Walk the Walk: Learning and Leading For a Better World

Marla Cornelius: Part 1

31 min · 2 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Marla Cornelius: Part 1

Descripción

In this episode of Walk the Walk, Scott McLarty, Head of School at Providence High School, sits down with Marla Cornelius, nonprofit consultant, coach, and strengths-based leadership expert. Together, they explore what it means to lead with purpose in a rapidly changing world, examining how leaders can balance vision and execution while staying grounded in values and impact. Marla shares her journey into the nonprofit sector, helping leaders better understand themselves through strengths-based coaching. She emphasizes the importance of self-awareness, authenticity, and continuous growth as the foundation for effective leadership. The conversation explores several key themes: * Leading Self First: Understanding how purpose, values, and self-awareness shape effective leadership. * Management vs. Leadership: Exploring the balance between big-picture vision and the practical execution needed to achieve it. * Adapting to Change: Examining how leaders can navigate uncertainty by focusing on impact, embracing flexibility, and using tools like scenario planning. * Strengths-Based Leadership: Highlighting how identifying and leveraging natural talents can empower individuals and teams. Scott and Marla also reflect on the role of humility in leadership, the tension between ego and purpose, and the idea that leadership is not about position, but about influence and authenticity. They conclude by reinforcing a powerful idea: anyone can lead from anywhere, and meaningful impact begins with knowing who you are and choosing how you show up. Please visit www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk [https://www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk] to join our mailing list and become a part of the ongoing conversation. Walk the Walk can be found on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, LinkedIn – or wherever you listen. Please support us by liking and subscribing. Thanks for walking the walk.

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17 episodios

episode Icons, Idols, and the AI Mirror artwork

Icons, Idols, and the AI Mirror

In this episode of Walk the Walk, Scott McLarty, Head of School at Providence High School, explores a provocative idea: what if artificial intelligence is not best understood as a tool, a threat, or a breakthrough - but as a mirror? Scott explores the idea that AI might be reflecting our humanity back to itself - our creativity and brilliance alongside our biases, assumptions, and limitations. But like any mirror, it may do more than simply reveal. It can also distort, flatten, and capture our attention in ways that subtly shape who we’re becoming. He makes a powerful distinction between idols and icons. An idol captures our gaze and holds us in place, while an icon points beyond itself, inviting deeper understanding and meaning. In the age of AI, this distinction becomes essential. When we begin to turn to AI for certainty, affirmation, or meaning, we risk becoming less attentive, less curious, and less human. At the heart of the episode is a guiding question for the series: Will AI help us become more fully human or more machine-like? Scott challenges listeners to move beyond conversations about productivity and efficiency and instead consider formation. What habits are we strengthening? What capacities are we outsourcing? And what must remain deeply, irreducibly human? To frame this reflection, Scott highlights key tensions shaping our engagement with AI:  * Reflection vs. Distortion - When does AI help us see more clearly, and when does it reshape reality?  * Productivity vs. Purpose - Are we creating more value, or simply more noise?  * Simulation vs. Substance - Are we becoming more understanding, or just appearing more polished?  * Efficiency vs. Wisdom - Are we becoming better, or just faster?   Scott points out that while AI can generate language, simulate empathy, and accelerate output, it cannot replace conscience, relationship, responsibility, or love. These are the human capacities education is meant to form and protect.  Scott concludes with a simple but powerful framework:  The mirror shows us ourselves.  The idol traps us in ourselves.  The icon points us beyond ourselves.  AI will not decide which one it becomes. We will.  Please visit www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk [https://www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk] to join our mailing list and become part of the ongoing conversation.  Walk the Walk can be found on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, LinkedIn—or wherever you listen. Please support us by liking and subscribing.  Thanks for walking the walk.

6 de jun de 202612 min
episode AI Is Neither Our Savior nor Our Destroyer. So What Is It? artwork

AI Is Neither Our Savior nor Our Destroyer. So What Is It?

In this episode of Walk the Walk, Scott McLarty begins a new series exploring one of the most important and complicated forces shaping our world: artificial intelligence. Moving beyond both the hype and fear that often dominate the AI conversation, Scott invites listeners into a deeper reflection on what these technologies mean for education, leadership, relationships, and the future of humanity itself. Rather than framing AI as either a miracle solution or an existential threat, Scott challenges listeners to resist simplistic narratives and ask more meaningful questions about human dignity, wisdom, consciousness, creativity, and what it means to educate young people in a rapidly changing world. Drawing on insights from education, philosophy, faith, and leadership, he argues that the most important questions surrounding AI are not ultimately technological questions, but deeply human ones. Throughout the episode, Scott explores several key ideas, including:  * Moving Beyond Extremes: Resisting both techno-utopian optimism and fear-driven dystopian thinking.  * Formation Over Technology: Exploring why the AI conversation is ultimately about shaping human beings, not simply adopting new tools.  * Protecting Human Dignity: Asking how emerging technologies can strengthen learning, relationships, and the common good rather than diminish them.  * Paying Attention to What Shapes Us: Reflecting on how AI not only helps us do things differently, but may also shape the way we think, create, communicate, and live.  Scott also examines why schools, families, and communities cannot outsource wisdom in the age of AI, emphasizing the need for a deeply human-centered approach grounded in ethical responsibility, compassion, integrity, and thoughtful discernment. Throughout the episode, Scott encourages listeners to approach AI not with panic or blind optimism, but with curiosity, courage, humility, and a willingness to wrestle honestly with difficult questions about the future we are building together. Please visit www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk [https://www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk?utm_source=chatgpt.com] to join our mailing list and become part of the ongoing conversation. Walk the Walk can be found on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], Amazon Music [https://music.amazon.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com] — or wherever you listen. Please support us by liking and subscribing.  Thanks for walking the walk.

30 de may de 202611 min
episode What We Carry Into Summer artwork

What We Carry Into Summer

In this episode of Walk the Walk, Scott McLarty reflects on the emotional threshold that arrives at the end of every school year, a moment filled with exhaustion, gratitude, celebration, uncertainty, and hope. As students, parents, teachers, and school leaders prepare to step into summer, Scott explores what it means to navigate seasons of transition and change.  Drawing on themes explored throughout the first season of the podcast, Scott revisits the challenges of living and leading in a VUCA and BANI world — one marked by volatility, anxiety, complexity, and rapid change. Rather than offering simple answers, he invites listeners to consider the kind of leadership and humanity this moment requires: courage, curiosity, humility, resilience, compassion, and the willingness to embrace mystery. Throughout the episode, Scott highlights several meaningful practices for renewal this summer, including:  * Recovering Our Attention: Reclaiming space for presence, reflection, and deeper human connection.  * Reading, Listening, and Wandering: Following curiosity and allowing ideas to stretch and renew us.  * Practicing Better Questions: Developing the habit of asking thoughtful, courageous, and compassionate questions.  * Making Room for Joy: Remembering that rest, laughter, wonder, and play are essential parts of human flourishing.  Scott also looks ahead to the next two episodes — as well as the next season — of Walk the Walk, which will explore one of the defining forces shaping our future: artificial intelligence. Through questions about wisdom, consciousness, leadership, and what it means to be fully human, the upcoming series will examine how we prepare young people to navigate an increasingly technological world without losing their humanity in the process. Scott then leaves listeners with one final invitation: to take a walk with a single meaningful question and resist the urge to rush toward an answer, allowing the question to slowly shape their perspective, reflection, and growth.  Please visit www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk [https://www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk?utm_source=chatgpt.com] to join our mailing list and become part of the ongoing conversation.   Walk the Walk can be found on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], Amazon Music [https://music.amazon.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com] — or wherever you listen. Please support us by liking and subscribing.  Thanks for walking the walk.

23 de may de 202612 min
episode Marla Cornelius: Part 2 artwork

Marla Cornelius: Part 2

In this episode of Walk the Walk, Scott McLarty continues his conversation with Marla Cornelius, a nonprofit consultant, coach, and strengths-based leadership expert. Together, they take a deeper look at the CliftonStrengths Assessment, exploring what it is, why it matters, and how it can be applied in everyday leadership, learning, and relationships. Marla unpacks the shift from a deficit-based mindset to a strengths-based approach, emphasizing the importance of focusing on what’s right with people and how that perspective drives engagement, growth, and impact. The conversation explores several key themes: * Understanding Strengths: Examining CliftonStrengths as a research-based, descriptive tool that helps individuals identify and articulate their natural talents. * From Insight to Action: Exploring the “name it, claim it, aim it” framework and how strengths can be intentionally applied to real challenges and goals. * Strengths in Practice: Looking at how strengths show up in the classroom, in leadership, and in everyday decision-making. * Relationships and Communication: Understanding how awareness of our own strengths, and those of others, can reduce friction and improve how we work and live together. Scott and Marla also walk through Scott’s own CliftonStrengths results, offering a practical, real-time example of how this work can deepen understanding and shape leadership. They conclude with a clear takeaway: strengths aren’t just something to identify—they’re something to use, intentionally, in how we learn deeply, lead bravely, and connect with others. Please visit www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk [https://www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk] to join our mailing list and become a part of the ongoing conversation. Walk the Walk can be found on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, LinkedIn – or wherever you listen. Please support us by liking and subscribing.  Thanks for walking the walk.

9 de may de 202642 min
episode Marla Cornelius: Part 1 artwork

Marla Cornelius: Part 1

In this episode of Walk the Walk, Scott McLarty, Head of School at Providence High School, sits down with Marla Cornelius, nonprofit consultant, coach, and strengths-based leadership expert. Together, they explore what it means to lead with purpose in a rapidly changing world, examining how leaders can balance vision and execution while staying grounded in values and impact. Marla shares her journey into the nonprofit sector, helping leaders better understand themselves through strengths-based coaching. She emphasizes the importance of self-awareness, authenticity, and continuous growth as the foundation for effective leadership. The conversation explores several key themes: * Leading Self First: Understanding how purpose, values, and self-awareness shape effective leadership. * Management vs. Leadership: Exploring the balance between big-picture vision and the practical execution needed to achieve it. * Adapting to Change: Examining how leaders can navigate uncertainty by focusing on impact, embracing flexibility, and using tools like scenario planning. * Strengths-Based Leadership: Highlighting how identifying and leveraging natural talents can empower individuals and teams. Scott and Marla also reflect on the role of humility in leadership, the tension between ego and purpose, and the idea that leadership is not about position, but about influence and authenticity. They conclude by reinforcing a powerful idea: anyone can lead from anywhere, and meaningful impact begins with knowing who you are and choosing how you show up. Please visit www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk [https://www.providencehigh.org/walkthewalk] to join our mailing list and become a part of the ongoing conversation. Walk the Walk can be found on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, LinkedIn – or wherever you listen. Please support us by liking and subscribing. Thanks for walking the walk.

2 de may de 202631 min