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

Latest Episodes

Five “clinical containers” to design your language therapy system

In episode 255 of De Facto Leaders, I elaborate on the concept of using vocabulary as a large “container”, so you can design sessions efficiently without sacrificing quality.I talk about why more experienced clinicians often struggle to make their interventions scalable, and why this gets in the way of carryover.I also share the five “containers” I use in my Language Therapy Advance Foundations program that can support skills like reading, writing, spelling, and language processing in ways that can be reinforced outside sessions. If you have a ton of knowledge relating to language and executive functioning, but don’t know how to organize it into a cohesive system…If you’re getting results in sessions, but it takes a ton of effort on your part and consumes all your capacity…If you’re able to scaffold and model “on-the-fly”, but struggle to explain your techniques to others so they can replicate them…Then you’ll find this concept of “containers” really useful.In this episode, I mentioned Language Therapy Advance Foundations, my program that gives speech pathologists a framework for building language skills needed to thrive in school, social situations, and daily life. You can learn more about the program here: https://drkarenspeech.com/languagetherapyYou can view this episode on the blog to see the screenshare here: https://drkarenspeech.com/five-clinical-containers-to-design-your-language-therapy-system/The handout referenced in this episode is the session handout for my “Three Shifts to Creating a Scalable Language Therapy System” session. You can sign up for this free online session here: https://drkarenspeech.com/language

Hospital Blame Culture Killing Your Team? Break "Victim Mode" TODAY!

Is your hospital stuck in endless finger-pointing? "It's the system's fault!" "Shift change screwed us!" Sound familiar? This toxic Victim Saboteur mindset fuels burnout, errors, and zero accountability – and it's fixable now.Hosts Alex and Janin reveal how to shatter blame cycles in The Humility Advantage. Get the Ownership Debrief blueprint that transforms "Who's to blame?" into "What I own and fix."Steal these game-changers:✅ Spot Victim Mode red flags in your culture✅ 10-min debriefs: Facts → Ownership → Fixes → Wins✅ Leader hacks to build unbreakable accountability (neurodivergent-friendly!)Healthcare heroes: Reclaim your team's power with humility-fueled ownership. No more drama – just results.👉 Hit play and end blame forever!Subscribe for weekly leadership gold on burnout-proof culture and team wins.

Science Delivered with Dr. Olivia Mullins

Dr. Olivia Mullins returns to the podcast to discuss her work teaching science with primary grade students. We discuss how she is using research in improving students' reading comprehension in the science lessons.LInks: Website: https://www.science-delivered.org/X: Olivia Mullins (@oliviajune82) / XSubstack: Olivia Mullins | SubstackLinkedIn: (1) Olivia Mullins | LinkedInBooks: Amazon.com: Experimenting With Science: Think, Test, and Learn! (Dummies Junior): 9781119291336: Mullins, Olivia J., Ph.D: Books

An AI Porsche Classroom Experience with Michael Angelone

In the context of teaching and learning, what it means to stay deeply human, intellectually honest, and pedagogically creative in a world increasingly shaped by machines.CourseHeroHow do we do school now that AI is here? Psychological safety for students. See Jethro’s article.Panels with students Guiderails, buy in, ideas. Student Success Council.Move from product to process. Hitting the wall. How to restrain. Just because everyone’s doing it doesn’t make it cool. The water usage is fake…AI Literacy as it’s own literacy. 4 phase AI scaffolding processIt’s like you’re teaching them to drive a new car. An AI Porsche experienceAbout Michael AngeloneAs an English professor at American River College, Michael Angelone views composition and literary studies through a philosophy rooted in critical thinking, process-driven writing, and student-centered learning. His teaching approach reflects his commitment to preparing students to engage meaningfully with complex texts and contemporary cultural issues, balancing traditional literary rigor with forward-thinking andragogy.Outside the classroom, he serves as advisor to the American River Review 2.0, mentoring students as they curate, edit, and publish a nationally recognized literary and multimedia journal. Additionally, his role on the editorial board of Ad Lumen Press allows him to champion diverse, emerging literary voices, guiding manuscripts from selection to publication while collaborating closely with authors to tell their stories.As an Advisory Committee member of the Borchard Foundation Center on Literary Arts, he contributes strategic insights to programs that foster cross-cultural literary exchange, artist residencies, and literary fellowships, further enriching the literary community across the Americas.His leadership as Vice President of the Los Rios College Federation of Teachers (LRCFT 2279) centers on faculty advocacy, fair labor practices, and educational equity. He actively works to ensure fair compensation, address full time/adjunct faculty disparities, and promote inclusive faculty development and mentorship, reflecting his belief that the quality of education directly correlates with faculty support and equity.A proud delegate to CA Boys State (1997), his early experience in civic leadership and governance shaped his lifelong dedication to advocacy, leadership, and educational excellence. In each role—as professor, advisor, union leader, and literary advocate—he remains committed to advancing innovation, equity, and engagement in higher education and literary arts.

The Work No One Sees: The Reality of Classified Staff With Tracy Scott

Shannon welcomes Tracy Scott, a second-grade instructional assistant with 23 years of experience in Jefferson County Public Schools, to discuss the often-overlooked role of classified school staff. Tracy shares what instructional assistants actually do—far beyond the common misconception of just "taking kids to the bathroom"—including leading intervention groups, providing emotional support, managing behavior, and building lasting relationships with students.Key topics include the persistent class divide between certified teachers and assistants, how assistants are frequently given the most challenging students and behavior situations without recognition, and the need for mutual respect within school communities. Tracy emphasizes that kids primarily need love, attention, and "their person" to confide in—something she's provided for two decades, maintaining relationships with former students well into their twenties.Links: Putman XR Consulting LinkedIn: Shannon Putman

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