BE Podcast Network: Podcasts that help you go Beyond Education. 

Latest Episodes

Unleash Aliveness with Alisha De Lorenzo

In this episode, Mike sits down with Alisha DeLorenzo, educator and consultant from New Jersey, to explore her powerful framework of "Unleash Aliveness." Alisha shares how a deeply personal encounter with loss sparked her mission to help schools move from feeling like a "zombie apocalypse" to places of genuine energy and engagement.Key Takeaways:Aliveness is created when people feel significant and heardChange doesn't come from big initiatives — it comes from small, community-led sprintsLeaders don't need all the answers; the wisdom is already in the buildingTransformative principals are positively disruptive, human-centered, and willing to get out of the wayLinks:LinkedIn: Alisha De LorenzoInstagram: @alishadelorenzoWebsite: alishadelorenzo.com

Can You Still Teach Critical Thinking? - Paul Blaschko

In this episode, Priten speaks with Paul Blaschko, an assistant teaching professor of philosophy at Wake Forest University. Paul's work sits at the intersection of liberal education, critical thinking instruction, and course design. The central question driving their conversation: in an era of AI that can generate plausible-sounding arguments and explanations, can we still teach students to think critically—or must we fundamentally reimagine what critical thinking means?Key Takeaways:EdTech should solve existing problems, not create new ones. Paul approaches technology as a tool only when he's already facing a pedagogical challenge. This shifts the question from "what can this tool do?" to "what does my classroom need?"YouTube explainers preceded ChatGPT in reshaping how students research and learn. Long before AI, students were outsourcing understanding to video tutorials rather than wrestling with dense texts, revealing a deeper shift in how students approach knowledge.Critical thinking instruction requires direct practice with real arguments, not shortcuts around difficulty. There's no substitute for students actually constructing and defending their own positions through dialogue and written work, even when AI can do it faster.Scaling critical thinking instruction demands new infrastructure, not just new pedagogy. Paul and his team are testing whether platforms like Think Arguments can help instructors manage the feedback and iteration needed to teach reasoning at scale across institutions.AI may not replace the professor's role so much as expand it into explicit curation and judgment. In a world where explanations are abundant, the teacher's value shifts toward deciding which frameworks matter and helping students evaluate competing arguments.Paul Blaschko is an assistant teaching professor at the University of Notre Dame. He teaches God and the Good Life, a course dedicated to asking the big questions about meaning, morality, and faith. He also serves as the Director of the Sheedy Family Program in Economy, Enterprise, and Society, a program devoted to exploring how the humanities can help us find meaning in work. With Meghan Sullivan, he has co-authored The Good Life Method (Penguin Press, 2022), a book about how philosophy can help us live better lives. He is currently working on a book on the philosophy of work (under contract with Princeton University Press), and is the co-founder of a Notre Dame based tech start-up that aims to solve problems with dialogue on the internet.

The Workforce Capital Audit: Your Balance Sheet is Lying

As a healthcare executive, you are accustomed to scanning the annual balance sheet for the "usual suspects": multi-million dollar MRI machines, exorbitant pharmaceutical costs, and the crushing weight of regulatory compliance. But hiding within those numbers—completely invisible on any standard financial review—is a massive gaping hole that is bleeding your hospital dry. We call this the phantom cost of fear.In this episode, we pull back the curtain on the "Humility Advantage," a groundbreaking clinical report released in March 2026 by J Alexander, Adel Malas, and Chief Medical Strategist Dr. Brandon Bentz of Excelerate You. We aren’t just talking about "soft skills"; we are dissecting the hard, empirical neuroscience of interpersonal risk-taking and its direct impact on your bottom line.Inside the Episode:The $1.7 Million Exit Interview: Why a single specialist leaving can cost a hospital up to $1.7 million, and why the "financial bleed" starts the second a clinician psychologically withdraws.The Amygdala Hijack: Why traditional "resilience training" and meditation apps fail. We explore how chronic stress physically thickens the brain's fear pathways, making empathy and curiosity biologically inaccessible.The Air Force Blueprint: How the military used "Red Boards" and "Stop Work Authority" to return $500 million to the Department of Defense—and how these exact mechanisms translate to the OR and ICU.The 16-Week Rewiring: A deep dive into the GOLD Operating System and the four stages of psychological safety. Learn how to move your team from "Quiet Quitting" to "Active Disclosure" using biological circuit breakers.The Workforce Capital Audit: Why J Alexander, Adel Malas, and Dr. Brandon Bentz argue that this audit is an existential necessity for Critical Access Hospitals and a fiduciary responsibility to the community.If you are a CEO, Chief Medical Officer, or Nursing Director, you are currently making a choice: you can continue to let capital bleed blindly into turnover, or you can intentionally redirect it toward a neuroscience-grounded solution.Is your leadership culture an asset or a liability?Download the full clinical evidence report and start your audit today: https://excelerateyoucoaching.com/white-paper

Hosts

Jethro Jones

Jethro Jones

Host of The Authority Podcast — Expert Insights and Fresh Ideas for Education Leaders
Ross Romano

Ross Romano

Host of The Authority Podcast — Expert Insights and Fresh Ideas for Education Leaders
A Jethro Jones

A Jethro Jones

Host of Transformative Principal
Mike Caldwell

Mike Caldwell

Host of Transformative Principal