Coverbild der Sendung Critical Connections

Critical Connections

Podcast von Critical Connections

Englisch

Persönliche Erzählungen & Gespräche

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Critical Connections are formed by building authentic relationships, through listening with all the senses of the body and the mind. Through small actions and connections, patterns emerge to create ecosystems and societies, and through intentional change, we can build the worlds we long for. The Critical Connections podcast is dedicated to educating in a way that resonates and invites listeners to become active community members engaged in the fulfilling work of social impact. DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed are those of the podcast participants alone, and do not necessarily represent Utah Valley University or the UVU Center for Social Impact.

Alle Folgen

29 Folgen

Episode Pockets of Care: Conflict as a Tool to Build Community Cover

Pockets of Care: Conflict as a Tool to Build Community

We need community now more than ever...but what does that look like?  As we navigate connecting with others and learning from other ways of knowing, we’re likely not going to learn them from people who look or live like us, and certainly we’re not going to learn them from people we agree with on everything. We are likely going to disagree and argue; we will have conflict.  But is there a way to do that doesn’t cause harm? Can conflict be productive, or generative even?  Can conflict pull us closer to care, closer to solutions, closer together?  Emily Taylor, an expert conflict mediator and an ombudsman at Utah Valley University, joins us as we discuss how to have conversations that matter, and how we can use them to build the connections we need to survive and thrive. DISCLAIMER: The opinions and views expressed within this podcast do not necessarily reflect Utah Valley University, UVU's Ombuds Office, or UVU's Center for Social Impact. References: brown, a.m. (2017). Emergent Strategy. (pp. 3). AK Press. Needelman, J. (2023, March 14). Forget Utopia. Ignore Dystopia. Embrace Protopia! The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/14/special-series/protopia-movement.html [https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/14/special-series/protopia-movement.html] Limón, A. (2022). The End of Poetry. The Hurting Kind. Milkweed Editions. Taylor, E. (2021). Conflict Fluent.

27. Nov. 2024 - 1 h 1 min
Episode Surviving the Apocalypse: Looking to Other Ways of Knowing to Survive and Thrive Cover

Surviving the Apocalypse: Looking to Other Ways of Knowing to Survive and Thrive

The Critical Mass Podcast returns for it's third season with a reinvigorated focus, and a new name; Critical Connections. We're going to talk about the new name, what it means, and honor the name we came from. We also turn our eyes to the future, to confront what can feel like an apocalyptic time in our history. We're joined by Dezi Lynn, a Diné educator whose expertise in pattern-recognition and empowering ways of knowing and learning will help us consider potential pathways to surviving, and maybe thriving, through the future. DISCLAIMER: The opinions and views expressed within this podcast do not necessarily reflect Utah Valley University or UVU's Center for Social Impact. References: brown, a.m. (2017). Emergent Strategy. (pp. 3). AK Press. Kimmerer, R.W. (2013). Braiding Sweetgrass. (pp. 207). Milkweed Editions.

2. Okt. 2024 - 43 min
Episode Thinkers and Makers: STEM vs Humanities Part 2 Cover

Thinkers and Makers: STEM vs Humanities Part 2

Dani wants to know what goes on in STEM departments at UVU. She talks to students of all walks of life to understand how narratives about STEM--who belongs, and who doesn't--affect those who study the 'hard' sciences. Due to the nature of this episode, the interviews are sprinkled throughout rather than sectioned off as in previous episodes. While our intention was to have every interviewer introduce themselves once at the beginning and then rely on listeners to recognize their voice later in the episode, about half of the introductins were lost, and listeners reported difficulty knowing who was talking when. I've provide timecodes below for the interviewees, and I apologize to them--especially those who provided me with beautiful introductions which were not used in the final cut--and to listeners who have a difficult time following the narrative. Thank you all for a wonderful year, and I hope you enjoy the final episode. Timecodes: Diana Molina 6:20, 18:50, 32:31 Pedro Del Valle 12:55, 30:30, 35:55 Abigail Gutierrez Carmona 16:38 Tayler Fearn 17:39, 29:28 NOTE: The opinions expressed are those of the podcast participants alone, and do not necessarily represent Utah Valley University or the UVU Center for Social Impact.

22. Mai 2024 - 42 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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