate new tools gradually.

(10:53) Teach Like It's Still Hard for You

(12:18)Teach with Confidence And Help Students Build Theirs

(014:01) Not Everyone Got Sorted Into 'Loves School' House, And That's OK

(16:00) Don't Do It Alone. Seek collaboration and support.

(18:36) Plan Like a Pro, Reflect Like a Rookie. Continuous improvement is key.

(20:37) You Will Make a Difference. Impact often comes without applause.

(22:05) It's a privilege to teach. Kindness isn't optional, it's foundational.

📌 Featured Educators
Find out more about our amazing featured educators

Betsy Langness is the Psychology Department Head at Jefferson Community and Technical College, where she has worked for more than 20 years. She currently teaches general and developmental psychology courses in a virtual, asynchronous environment. Previously, she worked as a counselor, taught as an adjunct and also worked as Senior Academic Advisor for the Honors Program at the University of Louisville. 

Dr. Ryan Herzog is an Associate Professor of Economics, Program Coordinator, and Faculty Fellow at Gonzaga University, where he has been teaching for 16 years. His work focuses on macroeconomics, financial markets, and public policy.

Dr. Kendra Thomas is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Hope College. She has been teaching human development courses for 12 years. She is a mother of two and researches adolescents' perceptions of justice and how hope changes over time.

Dr. Jennifer Ripley Stueckle has spent the past 17 years as a Teaching Professor and Non-Majors Biology Program Director at West Virginia University. While her expertise centers around toxicology and fish physiology, she has taught introductory biology, immunology, and human physiology, in addition to creating and directing the biology courses offered through dual enrollment at West Virginia high schools.

Dr. Mike May is the lower division coordinator in the department of mathematics and statistics at Saint Louis University, where he has taught for more than 30 years. During that time he has looked at how to effectively incorporate numerous technologies into effectively teaching mathematics. 

Dr. Derek Harmon is an Associate Professor - Clinical in the Department of Biomedical Education and Anatomy at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. For over a decade, he has taught anatomy to medical, graduate, physical therapy, and occupational therapy students, medical residents, and practicing clinicians. His research is focused on the impact of immersive technology on anatomy education and medical simulation.

Jennifer Duncan is an Associate Professor of English at Georgia State University's Perimeter College. She has been teaching English literature and composition for twenty-five years and specializing in online teaching for fifteen.

Adriana Bryant is an English and Developmental English Instructor at Lone Star College–Kingwood in Texas. She teaches courses of different modalities, and strives to create an engaging environment that helps foster her students' growth and desire to learn. She also contributes to professional development within her department and college community.

Dr. Amy Goodman is a Senior Lecturer in the Mathematics Department at Baylor University, where she has taught since 1999. In addition to teaching, she is also a course designer, OER author, teaching mentor to other faculty and graduate students, and learning analytics researcher. Her pedagogy is founded on the belief that all students be successful at mathematics.

Julie Moore has been teaching writing, literature, and writing center pedagogy in Higher Education for 35 years; presently, she works as a Senior Online Academic Advisor and First-Year Composition Instructor for Eastern University's LifeFlex program. The author of four collections of poems, Moore has recently won the Donald Murray Prize from Writing on the Edge and several notable prizes for her poetry.

Mary Gourley is a psychology instructor at Gaston College with over 16 years of teaching experience. She also teaches gender, human sexuality, and social psychology courses at New Mexico State University's Global Campus.

Resources: 

What the Best College Teachers Do 

Macmillan Learning

☎️ Join the Conversation

🔗 If you found something helpful in this episode, pass it along to a colleague—or that one friend who still starts every semester saying, "This time I'm staying ahead on grading." You know who you are.

🔗 Got a tip of your own? Leave us a voicemail at (512) 765-4688 & your strategy might just make it into a future episode.

 

EP 11: From "Is This on the Test?" to "Here's What I Think": 10 Ways to Make Critical Thinking Happen

Season 1 · Episode 11

mercredi 2 juillet 2025Duration 23:41

In a world of instant answers, where students can summon AI-generated text faster than they can raise their hand, how do we actually teach critical thinking?

In this episode of The What & Who of EDU, we dig into 10 real-world strategies from educators across the country who've figured out how to move beyond right-or-wrong thinking. Whether it's removing the fear of failure, sneaking in some stealth logic through iClicker questions, or letting students spar with ChatGPT, these instructors are making critical thinking tangible, and totally teachable.

Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

🎓 Episode Highlights:

  1. Remove the Fear of Failure: Dr. Christin Monroe (Landmark College). Use unlimited attempts and revision opportunities to promote problem-solving over perfection.

  2. Unplug to Go Deeper: Dr. Margaret Holloway (Clark Atlanta University). Ditch the phones, print the readings, and make space for honest, un-Googleable thought.

  3. Flip It and Think About It: Dr. Amy Goodman (Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College). Use flipped learning to focus class time on metacognition, not just content review.

  4. Channel Your Inner Socrates: Dr. Erika Martinez (University of South Florida). Answer questions with questions and let students build the logic themselves.

  5. Teach the Process, Not Just the Point: Dr. Charlotte de Araujo (York University). Turn your lecture into a real-time thinking lab using data and hypothesis-driven learning.

  6. Give Them Problems Worth Solving: Dr. Ryan Herzog (Gonzaga University). Use messy, real-world questions to make students wrestle with how they'd figure it out.

  7. Make Them Explain It Like a Kid's Listening: Dr. Mike May (Saint Louis University). Have students break down complex ideas for a fictional 9-year-old. No jargon allowed.

  8. Hide Critical Thinking in Plain Sight: Dr. Jennifer Ripley Stickle (West Virginia University). Use layered clicker questions to sneak in logic-building without calling it a "thinking exercise."

  9. Let AI Make the Mistakes: Jennifer Duncan (Georgia State University, Perimeter College). Use AI tools like ChatGPT as a critical thinking foil—spot hallucinations, bias, and BS.

  10. Make Them Teach It Live: Dr. Derek Harmon (The Ohio State University). Have students present their learning in front of peers under pressure—because if they can teach it, they know it.

📌 Educator Bios & Resources:
Find out more about our amazing featured educators

Dr. Christin Monroe is an Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Landmark College, where she has been teaching for five years. She teaches in Principles of Chemistry, Introduction to Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, and Biochemistry, with a focus on supporting neurodivergent learners.

Dr. Margaret Holloway is an Assistant Professor of English and the Composition Coordinator in the English & Modern Languages Department at Clark Atlanta University. Her research is rooted in the rhetoric and composition discipline, and she has nine years of college-level teaching experience.

Dr. Amy Goodman is a Senior Lecturer in the Mathematics Department at Baylor University, where she has taught since 1999. In addition to teaching, she is also a course designer (for the Mathematics Department and the School of Education), OER author, teaching mentor to other faculty and graduate students, and learning analytics researcher. Her pedagogy is founded on the belief that all students - any student - can be successful at mathematics.

Dr. Erika Martinez is a Professor of Instruction at the University of South Florida, where she has been teaching economics for 14 years. She also teaches at UNC-Kenan Flagler Business School's MBA@UNC online program and Santa Barbara City College, covering courses from principles of economics to advanced microeconomic theory and many economic electives. She is the recipient of multiple teaching awards and is passionate about making economics accessible and engaging for all students.

Dr. Charlotte de Araujo is an Assistant Professor, York University with 16+ years of post-secondary undergraduate and graduate teaching experience geared towards biology and biomedical science students. She was recently recognized with a 2023 Faculty of Science Excellence in Teaching Award. Dr. Charlotte has coordinated large-scale biology/biochemistry programs at multiple Ontario based universities and is also a consultant.

Dr. Ryan Herzog is an Associate Professor of Economics, Program Coordinator, and Faculty Fellow at Gonzaga University, where he has been teaching for 16 years. His work focuses on macroeconomics, financial markets, and public policy.

Dr. Mike May is the lower division coordinator in the department of mathematics and statistics at Saint Louis University, where he has taught for more than 30 years. During that time he has looked at how to effectively incorporate numerous technologies into effectively teaching mathematics. 

Dr. Jennifer Ripley Stueckle has spent the past 17 years as a Teaching Professor and Non-Majors Biology Program Director at West Virginia University. While Dr. Ripley Stueckle expertise centers around toxicology and fish physiology, she has taught introductory biology, introductory biology labs, immunology, and human physiology, in addition to creating and directing the introductory biology courses offered through dual enrollment at West Virginia high schools.

Jennifer Duncan is Associate Professor of English at Georgia State University's Perimeter College. Jennifer has been teaching English literature and composition for twenty-five years and specializing in online teaching for fifteen.

Dr. Derek Harmon is an Associate Professor - Clinical in the Department of Biomedical Education and Anatomy at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. For over a decade, he has taught anatomy to medical, graduate, physical therapy, and occupational therapy students, medical residents, and practicing clinicians. His research is focused on the impact of immersive technology on anatomy education and medical simulation.

☎️ Join the Conversation

Got your own sneaky critical thinking tip? We want to hear it! Leave us a voicemail at (512) 765-4688. Whether it involves sticky notes, TikToks, or a dramatic reading of James Baldwin, your strategy might just make it into a future episode.

🔗 Don't forget to subscribe and spread the word! If this episode helped you rethink your classroom approach, pass it along to a colleague who still calls their syllabus "a living document" but hasn't changed it since 2019.

The Heartbeat of Berea: How Hutchins Library Builds Community and Critical Thinkers

Season 1 · Episode 10

mercredi 18 juin 2025Duration 36:47

In this episode of The What & Who of EDU, host LaShawn Springer sits down with Amanda Peach, Associate Director of Library Services at Berea College, a place where students don't just study in the library; they co-author, co-create, and even campaign for their favorite databases.

Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

Learn more about:

  • What it means to run a tuition-free work college in today's educational climate

  • How Hutchins Library serves as a third space for student belonging and well-being

  • Why research consultations are the secret sauce of building student confidence

  • The power of invitation: how Amanda turns students into co-authors and collaborators

  • What faculty and librarians can build together when they treat each other as pedagogical partners

🏫 About Berea College

📐 Information Literacy & Frameworks

🖋️ Open Pedagogy & Zine Making

🎧 Stay tuned to the end for four big takeaways and practical tips you can use, starting today.

📞 Want to weigh in? Leave us a voicemail at 512-765-4688. 📢 Don't forget to subscribe, rate, and share—it helps more educators join the conversation.

 

From Blah to Aha! 10 Instructor-Approved Ways to Engage Students

Season 1 · Episode 9

mercredi 4 juin 2025Duration 24:04

Lectures have a reputation. And it's... not great. Think glazed eyes, hidden phones and the eternal question: "Will this be on the exam?" But lectures don't have to be one-way streets. In this Top 10 episode of The What & Who of EDU, we share 10 engagement strategies straight from real educators who've wrestled with disengaged students, and won.

🔥 Spoiler: There are iClickers, Disney villains, coloring pages, and even campaign speeches involved.

Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

🎓 Episode Highlights:

Don't Compete With AI—Do What It Can't  [00:01:27]
Break the Spell—Reset Focus Every 15 Minutes  [00:03:47]
Pop In a Checkpoint—Mid-Lecture, Not Midnap  [00:5:21]
Let Students Take the Wheel  [00:07:14]
iClickers = Speed Bumps for Your Brain  [00:08:17]
Remix the Medium—Even Disney Counts  [00:10:20]
Don't Just Lecture—Choreograph Learning [00:11:41]
Asynchronous ≠ Autopilot [00:14:05]
Build Belonging Into the Bones  [00:15:50]
Have Students Direct (And SOmetimes Eat) Their Learning [00:18:18]
Flip the Script—Let Students Lead the Questions [00:20:34]

📌 Educator Bios & Resources: Learn more about our amazing featured educators

Dr. Ryan Herzog is an Associate Professor of Economics, Program Coordinator, and Faculty Fellow at Gonzaga University, where he has been teaching for 16 years. His work focuses on macroeconomics, financial markets, and public policy.

Dr. Erika Martinez is a Professor of Instruction at the University of South Florida, where she has been teaching economics for 14 years. She also teaches at UNC-Kenan Flagler Business School's MBA@UNC online program and Santa Barbara City College, covering courses from principles of economics to advanced microeconomic theory and many economic electives. She is the recipient of multiple teaching awards and is passionate about making economics accessible and engaging for all students.

Dr. Margaret Holloway is an Assistant Professor of English and the Composition Coordinator in the English & Modern Languages Department at Clark Atlanta University. Her research is rooted in the rhetoric and composition discipline, and she has nine years of college-level teaching experience.

Dr. Mike May is the lower division coordinator in the department of mathematics and statistics at Saint Louis University, where he has taught for more than 30 years. During that time he has looked at how to effectively incorporate numerous technologies into effectively teaching mathematics. He is currently looking at using spreadsheets in teaching mathematics to business students.

Dr. Christin Monroe is an Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Landmark College, where she has been teaching for five years. She teaches in Principles of Chemistry, Introduction to Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, and Biochemistry, with a focus on supporting neurodivergent learners through inclusive and innovative teaching practices.

Jennifer Duncan is Associate Professor of English at Georgia State University's Perimeter College. Jennifer has been teaching English literature and composition for twenty-five years and specializing in online teaching for fifteen.

Dr. Derek Harmon is an Associate Professor - Clinical in the Department of Biomedical Education and Anatomy at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. For over a decade, he has taught anatomy to medical, graduate, physical therapy, and occupational therapy students, medical residents, and practicing clinicians. His research is focused on the impact of immersive technology on anatomy education and medical simulation.

Betsy Langness has been with Jefferson Community and Technical College since 2002. Prior to becoming a full-time faculty member in 2015, she was a Counselor at the college and taught as an adjunct for 9 years. Before coming to Jefferson, she was a Senior Academic Advisor for the Honors Program at the University of Louisville. She is currently teaching general and developmental psychology courses in a virtual, asynchronous environment.

Dr. Charlotte de Araujo is an Assistant Professor, York University with 16+ years of post-secondary undergraduate and graduate teaching experience geared towards biology and biomedical science students. She was recently recognized with a 2023 Faculty of Science Excellence in Teaching Award. Dr. Charlotte has coordinated large-scale biology/biochemistry programs at multiple Ontario based universities and is also a consultant.

Dr. Jennifer Ripley Stueckle has spent the past 17 years as a Teaching Professor and Non-Majors Biology Program Director at West Virginia University. While Dr. Ripley Stueckle expertise centers around toxicology and fish physiology, she has taught introductory biology, introductory biology labs, immunology, and human physiology, in addition to creating and directing the introductory biology courses offered through dual enrollment at West Virginia high schools.

Adriana Bryant is an English and Developmental English Instructor at Lone Star College–Kingwood in Texas. She teaches courses of different modalities, and strives to create an engaging environment that helps foster her students' growth and overall desire to learn. She also contributes to professional development within her department and college community.

☎️ Have a tip that turns "meh" into "wow"?  Drop us a voicemail at (512) 765-4688 or email us at TheWhatAndWhoOfEDU@gmail.com and you just might hear your voice in a future episode.

🔗 Subscribe. Share. Show Off Your Student Engagement Glow-Up.

Little Reflections, Big Gains: Digging Into the Data on Student Belonging & Metacognition

Season 1 · Episode 8

mercredi 21 mai 2025Duration 29:12

We talk a lot about helping students succeed, but what if the most powerful tools aren't new technologies or teaching hacks, but the quiet moments where students reflect, connect, and feel like they actually belong?

In this special edition of Digging Into the Data on the What & Who of EDU, host Marisa Bluestone returns with Marcy Baughman, VP of Learning Science & Research at Macmillan Learning, to unpack findings from a large-scale, IRB-approved study funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.  With data from 726 students across 29 institutions, this episode explores two deceptively simple tools: a metacognitive reflection resource and a digital tool that fostered real belonging. The results were statistically significant, and included higher exam scores, increased engagement and students saying, "I actually felt like I belonged here."

Whether you're curious about the impact of "soft skills," want to support first-gen students or are just looking for a low-lift way to improve outcomes, this episode has practical insights you can use right away.

Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

🔍 What You'll Learn:

  • Just because students don't say "I need belonging" doesn't mean they don't.
  • How small, reflective check-ins led to measurable gains in student performance.
  • What students really mean when they talk about feeling lost in college.
  • How one grief-sharing moment sparked peer support and classroom connection.
  • Why instructors who responded to student insights saw the biggest payoffs.
  • The surprising power of mentors in normalizing academic doubt.
  • How "good enough" engagement with these tools still moved the needle.
📚 Today's Syllabus:
  • What Makes IRB-Approved Research So Powerful – 00:01:58
  • The Scale and Diversity of the Research – 00:03:18
  • Why Instructors Helped Design the Tools – 00:06:05
  • Belonging in Student Language (Not Research Jargon) – 00:08:01
  • What Reflection Really Looks Like for Busy Students – 00:9:56
  • Why It Worked: The Surprising Impact – 00:10:32
  • Reflection That Actually Changed Outcomes – 00:12:44
  • The Power of Peer Mentorship (Even on Video) – 00:13:43
  • Belonging, Made Visible – 00:14:55
  • How Instructors Integrated These Tools – 00:18:26
  • Implementation Wins and "Good Enough" Habits – 00:21:04
  • What's Next for the Belonging Tool – 00:22:06
  • Final Takeaways & Tips Recap – 00:24:06

Required Reading:

Guest:
Marcy Baughman
VP, Learning Science & Research, Macmillan Learning

Office Hours:
Have a classroom story, tip, or question? Call (512) 765-4688 and you might be featured in a future episode.
Want to be a guest or suggest a topic? Email us at TheWhatAndWhoOfEDU@macmillan.com

Four Strategies, Five Point Gains: Digging Into The Data on The Real Impact of Evidence-Based Teaching

Season 1 · Episode 7

mercredi 14 mai 2025Duration 26:55

What if improving your students' exam scores didn't mean more grading, longer lectures, or sacrificing your personal life to the pedagogical gods? In this special episode of Digging Into the Data, host Marisa Bluestone sits down with Marcy Baughman, VP of Learning Science & Research at Macmillan Learning, to break down a large-scale study funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The focus? Four powerhouse evidence-based teaching strategies and the measurable impact they had on over 1,400 students across three semesters.

From surprising subgroup insights to tips you can try tomorrow, we're giving you the research-backed goods—and a few mic-drop moments you won't want to miss.

Brought to you by Macmillan Learning

🔍 What You'll Learn:

  • Why "thinking about thinking" might just be the ultimate grade booster.
  • What instructors think they're doing vs. what students feel they're experiencing.
  • How small digital nudges created big academic wins.
  • Why it's not just what you teach—but how students understand they're learning.
  • What students really need to hear when they're knee-deep in coursework (and why you should say it more often).
  • How the simple act of assigning the right resource can unlock better outcomes—without adding more to your plate.
  • The one strategy students loved... but couldn't name.
📚 Today's Syllabus:

📜 The Goals Behind the Study → 00:02:01
📊 Defining the Four Strategies → 00:03:28
🏫 The Biggest Surprises → 00:05:10
💡 Metacognition's Outsized Impact → 00:07:17
🛠 Scaling Strategies: What's Ready, What's Not → 00:09:02
🔍 Bridging Perception Gaps in Active Learning → 00:12:23
✨ Instructors Who Pivoted Mid-Semester → 00:13:21
🎓 One Simple, Powerful Teaching Habit → 00:15:40
🎯 How to Implement Goal Setting and Reflection → 00:17:11
🧠 The 5-Point Impact of Evidence Based Teaching → 00:19:03
✨ What We Learned Today — A Brief Summary → 00:22:18

📖 Required Reading:

Links to studies, references, and Macmillan Learning resources mentioned in the episode:

Guest:

Marcy Baughman
VP, Learning Science & Research, Macmillan Learning

Office Hours:

📞 Leave us a voicemail! Got a classroom story, tip, or question? Call (512) 765-4688 and you might be featured in a future episode.

📨 Want to be a guest or suggest a topic? Email us at TheWhatAndWhoOfEDU@macmillan.com.

 

From Copy-Paste to Critical Thinking: 10 AI Guardrails and Hacks Every Educator Needs

Season 1 · Episode 6

mercredi 30 avril 2025Duration 20:15

We've all read those suspiciously flawless essays that scream "I was born in a chatbot!" And while AI isn't going anywhere, neither is our responsibility as educators to teach thinking—not just typing.

In this episode of The What & Who of EDU, host Marisa Bluestone brings you 10 practical AI guardrails and hacks straight from real educators. From rubric-writing clones and "tilted" assignments to Socratic prompt design and digital fire safety, these strategies show how AI can support, not supplant, authentic learning.

This podcast is brought to you by Macmillan Learning.

🎓Today's Syllabus:

  1. Dr. Erika Martinez (Univ. of South Florida) – AI as a digital assistant to boost productivity and reclaim time. [00:02:04]

  2. Jennifer Duncan (Georgia State Univ.) – Use AI to TILT your assignments and make expectations crystal clear. [00:03:14]

  3. Dr. Amy Goodman (Baylor Univ.) – AI as a rubric-writing coach to articulate grading standards—and your sanity. [00:04:54]

  4. Dr. Christin Monroe (Landmark College) – Map AI use back to learning objectives. If it doesn't serve the goal, skip it. [00:06:58]

  5. Adriana Bryant (Lone Star College–Kingwood) – Establish syllabus-based "fire safety" guardrails for safe exploration. [00:09:02]

  6. Dr. Margaret Holloway (Clark Atlanta Univ.) – Limit AI use to brainstorming—so students still do the thinking. [00:10:34]

  7. Betsy Langness (Jefferson Comm. & Tech College) – Promote AI accuracy + ethics: use it, cite it, verify it. [00:12:18]

  8. Julie Moore (Eastern Univ.) – Remind students their stories matter—bots can't replace their lived experience. [00:13:35]

  9. Dr. Amy Goodman (Encore!) – Teach prompt-based learning: Socratic nudges > full-blown solutions. [00:15:39]

  10. Adriana Bryant (Double Encore!) – Require AI documentation for digital literacy and transparency. [00:17:38]

Instructors (in order of appearance):

Dr. Erika Martinez is a Professor of Instruction at the University of South Florida, where she has been teaching economics for 14 years. She also teaches at UNC-Kenan Flagler Business School's MBA@UNC online program and Santa Barbara City College, covering courses from principles of economics to advanced microeconomic theory and many economic electives. She is the recipient of multiple teaching awards and is passionate about making economics accessible and engaging for all students.

Jennifer Duncan is Associate Professor of English at Georgia State University's Perimeter College. Jennifer has been teaching English literature and composition for twenty-five years and specializing in online teaching for fifteen.

Dr. Amy Goodman is a Senior Lecturer in the Mathematics Department at Baylor University, where she has taught since 1999. In addition to teaching, she is also a course designer (for the Mathematics Department and the School of Education), OER author, teaching mentor to other faculty and graduate students, and learning analytics researcher. Her pedagogy is founded on the belief that all students - any student - can be successful at mathematics.

Dr. Christin Monroe is an Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Landmark College, where she has been teaching for five years. She teaches in Principles of Chemistry, Introduction to Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, and Biochemistry, with a focus on supporting neurodivergent learners through inclusive and innovative teaching practices.

Adriana Bryant is an English and Developmental English Instructor at Lone Star College- Kingwood in Texas. She teaches courses of different modalities, and strives to create an engaging environment that helps foster her students' growth and overall desire to learn. She also contributes to professional development within my department and college community.

Dr. Margaret Holloway is an Assistant Professor of English and the Composition Coordinator in the English & Modern Languages Department at Clark Atlanta University. Her research is rooted in the rhetoric and composition discipline, and she has nine years of college-level teaching experience.

Betsy Langness has been with Jefferson Community and Technical College since 2002.  Prior to becoming a full-time faculty member in 2015, she was a Counselor at the college and taught as an adjunct for 9 years.  Before coming to Jefferson, she was a Senior Academic Advisor for the Honors Program at the University of Louisville.  She is currently teaching general and developmental psychology courses in a virtual, asynchronous environment.

Julie Moore has been teaching writing, literature, and writing center pedagogy in Higher Education for 35 years; presently, she works as a Senior Online Academic Advisor and First-Year Composition Instructor for Eastern University's LifeFlex program. The author of four collections of poems, Moore has recently won the Donald Murray Prize from Writing on the Edge and several notable prizes for her poetry.

 

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Not Your Average High School: How Bard Early College is Rewriting the Diploma Track

Season 1 · Episode 5

mercredi 16 avril 2025Duration 30:13

Today's Syllabus:

What happens when we stop seeing high school and college as separate worlds? In this episode, host LaShawn Springer chats with Dr. Siska Brutsaert, principal of Bard High School Early College Bronx, about how their innovative dual enrollment model is disrupting the traditional diploma track and empowering students to take on college-level coursework before they've even turned 18.

We explore how Bard creates a "place to think" by hiring mission-driven faculty, cultivating a deep sense of student agency, and building a supportive learning community where teenagers thrive through academic rigor. Whether you're an educator, administrator, or just someone who believes students are capable of more, this episode is your invitation to rethink what high school can be.

🧠 What You'll Learn

  • How Bard High School Early College blends high school and college into one transformative experience

  • Why trusting students with real intellectual responsibility changes everything

  • How informal writing and faculty workshops build rigorous, yet supportive, classrooms

  • The power of community in reducing academic stress and competition

  • Why scaffolding skills like time management and self-advocacy can be just as important as content mastery

This podcast is brought to you by Macmillan Learning.

 📖 Required Reading

Learn more about Bard High School Early College Bronx: https://bhsec.bard.edu/bronx/

Check out the podcast producer, Macmillan Learning https://www.macmillanlearning.com/college/us

BFW Publishing Group: https://www.bfwpub.com/high-school/us 

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Office Hours: 

📞If this episode got you thinking differently about dual enrollment, trust, or how we build real-world readiness into our classrooms—we want to hear about it. Drop us a voicemail at (512) 765-4688. We might feature your voice in a future episode.

📨 If you have an idea for a show or would like to be a guest, send us an email at: TheWhatAndWhoOfEDU@macmillan.com. 

For more information about our hosts, you can visit us here. https://go.macmillanlearning.com/the-what-and-who-of-edu#about 

 


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