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Listening to Learn

Podcast de Pacific Crest

inglés

Tecnología y ciencia

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We believe that fostering authentic, student-centered learning is an ongoing process of discovery. It requires us to listen deeply—to our students, to our colleagues, and to the principles that guide effective educational practices.Our monthly podcast, Listening to Learn, will help you do just that!Each month, we will explore a different facet of Process Education, translating its powerful principles into practical strategies for your classroom, institution, and self! From fostering self-growth and metacognition to designing quality learning experiences, we will do our very best to provide you with fresh perspectives and insights you can put to work increasing student success.(Built with the help of Google Notebook LM's Deep Dive.)

Todos los episodios

10 episodios

episode Why Structured Cooperation Beats Group Work artwork

Why Structured Cooperation Beats Group Work

This episode is specifically tailored for educators who might doubt whether the frustrations of requiring students to work in cooperative teams are truly worth the effort. Acknowledging the initial challenges, such as the upfront planning required and the difficult shift for instructors from being the "provider of knowledge" to a "facilitator", this episode will reassure and persuade hesitant teachers. You'll learn how the temporary hurdles of group work yield profound dividends, not only by increasing academic achievement, critical thinking, and retention, but also by equipping students with essential, lifelong interpersonal skills. By fostering positive interdependence and shared accountability, you'll find out how cooperative learning prepares students for collaborative environments in the real world, ultimately proving that the long-term benefits to both student development and academic success far outweigh the temporary classroom growing pains.

21 de abr de 2026 - 20 min
episode Getting from "Thinking They Know" to "Knowing They Know": Self-Validation of Learning artwork

Getting from "Thinking They Know" to "Knowing They Know": Self-Validation of Learning

Do you ever feel a disconnect between what you’ve meticulously taught and what your students actually walk away with? You’re not alone. Research highlights a significant gap: while faculty often test for high-level working expertise, many students are still stuck at the level of basic information processing. This gap doesn't just lead to student frustration—it leads to professional burnout for educators who feel like they are "filling vessels" rather than fostering true growth. The solution lies in a powerful, multi-faceted skill set called self-validation. But self-validation isn't just for the classroom. These skills are hierarchical, and there is no upper limit to strengthening them in your own professional practice. By modeling these techniques, you aren't just helping students pass a test; you are exercising "tough love" that prepares them—and you—for the challenges of life beyond the institution. When students begin to validate their own work, their confidence soars, and they become "full partners" in the learning process. As one student put it: "If I don’t push myself to learn to grow, nobody else will, and I won’t excel to my full potential". Are you ready to stop validating for your students and start helping them validate for themselves?

19 de mar de 2026 - 11 min
episode Designing Life One Week at a Time artwork

Designing Life One Week at a Time

From August 1 to January 31, 2025, fifty participants committed to an unusual experiment. For six months, they agreed to design their lives one week at a time. The premise of Phase III of the Self-Growth Project was simple: most people live their lives reacting to what shows up. We asked something different. What if you stepped back every week, reflected carefully, chose your priorities intentionally, and planned your time around the person you are trying to become? Instead of adding more activity, the project aimed to increase intention. Instead of chasing improvement in scattered ways, it invited participants to build a steady weekly rhythm of reflection, planning, action, and review. Every week followed the same pattern. Participants paused to reflect on what had actually happened in their lives. They identified insights from their real experiences. They clarified what mattered most for the coming week. They created a focused growth plan. Then they designed their week to match those intentions. Each participant also met weekly with a coach to review decisions, challenges, and direction. This was not a motivational program. It was a six-month practice of learning to direct your own growth. At the end of January, we asked a simple question: What actually changed?

17 de feb de 2026 - 14 min
episode Empowering the Life-Long Learner: Moving Beyond "Just Doing" artwork

Empowering the Life-Long Learner: Moving Beyond "Just Doing"

For those of us dedicated to the craft of teaching, we know that the most profound growth occurs when we—and our students—stop "sleepwalking" through routines and start asking "why". In this episode of our podcast, we dive deep into the concept of metacognition, or "thinking about our own thinking". When we step back from the act of "just doing" to examine how and why we perform certain tasks, we fundamentally strengthen our capacity for growth. Our discussion centers on a transformative framework: The Methodology for Generalizing Knowledge (MGK). We often see students struggle to apply what they have learned in one week to a new challenge the next, leading to the familiar refrain, "We've never seen this before!". This happens because knowledge remains "fragile" when it is tied to a single context. To counter this, the MGK provides a nine-step pathway to move from basic comprehension to working expertise, where knowledge can be transferred across any context at will. In this episode, you will hear: * The Parable of the Ham: A cautionary tale about how easily we inherit processes without understanding their purpose. * The Buddha’s Boat: An exploration of why generalizing knowledge is superior to merely transferring it—learning how to build a boat for any river rather than lugging the same boat across land. * The 9-Step Journey: A walkthrough of how to move learning from familiar contexts to totally unfamiliar ones. We use the practical example of "Perla," who applies these steps to clothing repair to illustrate how shifting from simple mending to creative upcycling requires a grasp of underlying principles. * The Power of Contextual Prompts: Insights into why high-quality problem solving depends on our ability to discern the "prompts" in a new situation that activate our existing knowledge. As educators, our goal is to help learners move from "thinking they know" to "knowing they know" through rigorous metacognitive checks and self-assessment. Tune in to discover how you can use the MGK to ensure that the knowledge you share is never fragile, but is instead a versatile tool your students can use to navigate any "river" they may encounter.

19 de ene de 2026 - 13 min
episode The Six Levers for Improving Performance artwork

The Six Levers for Improving Performance

This deep dive into the Theory of Performance, a framework published in the Faculty Guidebook by Pacific Crest, provides a comprehensive breakdown of how worthy accomplishments are produced through high-level performance in various learning contexts. The analysis is built upon the integrated Performance Model, which posits that performance—defined as integrating skills and knowledge to produce a valuable result—is the product of six interconnected components: identity, skills, knowledge, context, personal factors, and fixed factors. Importantly, performers control five of these areas, allowing for continuous development and growth. The sources detail that making substantial improvements to performance requires recognizing that these components co-exist and cannot be separated. Optimal performance is achieved by adhering to three axioms: engaging the Performer’s Mindset (an optimal emotional state), promoting Immersion (an enriching environment), and fostering Reflective Practice. By advancing their level of performance through this intentional approach, organizations and individuals realize tangible outcomes, including increases in quality, capability, capacity, skills, and identity, alongside a decrease in the cost and effort required to achieve results.

15 de dic de 2025 - 13 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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