• Introducing College Matters from The Chronicle
    Sep 5 2024
    Everything happening in the world converges in one place: higher education. College Matters from The Chronicle, coming September 10.
    Show more Show less
    2 mins
  • Episode 17: If You Had $45 Billion, What Would You Do to Improve Education?
    Nov 30 2016
    Jim Shelton, now heading up the education portfolio at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, isn’t giving any details yet. But in this podcast, he emphasizes the value of bringing learning scientists together with educators to improve learning and increase equality.
    Show more Show less
    22 mins
  • Episode 16: A Higher-Education Rebel With a Cause
    Oct 19 2016
    Sarah Short, who has taught some 44,000 students over a half-century at Syracuse U., wants to see more classroom interaction.
    Show more Show less
    9 mins
  • Episode 15: Online Education Is Now a Global Market
    Oct 5 2016
    MOOCs may have been overhyped, but their impact is far from over, says Simon Nelson, of the online-learning provider FutureLearn, a spin-off of the British Open University. And traditional colleges have a huge opportunity if they’re just willing to think a little differently.
    Show more Show less
    14 mins
  • Episode 14: How Colleges Should Adapt for a Networked Age
    Sep 21 2016
    Author Joshua Cooper Ramo points to a shift in attitudes toward college -- and authority figures in general.
    Show more Show less
    15 mins
  • Episode 13: A Comedian and an Academic Walk Into a Podcast …
    Sep 7 2016
    Shane Mauss, a stand-up comic who likes picking professors’ brains, has become an unlikely but engaging science educator.
    Show more Show less
    13 mins
  • Episode 12: You Don’t Know Your Students. This Professor Hopes to Change That.
    Aug 24 2016
    Michael Wesch, an associate professor of anthropology at Kansas State, joins his students for an unusual tour of their lives beyond the classroom.
    Show more Show less
    26 mins
  • Episode 11: Are MOOCs Forever?
    Jul 14 2016
    Coursera’s Daphne Koller discusses plans for the future of a format that some thought would never last this long.
    Show more Show less
    14 mins