ChangED
What did you think of the episode? Send us a text! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2245327/fan_mail/new] A few minutes into this conversation, we realize something: the most eye-opening part of global education is how much of it feels familiar. Dr. Christine Royce, a faculty member at Shippensburg University, joins us fresh off a Fulbright Scholar experience in Cairo, Egypt, where she taught future STEM teachers and worked alongside university faculty in a program built to prepare educators for grades 7 to 12. We get specific about what she noticed on the ground. The structure of teacher preparation can look surprisingly similar, but the day-to-day learning conditions change everything: different access to materials, different tech realities, and students collaborating in ways shaped by shared devices and limited campus-wide Wi-Fi. We also unpack a huge instructional wrinkle that’s easy to overlook from afar: STEM subjects taught in English even when it’s not students’ native language, and what that can mean for scaffolding, participation, and cognitive load. Then the conversation turns to purpose and motivation. The Cairo program ties coursework to practical application and the “grand challenges” of the country, pushing integrated STEM thinking instead of isolated subjects. Christine shares a moment during Ramadan that stops us in our tracks: an extra class session added because the learning wasn’t done, and students showed up ready to engage. It raises a simple question with big implications: what happens when learners truly see education as a scarce, valuable opportunity? If you’re interested in STEM education, teacher prep, global education, or meaningful professional learning, you’ll leave with concrete insights and a push to seek perspective, even if it’s just the next classroom over. Subscribe, share this with an educator friend, and leave a review, then tell us: what’s one place you could go to learn something new about your own teaching? Want to send us a show idea or just say hi? Email us at: thechangedpodcast@gmail.com!
132 Episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til å kommentere
Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av ChangED sitt community!