Coverbild der Sendung The TechEd Clubhouse

The TechEd Clubhouse

Podcast von Dan Thomas

Englisch

Wissen​schaft & Techno​logie

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The Tech Ed Clubhouse explores teaching through the lens of STEM, CTE, and hands-on learning—focusing on curiosity, professional judgment, and designing experiences that make learning feel real again. Less compliance. More thinking. Built for real classrooms.

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97 Folgen

Episode Stop Teaching? Jason Kennedy on Designing Learning That Actually Works - TEC97 Cover

Stop Teaching? Jason Kennedy on Designing Learning That Actually Works - TEC97

What if the biggest problem in education right now… isn’t student motivation? What if it’s assignment design? In this episode of the Tech Ed Clubhouse Podcast, I sit down with curriculum director, author, and learning designer Jason Kennedy to unpack the difference between teaching and designing learning. We dig into: * compliance vs real engagement * why “doing the work” doesn’t always mean learning * how AI can help teachers create better learning experiences * why some students thrive in art, STEM, shop, and music classes * how success criteria and feedback change everything * what teachers can do tomorrow without completely overhauling their classroom Jason also shares practical ways teachers can redesign tasks so students do more of the thinking, decision-making, and learning themselves. This conversation connects directly to recent episodes around assignment design, independence, and why AI didn’t break education—it exposed weaknesses that were already there. 🎯 Key Takeaways * Engagement is not entertainment * Compliance can hide a lack of learning * Tasks should be designed, not just assigned * Feedback matters more than grades * AI can reduce teacher workload while increasing personalization * Students need ownership, choice, and opportunities to think * The best examples of learning often already exist inside your building 🧠 Big Ideas from the Episode * “If the teacher is doing most of the talking, questioning, and work… there may be a lot of teaching happening, but not a lot of learning.” * “Tasks must be designed for engagement and evidence of learning.” * “We don’t need to throw everything out. We need to design better.” 🔗 Connect with Jason Kennedy 🌐 Website: Let’s Quit Teaching [https://www.letsquitteaching.com] 🎧 Listen & Connect🎙️ The Tech Ed Clubhouse Podcast 🌐 CoachThomasTech Website [https://coachthomastech.com] ▶️ Tech Ed Clubhouse on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@teched_clubhouse_podcast/podcasts] If this episode challenged your thinking, share it with another educator who’s trying to move beyond compliance and toward real learning.

Gestern - 39 min
Episode What If There Was No Red Tape? Rebuilding Education with the Thinkering Collective - TEC96 Cover

What If There Was No Red Tape? Rebuilding Education with the Thinkering Collective - TEC96

What happens when educators stop waiting for permission… and start building the kind of learning students actually deserve? In this episode of The Tech Ed Clubhouse Podcast, I sit down with Garrett Wilhelm and Evin Schwartz from the Thinkering Collective to talk about humanizing education, supporting innovators inside schools, and creating learning experiences that students remember for life. The conversation dives into why so many educators feel stuck, how traditional systems suppress innovation, and why project-based, community-connected learning matters more now than ever. From outdoor learning labs and bird sanctuaries to statewide innovation fellowships and AI literacy, this episode explores what happens when teachers are trusted to create again. If you've ever felt like schools are missing the point… this conversation is for you. 🎯 Key Takeaways * Why the most innovative educators are often isolated inside schools * How the Thinkering Collective is building a nationwide network of teacher innovators * The real reason students remember projects—but forget worksheets * Why “soft skills” are actually essential human skills * How community partnerships can transform learning experiences * The importance of giving educators agency, mentorship, and follow-through * Why AI is accelerating the need for more human-centered learning * How project-based learning naturally integrates math, literacy, science, communication, and career readiness * What “no red tape” education could actually look like 🧠 Big Ideas from the Episode “The project becomes the curriculum.” “Students don’t remember worksheets. They remember what they built.” “Human is the currency.” “We’re not anti-AI. We’re pro-human.” “The innovators in schools are often treated like outsiders.” 🔗 Connect with the Thinkering Collective 🌐 Thinkering Collective Website [https://www.thinkeringcollective.org/] 📰 Thinkering Media Substack [https://thinkeringmedia.substack.com/] Learn more about their fellowships, educator networks, statewide initiatives, and community-driven innovation projects. 🎧 About The Tech Ed Clubhouse Podcast The Tech Ed Clubhouse Podcast explores STEM, project-based learning, AI, creativity, play, and practical ways to make learning more human. Hosted by veteran educator and consultant Dan Thomas, each episode focuses on ideas educators can actually use—without the hype. 📌 Share This Episode If this episode sparked an idea for your classroom, school, or district: ✅ Share it with another educator ✅ Post it on social media ✅ Start a conversation in your building ✅ Ask: What would we create if there was no red tape?

18. Mai 2026 - 44 min
Episode Beyond Compliance: Building Curious, Creative Thinkers with Dr. Katie Trowbridge - TEC95 Cover

Beyond Compliance: Building Curious, Creative Thinkers with Dr. Katie Trowbridge - TEC95

What happens when schools become more focused on answers than thinking? In this episode of The TechEd Clubhouse Podcast, I sit down with educator, nonprofit leader, and author Katie Trowbridge to unpack one of the biggest challenges facing education today: the slow loss of curiosity, creativity, and human connection in classrooms. From AP students trapped in compliance culture to reluctant learners who thrive when given ownership, we explore what deeper thinking actually looks like in real classrooms—not just in theory. Katie shares insights from her work with Curiosity to Create and explains how curiosity, creative thinking, critical thinking, and connection work together to create meaningful learning experiences. We also dive into: Why “right answer culture” is hurting learning The danger of over-standardized teaching Productive struggle and the fear of failure Why teams matter more than groups What educators can learn from coaches, band directors, and shop teachers How relationship-building changes classroom culture Why AI-resistant assignments start with better design The importance of process over product This episode is packed with practical ideas for teachers, leaders, and anyone trying to create classrooms where students think, connect, and take risks. Key Takeaways Curiosity must be nurtured intentionally as students get older Compliance-driven classrooms often suppress creativity and risk-taking Productive struggle is essential for deeper learning Reflection is the missing piece in many classrooms Teams build stronger collaboration than temporary “groups” The best learning environments often already exist in music, athletics, and hands-on classrooms AI doesn’t expose cheating problems—it exposes weak assignment design Human connection is foundational to meaningful learning Mentioned in This Episode Curiosity to Create [https://curiosity2create.org/] Katie Trowbridge Website [https://www.katietrowbridge.com/] Lead Boldly, Think Deeply [https://www.katietrowbridge.com/lead-boldly-think-deeply/] Deeper Thinking in the Classroom [https://www.katietrowbridge.com/deeper-thinking-in-the-classroom-2/] Memorable Quotes “We have to stop managing tasks and start mentoring thought.” — Katie Trowbridge “We’ve lost the joy of struggle.” — Katie Trowbridge “Kids don’t come to school to watch us work.” “If a chatbot can complete your assignment, that’s a design problem.” Connect with the Show Follow The TechEd Clubhouse Podcast for conversations around: STEM PBL Creativity AI in education Curiosity-driven learning Practical classroom innovation

11. Mai 2026 - 50 min
Episode Stop Explaining: Why Your Lesson Starts in the Wrong Place - TEC94 Cover

Stop Explaining: Why Your Lesson Starts in the Wrong Place - TEC94

🔥 Episode Summary Most lessons start the same way: Explain it → practice it → assess it. That sequence feels safe. It’s also the problem. In this episode, I break down why starting with explanation kills thinking—and what to do instead. Across ELA, math, science, and social studies, I show how a simple shift in sequence creates more engagement, better thinking, and real independence… without blowing up your unit plan. This isn’t a new strategy. It’s a different starting point. 🎯 What You’ll Get Why “content first” feels right—but limits thinking How AI exposed the difference between compliance and real learning What actually happens when you put the problem first Simple ways to try this tomorrow (no extra prep) 🧠 The Shift Don’t explain first. Start with the problem. Let students wrestle before you rescue. That discomfort? That’s where thinking starts. 🛠️ What This Looks Like (Real Classrooms) ELA: Start with a flawed argument → let students find what’s wrong Math: Put the problem up cold → delay the steps Science: Run the lab first → explain after Social Studies: Lead with a primary source → add context second Same move. Different subjects. 🔁 The Framework Build → Think → Reflect (BTR) Build: Do the task before the explanation Think: Add content after students attempt it Reflect: Ask what they’d change or do differently Miss the last step, and it never sticks. 🎯 Try It Tuesday Take one assignment and ask: “Can students complete this without making a single decision?” If yes: Put the problem first Hold the vocabulary End with one reflection question That’s the shift. 💬 Keep It Going Try it. See what happens. Even if it gets weird—that’s the point. Share how it goes: 📲 @CoachThomasTech 🎧 About the Podcast The TechEd Clubhouse Podcast — practical, no-fluff ideas you can use tomorrow to make learning more active, meaningful, and real.

4. Mai 2026 - 36 min
Episode Independent Students on a Tuesday - TEC93 Cover

Independent Students on a Tuesday - TEC93

Episode Summary What if the best example of student-centered learning in your building isn’t in a framework or a PD session—but right down the hall? In this episode, Dan builds on last week’s idea that AI didn’t break education—it exposed weak assignment design—and takes it one step further. Even when students are “thinking,” they still may not be developing independence. The difference is decision-making. From the band room to the shop, from athletics to art, this episode breaks down what’s actually working in schools right now—and how to bring those same structures into your classroom on a regular Tuesday, even with a test on Friday. Key Takeaways If a chatbot can complete your assignment, it’s not a tech problem—it’s a design problem. Thinking is not the same as independence. Students need opportunities to make decisions, adjust, and try again. Some of the most effective classrooms already exist in your building—band, art, shop, athletics. Students who struggle in core classes often thrive in environments where they can do before being told, get immediate feedback, and iterate without penalty. You don’t need a full overhaul. You need a small structural shift. The Big Idea Independence isn’t built through better instructions. It’s built through better decisions. Try This Tomorrow (The Tuesday Shift) Start with the problem. Don’t explain it right away. Give students a task and let them try, even if it’s messy. Then teach into their thinking. Use what they did to introduce the concept so the content has context. End with a decision. Ask, “What would you change if you tried this again?” Same class. Same time. Just one added element: student decision-making. What to Look for in Your Building Instead of copying activities, look at how learning works. In band, students try, adjust, and refine. In athletics, they practice reps before the game. In art, mistakes are part of the process. In theater, they run it before explaining it. In shop or CTE, the work provides immediate, honest feedback. If every student’s work looks the same, they probably didn’t make real decisions. The Student to Watch Think about the student who struggles in math, ELA, or social studies. The one who gets redirected constantly and feels disengaged. Then watch what happens when they walk into PE, art, or shop. Same student. Different structure. This Week’s Challenge Visit one teacher down the hall—art, shop, coach, or another colleague. Ask, “Where do your students make decisions?” Bring one idea back to your classroom and try it on your next Tuesday. Connect Have you tried this? Seen a shift? Reach out and share: @CoachThomasTech Final Thought We’ve been chasing tools. But the model we’re looking for has been in our schools the whole time. If this episode connects with you, share it with a colleague and try one small shift this week.

27. Apr. 2026 - 33 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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