45. Coastal Erosion and Other Subjects, With Dan Gaudiano

The What School Could Be Podcast - Een podcast door What School Could Be - Maandagen

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Dan Gaudiano is the Academy Science Department Head at Punahou School. He has a BA in geology from Colgate University. At the University of South Carolina Columbia he earned an MS in geology, and then a Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT). Dan has written in scientific journals, authored scientific papers, been a coastal geologist and a scientific researcher. He was the lead coordinator for a water conservation project in Hawai’i and has been a curriculum resource teacher with an emphasis on technology integration. (Catch this article (https://bulletin.punahou.edu/beyond-the-classroom/) in the Punahou Bulletin to know more about ways Dan thinks “beyond the classroom.”) A number of my colleagues have mentioned Dan’s seminal presentation on student stress at the 2019 Schools of the Future Conference. Most of all, what you get from reviewing Dan’s body of work so far is that he cares deeply about kids and learning. There is no doubt that he has a growth mindset and is continually developing his teaching practice. In this interview Dan and I talked about inch deep and a mile wide, vs. posthole learning. We talked about student travel and his own trip to Samoa as part of the Malama Honua voyages. We went deep into capstone projects, design thinking, competency-based learning and what it takes to build communities of practice. It was a marvelous conversation. If you like it, please give us a rating and review at your podcast store! As always, this episode was edited by Daniel Gilad at DG Sound Creations. Find out more about Daniel at his Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/dgsoundcreations). This series is funded by Ted Dintersmith, the author of the bestselling book, What School Could Be.  The post 45. Coastal Erosion and Other Subjects, With Dan Gaudiano (http://mltsinhawaii.com/index.php/2020/09/21/s2e4-coastal-erosion-and-other-subjects-with-dan-gaudiano/) appeared first on @MLTSinHawaii (http://mltsinhawaii.com).

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