Beyond the Margins: The Podcast

It Takes the Village: Addressing Chronic Absenteeism Through Relationships

48 min · 23. juni 2026
episode It Takes the Village: Addressing Chronic Absenteeism Through Relationships cover

Description

In this episode of Beyond the Margins, Dr. Sohn A. Butts sits down with veteran educator and Pupil Personnel Worker Gary Hughes for an honest conversation about chronic absenteeism, student disengagement, and the importance of rebuilding trust between schools, families, and communities. Drawing on more than 25 years of educational experience, Hughes shares powerful insights into the barriers that prevent students from attending school consistently, including generational distrust of education, housing instability, academic struggles, and a lack of relevance in the classroom. Together, he and Dr. Butts explore why relationship-building, empathy, family engagement, and student voice are essential components of meaningful educational reform. This thought-provoking discussion challenges traditional approaches to attendance and accountability while offering practical, human-centered strategies for supporting students both inside and outside the classroom. Whether you're an educator, administrator, counselor, parent, or community advocate, this episode serves as a powerful reminder that student success is never achieved in isolation—it truly takes a village.

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All episodes

21 episodes

episode Beyond the Sentence: Why Higher Education in Prison Is an Investment in Human Potential artwork

Beyond the Sentence: Why Higher Education in Prison Is an Investment in Human Potential

In this compelling and deeply human conversation, Dr. Sohn A. Butts sits with educator, professor, and prison higher education scholar Dr. Mark Cornelius Booker to examine the transformative power of education beyond prison walls. Drawing on decades of teaching in correctional institutions, Booker challenges listeners to move beyond public perceptions of incarceration and instead view incarcerated individuals as students first—human beings whose capacity for growth, learning, and contribution does not disappear because of a criminal conviction. Together, Butts and Booker argue that the purpose of education is not to relitigate a person's past but to cultivate human development, dignity, and possibility. Throughout the conversation, Booker dismantles common misconceptions surrounding higher education in prison, illustrating how rigorous academic expectations, meaningful relationships, and culturally responsive teaching create environments where scholarship flourishes. He reflects on the unique challenges of teaching inside correctional institutions, the importance of extending grace to both students and correctional staff, and the often-overlooked role that HBCUs can play in expanding educational opportunity for incarcerated learners. Booker argues that prisons should not be viewed as places where education ends, but as spaces where authentic learning, accountability, and personal transformation can begin. The discussion broadens into a powerful conversation about restorative justice, public policy, and the long-term impact of higher education on individuals and communities. Booker contends that investing in prison education is not merely a question of reducing recidivism—it is an investment in safer communities, healthier institutions, and restored human potential. Calling for policymakers, educators, and the public to witness prison education firsthand, he reminds listeners that transformation cannot be fully understood from a distance. The episode ultimately reframes prison education as an act of hope, scholarship, and justice, affirming that education retains its power to change lives regardless of where learning takes place.

14. juli 202657 min
episode The Leadership Effect: Building Cultures Where Students, Teachers, and Communities Thrive artwork

The Leadership Effect: Building Cultures Where Students, Teachers, and Communities Thrive

In this inspiring and practical conversation, Dr. Sohn A. Butts sits with educational leader, author, and mentor Tyrone Richardson to explore how authentic leadership transforms schools, classrooms, and communities. Reflecting on his journey from a challenging childhood in Hartford, Connecticut—marked by poverty, educational setbacks, and the absence of his father—to serving as a teacher, principal, executive director, and district academic leader, Richardson shares how pivotal mentors, meaningful relationships, and unwavering perseverance shaped both his identity and his purpose in education. At the heart of the conversation is a vision of leadership grounded in relationships, relevance, and modeling. Richardson argues that educators cannot expect engagement without first understanding the students and communities they serve. Rather than relying on compliance or control, he demonstrates how curiosity, cultural responsiveness, and meaningful connections create classrooms where students ask questions, make connections, and become active participants in their own learning. He also emphasizes that effective leaders must model the practices they expect from teachers, creating coherent systems where engagement begins with leadership and cascades throughout the organization. The discussion expands into the importance of representation, educational entrepreneurship, and sustaining a lifelong career in education. Richardson reflects on the unique responsibility Black male educators carry as visible role models, the need to recruit and retain more educators of color, and the value of creating positive educational spaces through books, publishing, mentoring, and podcasting. He challenges educators to think strategically about career longevity, leadership development, and service beyond the classroom while advocating for equitable school funding as one of the profession's most urgent priorities. Throughout the episode, Richardson reminds listeners that leadership is measured not by titles but by the cultures we build, the people we develop, and the futures we help shape.

7. juli 202651 min
episode Beyond Translation: Reframing Multilingual Learners Through Belonging, Identity, and Asset-Based Education artwork

Beyond Translation: Reframing Multilingual Learners Through Belonging, Identity, and Asset-Based Education

What happens when students finally see themselves reflected in the educators who teach them, the leaders who guide them, and the advocates who believe in them? In this episode of Beyond the Margins, Dr. Sohn A. Butts sits down with educator and multilingual learning advocate Nitza Rivera for a powerful conversation about representation, identity, belonging, and the conditions that make authentic student engagement possible. Drawing from her own lived experience as a multilingual learner, Rivera challenges deficit-based thinking and offers a compelling vision for schools where students' languages, cultures, and experiences are recognized as strengths—not barriers. Together, they explore why representation matters, how belonging fuels engagement, the critical role of trust and relationships, and what educators can do to create learning environments where every student feels seen, valued, and empowered to succeed. Whether you're a teacher, school leader, counselor, or anyone committed to educational equity, this conversation will challenge your thinking and inspire your practice. Because before students can fully engage, they must first believe they belong. And when they do, everything changes.

30. juni 202656 min
episode It Takes the Village: Addressing Chronic Absenteeism Through Relationships artwork

It Takes the Village: Addressing Chronic Absenteeism Through Relationships

In this episode of Beyond the Margins, Dr. Sohn A. Butts sits down with veteran educator and Pupil Personnel Worker Gary Hughes for an honest conversation about chronic absenteeism, student disengagement, and the importance of rebuilding trust between schools, families, and communities. Drawing on more than 25 years of educational experience, Hughes shares powerful insights into the barriers that prevent students from attending school consistently, including generational distrust of education, housing instability, academic struggles, and a lack of relevance in the classroom. Together, he and Dr. Butts explore why relationship-building, empathy, family engagement, and student voice are essential components of meaningful educational reform. This thought-provoking discussion challenges traditional approaches to attendance and accountability while offering practical, human-centered strategies for supporting students both inside and outside the classroom. Whether you're an educator, administrator, counselor, parent, or community advocate, this episode serves as a powerful reminder that student success is never achieved in isolation—it truly takes a village.

23. juni 202648 min
episode From Bored to Bought In: Unlocking Contagious Teaching artwork

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In this episode of Beyond the Margins, Dr. Sohn A. Butts sits down with nationally recognized educator, speaker, and trainer Stephen Boyd to explore one of education's most pressing challenges: student engagement. Drawing on more than 25 years of experience, Boyd shares why engagement is not about compliance or control, but about creating learning experiences that students genuinely want to be part of. At the center of the conversation is Boyd's Contagious Teaching Framework, built around four essential elements: Connection, Context, Content, and Containment. Together, Dr. Butts and Boyd unpack practical strategies for increasing engagement, reducing behavioral challenges, fostering stronger relationships, and designing classrooms where students feel seen, valued, and motivated to learn. This episode challenges educators to rethink traditional approaches to classroom management and instruction. Whether you're a teacher, school leader, instructional coach, or education advocate, you'll leave with actionable insights and a renewed understanding that when engagement increases, achievement follows.

16. juni 202644 min