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Showing episodes and shows of
Dr. Lisa D. Delpit
Shows
Spark: Igniting Dynamic Dialogue
Filmer 7: Alice Lovelace on Say Yes To Destiny
For our last episode on Filmer, who better to cap the series than an Atlanta icon? Alice Lovelace is a cultural worker, performance artist, teacher, poet, organizer, author, and playwright. In 1978, she discovered the Neighborhood Arts Center and met Ebon Dooley (Leo Hale) and Toni Cade Bambara. Together, they organized poetry readings and classes while conducting meetings for the Southern Collective of African American Writers (SCAAW). In 1981, Ebon and Alice founded the nonprofit: Southeast Community Cultural Center located at the former Grant Park Elementary School and in 1984 opened the former school as The Arts Exchange – a studio sp...
2025-02-26
18 min
100 Great Teachers
Lisa Delpit
Lisa Delpit Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2024-08-15
05 min
Street Data Pod: Imagining the Next Generation of Education
[RE-RELEASE] Episode 14: “You are all elders in training” with Dr. Lisa Delpit and Dr. Jamila Dugan
We are back with another re-release from Season 2! In this episode, you’ll listen at the feet of the incomparable Dr. Lisa Delpit, whose books Other People’s Children and Multiplication Is for White People deeply impacted Shane and Alcine, alongside her brilliant mentee and Street Data co-author Dr. Jamila Dugan. We get a one-inch window into Dr. Delpit’s early experiences in “white teacher education” and the Open Classroom model where Black teachers’ wisdom and skill was often undervalued. We witness a beautiful exchange between Dr. Delpit and Dr. Dugan about the intergenerational work they are involved in and what it...
2024-04-18
50 min
The Teacher's Forum
On the Frontlines of Change: Transforming the Educational Paradigm with Zakiyyah Ali and Stacey Gibson
Send us a text message and let us know what you think and for ideas for future episodes. In honor of Women's History Month, join David as he sits down with two extraordinary educators: Zakiyyah Ali, a former New York master Social Studies teacher and EdD student at Howard University, and Stacey Gibson, an educator, and featured TED Speaker. Our conversation delves deeply into education today, starting with a robust discussion on James Baldwin's timeless 1963 piece, "A Talk to Teachers." Together, we explore living up to Baldwin's call to action amidst the ba...
2024-03-04
1h 12
ART IS CHANGE: Tactics and Tools for Activist Artists and Cultural Organizers
Art for Art’s Sake – NOT!—and What Activist Artist Alice Lovelace Built Instead
In our last conversation, (Episode 26) we shared Alice Lovelace's tumultuous history as a solo teaching artist and performer working with young writers all across the rural south. What follows is Alice's next chapter. In it she talks about building an extraordinary multi-disciplinary, cross-sector cultural institution that rises up from the funky detritus of the pandemic as a new beachhead of creative change in a small Georgia Community. BIOAlice Lovelace is a cultural worker, performance artist, teacher, poet, organizer, author, playwright, and arts administer. Since 1976 Atlanta has been her home of choice; a fertile ground f...
2023-09-13
35 min
Street Data Pod: Imagining the Next Generation of Education
Episode 14: “You Are All Elders in Training” with Dr. Lisa Delpit and Dr. Jamila Dugan
In this episode, you’ll listen at the feet of the incomparable scholar Dr. Lisa Delpit, whose books Other People’s Children and Multiplication Is for White People deeply impacted Shane and Alcine, alongside her brilliant mentee and Street Data co-author Dr. Jamila Dugan. We get a one-inch window into Dr. Delpit’s early experiences in “white teacher education” and the Open Classroom model where Black teachers’ wisdom and skill was often undervalued. We witness a beautiful exchange between Dr. Delpit and Dr. Dugan about the intergenerational work they are involved in and what it means for all of us to step i...
2023-04-27
47 min
The Integrated Schools Podcast
Centering Civil Rights in the Fight for Education
For many, the words “civil rights” conjure images of the past, focusing on politicians, lawyers, activists. However, our guests today ask us to consider the civil rights implications we face today in the fight for a quality, 21st century education for all kids. Dr. Kia Darling-Hammond was recently commissioned to write about the importance of civil rights in the fight for educational equity, particularly the importance of the data collected by the Civil Rights Data Collection. Through that work, she enlisted her mother, Dr. Linda-Darling-Hammond, to co-author a new book, The Civil Rights Road to Deeper Learning: Five Essentials for Equity...
2023-02-22
1h 00
Resilient Schools
How To Help Kids Win In School And Life With Mitch Weathers Resilient Schools 12
As students, we all know the importance of being successful in school. But what does it really take to achieve that success? While good grades and test scores are certainly important, there are other key skills that can make a big difference in a student’s ability to succeed. These skills, known as executive functioning skills, can be described as the things students need to be successful in school and in life. Executive functioning skills include things like goal setting, working memory, time and task management, organizational skills, accountability, and self-regulation. These skills are crucial for helping st...
2023-01-22
45 min
Rethinc Podcast
Understanding the Dynamics of Power in the Workplace w/ Dr. Brandy Nelson
Kate Gerson is joined by Rethinc partner, Brandy Nelson, in a thoughtful discourse about the implications of power dynamics within organizational culture. Lisa Delpit's 1988 article, “The Silenced Dialogue: Power and Pedagogy in Educating Other People's Children,” was used as an impetus to their discussion – analyzing how this age-old concept of power profoundly shapes our experiences even today. From unspoken codes of conduct to critical aspects of work culture embedded within organizations, they discussed how these factors influence everyday interactions between individuals across lines of difference and unpacked how these dynamics are often built upon preexisting ideologies supported by those with p...
2022-12-01
1h 11
The Extraordinary Educators Podcast
Oral Fluency with Glendaliz Martinez
Glendaliz Martinez, National Director of Content and Implementation at Curriculum Associates joins this episode to discuss literacy. Glendaliz dives into oral fluency, and how to support students while they are reading out loud. She explains best practices for giving students feedback, and tools you can use to support oral fluency. She also provides research about what happens when we overcorrect students, and what implications this has for their confidence and willingness to take risks. Glendaliz closes out the episode by answering a question about the science of reading. Science of ReadingAnita ArcherLisa DelpitMagnetic ReadingCurriculum Associates' BlogTwitterInstagramEmail: ExtraordinaryEducators@cainc.co
2022-10-19
19 min
The A&P Professor
115 Are You a Warm Demander?
We once again revisit deadline extensions, we discuss warm demanders and how they avoid toxic rigor, we discover which arm is best for a vaccine booster, we find out if we can grow new auditory hair cells, we get tips on how to speak more effectively while wearing a mask, and learn about a new discovery about oxygen absorption in the intestines. Can we breathe through our anus? Listen to find out! 00:00 | Introduction 01:02 | Growing New Auditory Hair Cells 06:19 | Mask Talk: Loud, Slow, & Clear 11:17 | Sponsored by AAA 12:21 | Which Arm for T...
2022-05-17
52 min
Talk Louisiana
Tuesday, April 12th: Lisa Delpit, George "Tic" Price
Dr. Lisa Delpit reflects on growing up in the 60's in Baton Rouge as well as her thoughts on racial issues in our country today. Coach George "Tic" Price speaks on his life and coaching career as well as his book "Locker Room Talk".
2022-04-12
44 min
Twig Science On…
Other People's Children by Lisa Delpit
We talk to Twig's own Contessa Akintunji about how Lisa Delpit's book changed her life, the power of recognizing our own biases, and why it's so important for teachers to get to know students and their families.Find us everywhere:Official site: https://learn.twigeducation.com/homepage-podcastFacebook: https://learn.twigeducation.com/facebook-podcastTwitter: https://learn.twigeducation.com/twitter-podcastInstagram: https://learn.twigeducation.com/instagram-podcastYouTube: https://learn.twigeducation.com/youtube-podcast See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
2022-02-17
16 min
Learning Through Math
Learning About Equity and Early Numeracy
Amazon.com: Figuring Out Fluency - Addition and Subtraction With Fractions and Decimals: A Classroom Companion (Corwin Mathematics Series)Numeracy for All Learners: Teaching Mathematics to Students with Special Needs (Math Recovery): Tabor, Pamela D, Dibley, Dawn, Hackenberg, Amy J, Norton, Anderson: 9781526491954: Amazon.com: BooksDeveloping Number Knowledge: Assessment,Teaching and Intervention with 7-11 year olds (Math Recovery)Amazon.com: Teaching Number in the Classroom with 4-8 Year Olds (Math Recovery): 9781446282694: Wright, Robert J, Stanger, Garry, Stafford, Ann K., Martland, James: BooksAmazon.com: Teaching Number: Advancing Children′s Skills and St...
2022-01-30
38 min
Early Risers
What’s Happening in the Classroom? Early Childhood Educators and Implicit Bias
About a quarter of all children in the United States younger than five years old attend some kind of formalized childcare. Early childhood programs can be a great way for children to start learning about the world, including how to build relationships with other children and adults. But part of this learning also involves absorbing the implicit biases in their environment, including unconscious assumptions about race. However, Sheila Williams Ridge, co-director of the University of Minnesota’s Child Development Laboratory School and expert on nature–based learning, says these assumptions can be challenged when teachers are trai...
2021-12-01
36 min
Ready to Lead
Empowering Those You’re Charged to Lead with Mike Yates
As leaders, we have privilege, and it’s up to us to empower the people we’ve been charged to lead. Today’s guest, Mike Yates, empowers people on a daily basis. Mike is an educator, the host of the Schoolish podcast, TED talker, and runs the Reinvention Lab at Teach for America. In this episode, he sits down with host Richard Lindner to talk about recognizing privilege and power structures and how leaders everywhere can leverage that knowledge to gain a better understanding of their team. Mike’s journey is fascinatin...
2021-11-01
42 min
UnboundEd Podcast
The Complexion of Teaching and Learning - Episode 7 - Fusion and Friction with Standards
This episode features candid conversations with education leaders about the push for excellence and equity and what role standards play in providing instruction that is grade-level, engaging, affirming, and meaningful. Side B features a conversation with Bradley Powless of the Onondaga Nation who discusses the importance of identity in education. Episode notes: The following scholars and texts are featured in Episode Seven: Shariff El-Mekki, founder of the Center For Black Educator Development Paul Gorski, Equity Literacy Institute, Avoiding Racial Equity Detours Dr. Kofi Lomotey, author, professor of educational leadership at Western Carolina University Jeremy Garcia and Valerie Shirley, Indigenous scholars...
2021-10-14
1h 39
Black History Mini Docs Podcast
The Dr. Lisa D. Delpit Interview
Send us a textNeema Barntette presents BHMD podcast hosted by Ah-Keisha McCants. Her guest is MacArthur “Genius” Award winner Dr. Lisa D. Delpit, the principal of the consulting firm Delpit Learning. Recently retired Felton G. Clark Distinguished Professor of Education at Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Dr. Delpit is author of one of the best selling education books of 2013, “Multiplication is For White People”: Raising Standards for Other People’s Children.
2021-07-30
42 min
So to Speak: The Free Speech Podcast
Ep. 135 Are education schools secretly driving campus censorship?
Are education schools secretly driving campus censorship? On today’s episode of So to Speak: The Free Speech Podcast, we are joined by Lewis & Clark Associate Professor of English Lyell Asher to discuss his 2018 article for the Chronicle of Higher Education, “How Ed Schools Became a Menace.” Also joining the conversation is FIRE President & CEO Greg Lukianoff, co-author of the bestseller “The Coddling of the American Mind.” Show notes: Transcript “Educating School Leaders” by Arthur Levine Yale University: Protesters at Yale Threaten Free Speech, Demand Apologies and Resignations from Faculty Members Over Halloween Email...
2021-05-06
1h 00
EntanglED
Episode 4: CRP vs. Everybody
In today's episode, we welcome our first guest - Dana Cager! We will talk with Dana about the importance of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy and dispel some myths surrounding the framework. Resources Mentioned Louisiana school board seeks to double aid requested by governor; includes $400 teacher pay raises LDOE Grant to Improve Career & College Readiness LDOE Supports in Developing Future School Leaders Justice for Learning Suggested Reading Teaching to Transgress by bell hooks Other People's Children by Dr. Lisa Delpit CRP and the B...
2021-03-18
57 min
REACH Fireside Chats: The Podcast
REACH Fireside Chats: Welcome Back, My Friend!
In spring 2020, REACH Educational Solutions produced the REACH Fireside Chats for educators around the world to enjoy. To our surprise and pleasure, hundreds of educators, community support members, and parents joined our chats regularly. These chats featured educational experts such as Dr. Pedro Noguera, Dr. Lisa Delpit, Dr. Chris Emdin, Dr. Tyrone Howard, Dr. Gary Orfield, Dr. Gilda Ochoa, Dr. John F. King, Jr., Dr. Beverly Tatum, Dr. Linda Darling-Hammond, and many more. When we ended the Fireside Chats for the summer, as the pandemic eased a bit, our audience inundated REACH with requests to begin offering the sessions...
2021-02-07
03 min
Nerdacity Podcast with DuEwa Frazier
Ep. 8 Who Should Be the Next Education Secretary?
DuEwa discusses the end of Betsy Devos' tenure as U.S. Education Secretary. She references recent articles from Inside Higher Education, NEA, and the Washington Post to give details on the speculation of the prospective candidates and what the agenda for the successor should be. DuEwa shares her "fantasy" list of who could be the next Education Secretary including Dr. Gloria Ladson-Billings and Dr. Lisa D. Delpit. Who do you think should be the next Education Secretary? What do you think of DuEwa's picks? #Nerdacitypodcast #DuEwa #education #edchat #politics #commentary #schools #news Leave a comment at D...
2020-11-19
20 min
Welcome to Paynesville!
Season 1 Special Episode: The Danger of An Educated Black Woman
Join me as I converse with Educated Black Females and their take on their obstacles during their journey as Educators. Stephanie Spivey, New Orleans, LA native and Toi Robinson-Trice, New York native and Atlanta transplant who both currently reside in Charlotte, North Carolina. I have had the honor of working with them to change generations of our children. Educators by heart, yet passionate and vocal about impacting systemic change to build bridges out of poverty. "So my passion is moving or, related to that bridge out of poverty and impacting systemic change. I like to thi...
2020-10-19
32 min
Hoo’s At The Writing Center
S2E1 - Anti-Racist Work in the Writing Center
The Hoo's at the Writing Center Podcast Team would like to address a number of things while acknowledging that more space and time is needed to explain them all. Firstly, we recorded this episode in Summer 2020. Prior to our recording of this episode, the Podcast Team understood that one episode would not be enough in engaging in an ongoing discourse about anti-racism. This is and should be an ongoing conversation, and we want to make it clear that this is just the start of it here on this podcast.Secondly, some of the terminology used in our...
2020-09-21
37 min
SJSU Lurie College of Education
Emancipatory Education Now | Meet the Co-Hosts
Emancipatory Education Now is a new student-led initiative at the SJSU Lurie College of Education that examines what emancipatory education – the critical evaluation of the systems and structures of oppression that maintain the status quo in our educational institutions – looks like in today’s society and advocates for the expansion of emancipatory education research, policies, and practices. In this episode, you can learn more about our student co-hosts through their name stories: Anne Lockmiller – Counselor Education Gabi Gupta – Sociology Jackie Rivas Lopez – Child & Adolescent Development Leslye Tinson – Ed.D. Leadership Program Vinson Vu – Business and Child & Adolescent Devel...
2020-09-08
46 min
Jesus and Therapy
Session 7: "Breaking The 'Preacher's Kid Syndrome'"
This episode is brought to you by Life Options Counseling Services where we assist you with seeing the many options life has to offer, in the midst of some of your most difficult challenges. Our counselors provide a rich therapeutic experience rooted in Christian foundation. For help or to schedule a consultation reach out to us at 908-290-3550.Kaveena A.S. Bullock is the daughter of a preacher who has made her mark in the world. She graduated with her Master’s Degree, having majored in English and Writing Studies. During her time at Kean University, her...
2020-07-24
27 min
WHBLE Presents Education As Liberation Hosted by Ah-Keisha McCans
Education As Liberation Episode 1
Decolonizing Education pt. 1 WHBLE founder, Ah-Keisha McCants talks with Teacher, Founder and CEO of The Lesesne Collective Corp d/b/a Sisters in Education Circle (SIEC) and the SIEC Retreat Host, Dr. Akosua Lesesne about the Black teaching tradition and education for Black liberation. Akosua Lesesne, is an educational design leader with expertise in education for Black liberation, grades 6-12 and the Black teaching tradition. She began her career as a high school social studies instructor and has 17 years of teaching, instructional coaching and district level leadership experience within five major, predominantly...
2020-07-13
50 min
Heavy Topics With Lightweights
Accepting Your Own White Supremacy with Megan Jackson
Today we are talking to our friend Megan Jackson about race relations in America. We originally wanted to speak to Megan about being in a multiracial relationship and how she's feeling raising her child in our current political climate but it quickly progressed into something so much more. We hope the horrible audio doesn't district you from this conversation because Megan is so open about accepting her own white supremacy and how she is learning from mostly Black women about the subject of racism. SHOW NOTES: The 1619 Project: Magazine Issue, Podcast Roots Miniseries Color...
2020-07-08
1h 02
Your Parenting Mojo - Respectful, research-based parenting ideas to help kids thrive
114: Othering
I had originally approached today's topic of Othering through a financial lens, as part of the series of episodes on the intersection of parenting and money (previous episodes have been on NYT Money colunist Ron Lieberman's book The Opposite of Spoiled, How to Pass on Mental Wealth to your Child, The Impact of Consumerism on Parenting, and How to Set Up A Play Room. The series will conclude in the coming weeks with episodes on advertising and materialism). I kept seeing questions in parenting groups: How can I teach my child about volunteering? How can I donate the stuff we don...
2020-06-19
58 min
Yondercast: The Gaming Life
Special Message: Other Voices to Listen To
Contact us at yondercast@gmail.comEpisode Agenda w/Time Stamps:00:07 - The purpose of this message - Black Lives Matter.03:41 - What we’re asking - seek out black voices and listen to what they have to say.04:59 - List of podcasts, books, and charitable organizations.07:15 - Our commitment.Podcasts We Recommend:1619 - New York Times - A five episode series telling the story of the first ship of slaves that were brought to America in 1619.About Race...
2020-06-09
07 min
The PrinciPALS Podcast
How to Talk to Kids About Race
In this episode of princiPALS, Emma and Jij discuss the importance of talking to kids about race. Join them to unpack common fears around discussing race and bias, including the role socialization plays, and explore studies on kids and race. Listeners will also get tips to help them feel more prepared for these necessary conversations. Further resources: National Association for the Education of Young Children’s (NAEYC) anti-bias education Sesame Workshop’s Identity Matters study NurtureShock by Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman PBS Utah’s Let’s Talk: Talking to Kids About Race Your Kids Aren't Too Youn...
2020-05-20
37 min
Cheers with Peers
Prof Meredith Temple-Smith & Dr Jennifer McIntosh - October 2019
In today’s episode you’ll hear from Professor Temple-Smith. What makes a great supervisor? How can you as a mid-career researcher model yourself on being an effective supervisor particularly if you’ve never experienced it yourself? Lisa Delpit says Warm Demanders “expect a great deal of their students, convince them of their own brilliance, and help them to reach their potential in a disciplined and structured environment" How can you be a warm demander in your role as a supervisor?
2019-10-13
00 min
The Grow Kinder Podcast
Cultural Competence and Teaching Diverse Student Groups with Dr. Lisa Delpit
Live at the 2019 SEL Exchange Conference in Chicago, we talk with Dr. Lisa Delpit, an award-winning author, American educationalist, and MacArthur award recipient. Dr. Delpit is executive director of the Center for Urban Educational Excellence in Miami and a distinguished professor at Southern University, Baton Rouge. As an African American researcher, she’s transformed the educational system for minority groups with her groundbreaking work in elementary education with a focus on language and literacy development. On this special episode, Dr. Delpit talks with us about the current state of educational equity, her advice for teaching to diverse groups of students, an...
2019-10-11
54 min
Best Next Step with Cass McCrory
In Business Archive: Teaching future teachers, advocacy around allergies and parenting with Kerri Mulqueen - A Real Women in Buisness interview with Cass McCrory
In this episode we chat with Kerri Mulqueen, an Assistant Professor of Education at Manhattan College in the Bronx, New York. She’s had a robust career in education, working as a high school teacher and administrator before shifting towards educating future teachers in her work at an institute of higher education. Kerri shares some amazing insight on the ins and outs of being an educator who teaches future educators and the empowerment that comes from being open to learning throughout your career. Kerri also reflects on the challenges that she’s faced as a mother with a chi...
2019-07-08
57 min
The Word Conscious Classroom
Episode 22: Studying the Author’s Word Choice Using Predictions
Predictions are powerful! In fact, we ask students to make predictions all the time because student predictions provide a window into the situation model, or the mental model, that students create in their minds. In this podcast episode, I decided to use a lesson from Texts and lessons for content-area reading. Daniels and Steineke (2011) suggested the use of a strategy entitled, the Quotation Mingle, a strategy similar to to Beers’ (2006) tea party (p.131). Daniels and Steineke (2011) reminded me of why “we want the students predicting, hypothesizing, posing questions, and drawing inferences before they even open the book,” this is known as fro...
2018-09-23
27 min
The Educator's Room Podcast
[Episode 50] Being Black at School
in this episode, Franchesca Warren interviews Kelly Hurst, Executive Director of Being Black at School, as we discussed the realities of being black at school-the good, bad, and ugly. This episode doesn't do the obligatory talk about "race" but they go "deep" into not only the realities but what teachers can do to really do the work. In this episode, we discuss... the background of how being Black in School was started the bias that many teachers have towards students of color why the work of Being in Black in School is needed why being colorblind does not help a...
2017-07-24
1h 01
How to Listen to Audiobook in Nonfiction, Social Sciences
Other People's Children by Lisa Delpit | Free Audiobook
Listen to full audiobooks for free on :https://hotaudiobook.com/freeTitle: Other People's Children Author: Lisa Delpit Narrator: Lisa Reneé Pitts Format: Unabridged Length: 9 hrs and 6 mins Language: English Release date: 07-18-16 Publisher: Tantor Audio Genres: Nonfiction, Social Sciences Summary: Winner of an American Educational Studies Association Critics' Choice Award and Choice Magazine's Outstanding Academic Book Award, and voted one of Teacher Magazine's "great books", Other People's Children has sold over 150,000 copies since its original hardcover publication. This edition features a new introduction by Delpit, as well as new framing essays by Herbert Kohl and Charles Payne. In a r...
2016-07-18
9h 06
Discover the Libray of Best Audiobooks in Nonfiction and Social Sciences
Other People's Children Audiobook by Lisa Delpit
Listen to the full audiobook free with a 30-day trial. Go tohttps://hotaudiobook.com/freeTitle: Other People's Children Subtitle: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom Author: Lisa Delpit Narrator: Lisa Reneé Pitts Format: Unabridged Length: 9 hrs and 6 mins Language: English Release date: 07-18-16 Publisher: Tantor Audio Ratings: 5 of 5 out of 32 votes Genres: Nonfiction, Social Sciences Publisher's Summary: Winner of an American Educational Studies Association Critics' Choice Award and Choice Magazine's Outstanding Academic Book Award, and voted one of Teacher Magazine's "great books", Other People's Children has sold over 150,000 copies since its original hardcover publication. Contact me for any questions: inforeq17@g...
2016-07-18
9h 06
The Student Centered Learning Podcast
Review of Lisa Delpit's Other People's Children
Listen to Kaitlin Niedman's review of Lisa Delft's classic 2006 book Other People's Children, and remember, learning is always personal.
2016-04-03
13 min
The Student-Centered Learning Podcast
Review of Lisa Delpit's Other People's Children
Listen to Kaitlin Niedman's review of Lisa Delft's classic 2006 book Other People's Children, and remember, learning is always personal.
2016-04-03
13 min
Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching
Programme 138, Lisa Delpit on Educating Minority Learners (6-5-12)
Presented and produced by Seán Delaney On this week's programme, Professor Lisa Delpit from Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and author of Multiplication is for White People: Raising Expectations for Other People's Children talks about her thoughts on raising expectations for students of colour in the United States in light of how they may help Irish educators think about educating traveller children, children from disadvantaged areas, and children whose parents were not born in Ireland.
2012-05-06
29 min