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Latest podcast episodes about combinations

GardenDC
Landscape Design Combinations

GardenDC

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 59:05


In this episode of GardenDC: The Podcast about Mid-Atlantic Gardening, we talk with garden designer and blogger Lee Miller, about landscape design combinations*. The plant profile is on Japanese Snowbell Tree and we share what's going on in the garden as well as some upcoming local gardening events in the What's New segment. We close out with the Last Word on "Peas Don't Like me" from Christy Page of GreenPrints.***Please Vote for our show the GardenDC Podcast athttps://bestof2026.washingtoncitypaper.com/ under Arts & Entertainment > Best Local PodcasterThe deadline to vote is June 10, 2026.  Thank you in advance!****You can order Lee Miller's book Landscape Design Combinations at https://amzn.to/4vALSzCThis link is to our Amazon affiliate account and we may earn a few pennies from these sales, but it wil not impact your purchase price.BTW, YOU can become a listener supporter for as little as $0.99 per month! See how at: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/show/gardendc/subscribeIf you liked this episode, you may also enjoy listening to:~ GardenDC Podcast Episode 135: Plants for Shadehttps://washingtongardener.blogspot.com/2023/01/gardendc-podcast-episode-135-plants-for.html~ GardenDC Podcast Episode 111: Flower Combinationshttps://washingtongardener.blogspot.com/2022/07/gardendc-podcast-episode-111-flower.html~ GardenDC Podcast Episode 102: Annual Combinationshttps://washingtongardener.blogspot.com/2022/04/gardendc-podcast-episode-102-annual.html~ GardenDC Podcast Episode 72: Low-Maintenance Gardeninghttps://washingtongardener.blogspot.com/2021/08/gardendc-podcast-episode-72-low.htmlShow Notes will be posted after 6/15/2026.We welcome your questions and comments! You can leave a voice mail message for us at: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gardendc/message Note that we may use these messages on a future episode.And be sure to leave us a 5-star review on your favorite podcast platform plus share us on social media with #GardenDC, so other gardeners can find us too!Episode Credits:Host and Producer: Kathy JentzMusic: Let the Sunshine by James MulvanyRecorded on 6-6-2026.

Stories and insights from Combined Healthcare NHS Trust
Long Service Award 2026, Stories of the Day - Combinations 102

Stories and insights from Combined Healthcare NHS Trust

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 25:34


Join Kyle Live from Port Vale Football Club for this year's Long Service Awards, a special event celebrating the dedication, achievements and years of service of staff across the NHS. Like last year, Kyle will be out among the staff round the tables speaking to colleagues to uncover some of the inspiring stories that have gone untold. From memorable career moments to the people and experiences that have shaped their NHS journeys.

City Ballet The Podcast
Episode 160: New Combinations: Symphonie Espagnole

City Ballet The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 35:24


Associate Artistic Director and host Wendy Whelan is back for a New Combinations conversation with Principal Dancer Tiler Peck as she prepares for the May 7 premiere of Symphonie Espagnole, her second choreographic commission for the company. Peck dives into the granularities of her process—from music selection to costumes to casting the 40-person ballet—and reflects on the unexpected ways in which choreographing has uncovered new facets of her own dancing and artistry. (35:24) Music: "Sisyphus" by Andrew Wegman Bird Wixen Music Publishing, Inc. as agent for Muffet Music Co   Edited by Emilie Silvestri

City Ballet The Podcast
Episode 159: New Combinations: Continuum

City Ballet The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 35:39


New Combinations Host and Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelan is joined by choreographer Christopher Wheeldon this week, whose ballet Continuum will have its NYCB premiere on May 1. It's part of a trilogy of leotard ballets, including Polyphonia and Morphoses, set to a score by György Ligeti—a composer whose music Wheeldon was "really intrigued by," but also "terrified" by. Wheeldon and Whelan discuss unlocking and understanding the mysteries of Ligeti's works, setting this piece on the company, and the positive impact fear can have on one's creative process. (35:39)   Music: "Sisyphus" by Andrew Wegman Bird Wixen Music Publishing, Inc. as agent for Muffet Music Co   Edited by Emilie Silvestri

Rounding Up
Season 4 | Episode 16 – Kristin Frang, Understanding the Roots of Fluency with Addition & Subtraction

Rounding Up

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 33:42


Kristin Frang, Understanding the Roots of Fluency with Addition & Subtraction ROUNDING UP: SEASON 4 | EPISODE 16 Research suggests that supporting students' fluency with addition and subtraction hinges on understanding how children's mathematical thinking develops. So what are the concepts and ideas that play a part in fluency with combinations to 10, 20, and beyond?  Today, we'll explore this question with Kristin Frang, director of instructional programs at Integrow Numeracy Solutions.  BIOGRAPHY Kristin Frang is the director of instructional programs for Integrow Numeracy Solutions. She designs resources and services that support states, districts, schools, and individuals in transforming numeracy education. RESOURCES "Understanding Units Coordination" Season 4, Episode 11 of the Rounding Up podcast Integrow Numeracy Solutions website blog  email address On Track to Numeracy book by Lucinda "Petey" MacCarty, Kurt Kinsey, David Ellemor-Collins, and Robert J. Wright TRANSCRIPT Mike Wallus: Welcome to the podcast, Kristin. It is so great to be talking with you today.  Kristin Frang: It's great to be here. I feel so honored to be on this podcast.  Mike: Before we dive into a conversation about addition and subtraction, I'd like to do a bit of grounding. So you're currently the director of instructional programs for Integrow Numeracy Solutions. I wonder if briefly you could tell the listeners: What is Integrow Numeracy Solutions, and what's its mission?  Kristin: Yeah. Integrow Numeracy Solutions' mission is to transform numeracy education by connecting research with practice and empowering educators to advance student mathematical thinking and success. But I really want to bring that mission to life through a story, just a quick story, if I can.  Prior to my role with Integrow, I was a K–12 mathematics consultant. And one of the things that I did was, when the Common Core [State Standards] were released, I worked with teachers to transition to the then-new standards. We studied many documents together, including progression documents that were included in the standards, and teachers were honestly fascinated by this idea of a progression and that they were embedded into the standard. But I remember an instance where we had been studying these progressions and a teacher came up and said to me, "I know where my students are at; I can see them in these progressions. But how do I get them to the next stage?"  And I didn't have an answer (laughs) at that point. I was a former middle school and high school teacher. I was working with elementary teachers. I was studying, just like them, these progression documents, and I could only categorize the reasoning that was in front of us. And so that next step to say, "Oh, this is what I would do and bring into action in the classroom," I didn't have an answer for. And so that's really where I was introduced to Integrow—formerly [the] US Math Recovery Council, but now Integrow Numeracy Solutions. And at the heart of our mission to empower educators is to bring research to the classroom in accessible and practical ways that advance student reasoning. We do this in professional learning, we do it in supplemental resources, and we also hire and train educators to deliver high-dosage tutoring for students to accelerate their learning.  Mike: I want to just linger on something you said, which was—and I really appreciate both the truth of the statement you made and also the vulnerability, which is to say—I think for many teachers, there's this experience of, "I can see my students in these progressions, but I'm not sure what to do when it comes to making moves to shift where they're at or help them move." And I think that's a profound truth for so many teachers. And I think it's really important that folks like you, who are doing this work, acknowledge that that's a place you were in once as well because that's so true for so many of us.  Kristin: Yeah. There's always a new thing where we're watching students, we're thinking about the next steps. And so often it boils down to categorizing the things that students are doing now, but not often figuring out: What are the true actions that we take with real children who are in front of us to get them to progress in their own reasoning? We can tell them the next step, but my belief system that is aligned with Integrow Numeracy Solutions is that the most powerful thing is to help students have those experiences and create that understanding themselves. And to do that, it's more complex than just knowing what the next benchmark is for them.  Mike: I think that's a helpful introduction. And I also find it to be a good segue for all the questions that I wanted to explore today. So let me start here: It feels important to acknowledge that supporting students' addition and subtraction fluency actually hinges on understanding how children's mathematical thinking develops. So I wonder if you can talk about some of the concepts and the ideas that play a part in fluency when it comes to combinations of 10, combinations to 20, and even beyond.  Kristin: Yeah. The words that we hear associated with fluency right now are "flexibility," "efficiency," "accuracy." So we've moved on from just speed, which I think is a really positive place for us to be in education. But at the heart of flexibility, efficiency and accuracy is a quantitative understanding of arithmetic. I'm really glad that you had Amy Hackenberg on [the podcast] recently who discussed this concept of units coordination because throughout what we'll talk about, you'll see units coordination come out, but she's definitely the expert to explain it. Just a nod. Just listen to that episode [Season 4, Episode 11]. It was amazing.  Thinking, though, specifically about fluency—fluency isn't just knowing all of these combinations. In the early stages of counting, students view a number simply as a count or result of a count of single items, and there's this critical shift in developing a unit as a fundamental tool of measurement. And that's the act of unitizing where a student conceives of a collection of items as one unit that's simultaneously made of smaller units.  It is a common progression that once a student counts on, that then we would shift to building strategies to solve addition and subtraction within 20, and then of course with 100, and beyond, and then in other domains. But this is all happening in first and second grade for that addition and subtraction to 20 fluency. So attending to this numerical composite—understanding that when a child says "7" and sees that that represents counting from 1 to 7 without having to count—is a really big cognitive shift in their mathematical understanding and can be undermined with, "Oh, now that they're counting on, we're going to tell them these strategies." And so we really do need to have some intentional instructional strategies to make sure that we're developing that first, that numerical composite, before we try to develop all these strategies for addition and subtraction to 20. Because that is the basis for children to move from a counting-based strategy to compose units.  So when they can use a quantity like, "Oh, 8 plus 5, I can break apart this 5 into smaller parts and I can give some of those parts to the 8." So children at that point have to simultaneously hold 5 as a single unit while recognizing the 2 and the 3 make up the 5, but they can be moved to the 8 as well. That's really sophisticated.  Mike: So I want to mark that because I think the notion that this is really sophisticated is important for folks to understand because I'll be vulnerable and honest: I didn't recognize the complexity of what children were grappling with when I started teaching, particularly as a person who was teaching kindergarten and first grade. I really saw my job as helping to build a set of rote procedures like counting and number sequence and memorizing combinations and the outcome of being able to count and the outcome of being able to quickly recall those. I think that's not in question, but understanding the mechanics and the evolution of kids' thinking that's going on, that's a big deal. This whole notion that you have a unit and the unit is composed of smaller units. And one of the things that you said that feels like a really big deal that could be lost is the idea that shifting from a counting-based strategy to a strategy that depends on this notion of units that have smaller units inside and that are also still a unit—that's such a big deal. In order to go from counting everything to counting on to being able to look at a number like 8 and say that it has a 5 and a 3 inside of it—all of that is connected to this notion of units inside of units. And I'm so glad you mentioned that.  Kristin: Yeah. The mental actions that students are doing, making those visible, when we see children do it developmentally, we just assume it's easy. But the shifts that they're making in their understanding of units to move from that pre-numerical stage of "Everything is a 1 and I have to repeat it" to "Now this word can stand in for the count" to "Now I can embed units inside of other units." There's so much happening, and they're so young at that age; we have to remember that too.  Mike: So let's talk about some other important components of developing fluency. What else is an important primer for how people are thinking about this?  Kristin: Yeah. Another important component is supporting students in developing the cognitive structures that allow students to anchor their understanding and quantitative meaning and develop that sophisticated reasoning. Many researchers, many authors have written in different ways and different names about these structures. So like a "mental structure," "mental residue," "mental tools," "patterns of thought." To name a few people, Zaretta Hammond, Betty [K.] Garner, Karen [S.] Karp are some people I've read and appreciate their thinking around that.  So it's more than just allowing students to use manipulatives to solve problems. There's an intentionality in how we use tools and an explicit process used by educators to bring their mathematical world to life. So first, identifying key settings that emphasize mathematical structures. So the tool in front of them has a big role to play in the "math"—I put that in quotations—in the "math" that they see. 10-frames that highlight a quantity of 10, but also can show other quantities within 10, such as, like, a five or a double. It has an added layer of boxes that contain a number. Some contain a number or a counter and others are empty. So there's ways that kids are coming to understand quantity with the structure.  Similarly, a bead rack can show a five structure, a double structure, depending on your representation. They can help kids think about exchanges and really kind of that movement of quantity in a real physical way. Using linking cubes, do you use them all in one color? Are you strategic about the color that you use to bring out mathematical structures for them?  So once we think about the key setting and the structure that we're trying to help kids reason about, we want to pose intentional questions that orient students to those structures. So how do they see that 5 inside? How are we going to bring that out? It's obvious to us, but are they seeing that or are they seeing something different in the tool? Are they reasoning about something different? And so the intentionality behind how we question students during those activities also aids to building their cognitive structures. So it's not the tool itself that is the 8. It's that the child is seeing the 8 and they're seeing the 5 and the 3 in some empty boxes.  And finally, I think the step that we miss a lot, especially in problem-based instruction or any kind of inquiry-based instruction, is this explicit time where we connect the symbols in formal mathematics directly to represent the child's thinking and the tool that they've been playing around with. So it's not just about knowing I can get an answer on the 10-frame, but it's [that] I'm abstracting that series of actions, and I'm then connecting it to this quantity that I've written in a symbol. And are there connections between those things? And if those things aren't happening—kids are doing all those parts and pieces, but really developing the cognitive structure that they can then themselves use and take with them, I think that's what's so powerful when we talk about fluency is they can take a cognitive structure with them and fill in the mathematics in the future [when] maybe they don't have an educator in front of them asking those questions. But if they've been through those processes, then they have that structure to fill in.  Mike: There's a lot that you just said that I think is important and we could probably linger on a lot of it. But on the front end of this conversation, you said it's one thing to be able to see students in a progression, and it's another thing to think about, "What's my role or what are the tools that I have to help them shift?" What I heard in that last part, particularly is this notion of almost like a translation between the physical materials kids are engaging with and the meaning that they're making of that, and then helping them to abstract that in a way where we have symbols that are representing either actions or quantities and the relationships that are happening. That part of the teacher's job and part of the moves that teachers have in their toolbox is this notion of translation—taking what I'm seeing kids doing and how what I'm hearing them say or do to make meaning of it, and then helping them make that abstraction is kind of one of the tools that's really important in a teacher's toolbox when they're thinking about helping kids make moves.  In preparation for our interview, one of the things that stayed with me was you described how your own understanding of the meaning and the importance of fluency had shifted over time. And I'm wondering if you can talk about what you used to think and what is it that you think now about fluency. Could you talk about your own personal journey?  Kristin: For sure. I used to think that knowing facts, just knowing them in a very static way—like I know the answer to 5 plus 3, I keep coming back to that fact—reduces the cognitive load when they were getting into higher grade levels. Well, they don't need to think about that problem, and they can think about what we're doing in seventh grade math or in algebra.  But what I've come to understand is that the ways that students know their facts—more specifically how they're able to work with the units and the way they conceptualize the units that they are given, how they break them apart, how they put them back together—that's what matters as they go. So not just knowing the answer, but that these things can be taken apart and put back together.  Anderson Norton is a researcher that I really love to listen to. And I listened to him at an Integrow conference once. And he talked about developing mathematics through repeatable mental actions. So this kind of relates back to those cognitive structures. One example of a group of mental actions is this idea of composable, reversible, and associative. So when I think about 8 plus 5, 5 is composed of a 2 and a 3, and I can reverse that to focus on the unit of 2, and then I can associate that quantity with the 8 to make a new unit while keeping intact the unit of 5. That's really complex, but that idea transcends the domains of mathematics. Now, I'm not an expert in units coordination research, so I hope I represented that correctly, but I've certainly experienced students struggling to keep track of different units as they work. So thinking about exponent rules, and they break apart these powers and they're writing them and they're learning all these patterns, but they're struggling to keep track of the units that they're working with. Factoring functions in algebra. We're asking them to break apart something and put it back together in these different forms, and they're losing track of these units. So these actions of composable, reversible, and associative have implications in many domains of mathematics. So the bottom line is we want to develop not the fact itself, but the mental action behind that fact. Anderson Norton, I hope I did that justice.  Mike: I want to name something that I think is really important, particularly given the fact that your background is actually in secondary [education]. So what I take from this is this idea of working with units and the mental actions, that transcends arithmetic. It transcends whole numbers and even rational numbers. And it pays dividends and it keeps paying dividends in middle school and high school as kids are working in an algebra context. And I think that's worth saying out loud because it means that doing this work with elementary students to develop fluency is a bit of a twofer in the sense that you do get kids who end up with a bank of facts that they know, but they also have this underlying understanding of units and actions that pays dividends for them in the long run. Mathematics education, students' learning experience, is not a sprint or a series of handoffs. It's really a marathon. And those early experiences, they pay dividends and they keep paying dividends. I think that's really important because it reminds us, particularly as elementary educators, that we're part of a larger project.  Kristin: Not only part of a project, but part of building a lifelong interest in mathematics as an actual body of research that's dynamic and not a set of things to memorize and learn so that mathematics does become applicable in these different fields because the way that I approach a problem as an expert mathematician is that I take things apart, I put them back together. That transcends many careers. It's not just about being a math teacher or a math professor. It's about coming to understand that I have autonomy and how I see relationships of things, whether they're numbers or shapes or maybe parts that I'm working on in some sort of creative field that I'm in, but that I can do all of these things and that I can be curious and repeat those actions and see how they play out in that particular study.  Mike: That's well said.  Well, let's talk about the what, the why, the how of combinations to 10 and 20. To begin, I want to note that we use the term "combinations," and I'm wondering if you can say more about what you mean when you refer to combinations and why they matter.  Kristin: Yeah. I mean combinations not to literally mean "addition," but that combination is the idea of this relationship between parts and wholes. So that 2, 3, and 5 have this kind of additive relationship. I can put these parts together to make the whole; I can take a part out of the whole and be left with a part. I can have a part and wonder what part I need to make the whole. And so we sometimes talk about these in curriculums as "fact families," but the emphasis should be on the relationship of the parts to the whole and not filling out that kind of mimicking of like, "I know the four sentences because I know this thing." So, "If I know this, I also know this." It feels really nuanced, but in action really quite specific.  Mike: So I think that's really helpful and it really does lead me to my next question about how we help kids build their fluency with combinations to 10 and 20 and beyond. So given the why that you just articulated, it seems like the how is going to be substantially different from the ways that many, if not most, adults learn to build fluency. Can you talk about that, Kristin?  Kristin: We start from key combinations first. We consider a set of combinations that would be really useful in a lot of contexts. And I think many listeners will be familiar with those key combinations: doubles. Combinations of 10, of course. 5 plus because I have five fingers and then I can add some more on it, and I'm showing some finger patterns. So those are things we normally work on with students anyways. But starting again, going back to my original statement from a quantitative perspective—so not the memorization of those facts, but that I really come to understand them as quantities that are useful to me. And then building from those key combinations—I also want to name before I build onto that, is that some kids just have other facts that are interesting to them that they bring. So it might be their age, it might be the combination of their siblings' ages. And so we don't want to ignore that we introduce key combinations to students, but that students also have combinations that are useful to them naturally.  So once we have a set of those key combinations that we've come to think about and reason about, we can then build things that we don't know. We can transfer that. So 5 plus 3 can help me think about 4 plus 3. If I have a mental structure of a 10-frame or a bead rack that helps me think about, "Oh, there's just going to be one less counter on the top, and so I'm going to take that [counter] away." So that idea of taking the 1 out of the number is a really important mental action of them disembedding that quantity.  In addition, when we think about the 5 plus, the doubles, the partitions, we're thinking about combinations that will also transcend into multidigit combinations. So addition, subtraction—whether we're working with whole numbers or decimals, we can make tens, we can make hundreds, we can make wholes, we can make zeros. And those combinations of 10 are going to be really useful for us.  Mike: I'm struck by the fact that the combinations and also the mental actions that accompany them, as you said, they really do scale up quite nicely. And it seems like they scale up in the sense that they can get used to understand and solve problems with larger whole numbers, but they can also scale in the sense that ideas will help kids, but they can also scale in the sense that the ideas can really help kids when they encounter fractions and decimals. I wonder if you could talk about that idea just a little bit.  Kristin: Yeah. So thinking about a combination of 10 in this missing part. So 99 plus can help us when we're thinking about, that 99 is 1 away from 100. It can also help us think about 99 one-hundredths or 9 tenths as being one part or one unit away from a benchmark number that's really helpful for us. And so, it's just that the unit itself is different. So instead of just a whole, I'm one whole unit away from 100, I might be 1 tenth of a unit away from one whole, so the unit is just changing.  The view of mathematics this way, again, is very dynamic. We're creating a world where children are thinking about units and units away across domains, across number systems. And if we come to regard units as things that we can act on, whether it's a single object or a group of objects or a shape—we can put them together, take them apart and reassociate them—I can think of a lot of my mathematical knowledge in this way and not as a static set of information that I learned. And so then I'm able to transfer that because I've done that mental action or I've thought about something being a unit away.  Mike: That's fascinating because I'm going to go back to this whole notion of the relationship between 3 and 2 and 5. So 3 is 2 units away from a unit of 5 and three-fifths are 2 one-fifths away from a unit of five-fifths or one whole. This notion of units away from or units that combine to make other units, I really get now whether it's whole numbers or fractions, we're really talking about a unit that we've defined and then how many other units or how can we—how did you describe that? What was the language you used before about pulling a unit out? Was it "disembed"?  Kristin: "Disembed," yeah.  Mike: That really plays regardless of the type of unit we're talking about.  Kristin: Yeah. And remember back where we said this quantity had a meaning, so 7 stood for something. When we disembed, that unit still has meaning in the context of the original unit. So that's a really important point about disembedding is that it's not just that you take a part out, it's that part still has a relationship to the whole and you don't lose that relationship.  Mike: As I hear you talking, there seem to be some themes that are jumping out. One is the importance of key fact combinations and the mental actions. Another is the role visual models play in learning those combinations. And I think finally, I hear you indicating that it's important for students to make connections between different representations of the same combination. Tell me what I understood properly. Tell me what you'd revise or add to the summary that I just offered.  Kristin: Yes. I think we get a false sense that a student understands a concept when they're recognizing pattern, and that could be that they're recognizing pattern in a really intentional setting. Maybe they're using a 10-frame. But is that same relationship present in another setting? Success should not be measured by one instance of a child recognizing that pattern. And so one way of knowing that a child knows this is to see it in many contexts. And I think that's why it's so important for us to acknowledge the research around multiple representations in mathematics. And showing that knowledge in these multiple ways really does say that this is a connected set of knowledge that I can refer to as a child and not just be successful on this one day. That doesn't mean that that experience where they're recognizing the patterns is not important, but that can't be the measure of their success.  So this also becomes challenging in our system that values assessment events so heavily and measuring against a set benchmark. And I just want to name that because that's a real challenge for teachers. And of course we want to develop this rich set of knowledge, and sometimes we have to say that this is the system that we live in. But the true measure of that knowledge is being able to take that knowledge and transfer it into these multiple representations or in these multiple spaces and be able to use that. And that's why we talk so much about fluency being flexible and not just about accuracy.  Mike: You have me thinking more deeply than I have in a long time about the structure of some of the visual models and the physical materials that children use when they're engaged with the Bridges curriculum. I wonder if we could get specific and talk about a few of the visual models that support student learning. Are there features that make some models particularly valuable?  Kristin: One I want to mention that we might not have talked about is just a child's fingers. I think sometimes we think child's fingers are not models for them because they're counting by 1 and we tend to want students to move to more efficient strategies. But these fingers actually become really efficient tools. We can exchange fingers, we can move them very easily. We have control, and they're always with us. And so the finger use itself, I think, is a really powerful tool for us to encourage students to use in very sophisticated ways.  Mike: I mean, we literally have units of 1, units of 5, and a unit of 10 at our fingertips in front of us. I'm so glad you called that out because that's a tool that students can make use of, that teachers can make use of and that we can think of in a slightly different way than we had in the past when I just thought about fingers as a counting-by-1 resource, when actually fingers, [a hand], and hands, plural, are 1s, 5s, and 10s right there in front of you.  Kristin: And they can stand in for other units if we're really sophisticated with sequences. So a 1 can be a 7 if we wanted it to be, and we can think really creatively about that. I mean, I think that depends on some other skills. But yeah, we have 1s, 5s, and 10s built right into our hands.  Mike: That's exactly right. And you're making me think about the fact that when I skip-count or when I see students skip-count, oftentimes what's happening is I'm speaking the unit out loud and I'm holding up one finger to stand in for that unit on my hand to keep track of the number of units. So I totally hear what you're saying.  Kristin: Yeah, very sophisticated. And then there's even more complex content, right? So thinking about hours and elapsed time, and we're crossing different kinds of numerical systems where you go from a 12 to a 1 is very complex, and then we can have these fingers as units as well to help us keep track of things. So of course, frames are a really powerful tool. Frames—specifically, 10-frames, 5-frames, 20-frames—provide an extra structure for students, especially when they're really thinking hard about some quantity pieces. So they might not be completely solid in that unit, but we don't have to say, "Oh, you have to count on first before we're going to try to explore some other patterns." Those things can be developing simultaneously. So frames provide this box that contains the unit for them and it becomes this really obvious count for them. They can see those individual discrete items, but they can also see what's missing really clearly because they're empty.  Bead racks are a great support as well when you're thinking about that relational network that we want students to develop and not count by 1s. So we can exchange beads, and we can exchange quantities, and we don't have to exchange beads one by one. Sometimes frames, when we get to a space, it's inconvenient to have to move five counters at the same time where in a bead rack, you can just slide those five over or three over at the same time.  I also want to mention linear bead racks. So taking that stacked bead rack and making it align really helps students think about a continuous model, which transfers to a number line and the idea of units being measurement. So we were talking about, "It's one away," and so really conceptualizing that kind of next decade of numbers and one bead away. That's developing that idea of relative magnitude that's extremely helpful when we get to middle school and all of a sudden we're working in negative numbers.  Mike: We're reaching the end of our time together. And before we go, I'm wondering if you could share contact information for Integrow Numeracy Solutions with our listeners. I'd really love to be able to offer that because we've just touched the surface of some of the ideas that you help educators explore in some of the training and the support that you all offer.  Kristin: Yeah. If you'd like to find out more about us, a great place to go is our website, which is www.integrowmath.org, all one word. And we have a lot of different things you can explore from our events. There is actually, if you add a backslash "blog" to that [www.integrowmath.org/blog], you can go to our blog and read some of the ways that we think about our professional learning and some of the topics that I talked about today. If you want to reach out directly, feel free to email info@integrowmath.org and someone will get you to the right place based on your question.  Mike: And for listeners, we'll put a link to both of those in the show notes. Before we leave, Kristin, I'll just ask one last question. Are there any recommendations that you have for folks interested in learning more about the ideas we've talked about today? It could be books, websites, articles, or even just a suggested practice for someone who wants to get started.  Kristin: Yeah. For sure, take a look at the blogs on our website. They're little snippets of pieces of our trainings that you can take right with you into the classroom. Some ideas that I've talked about—help with bead racks, ideas around multiplication and division, and supporting students to think about those units. Our new publication, On Track to Numeracy from [Lucinda] "Petey" MacCarty, Kurt Kinsey, [David Ellemor-Colons, and Robert J. Wright], is designed to be an accessible, relatable and practical tool focused on supporting classroom teachers. It not only has the progressions that I started this podcast off talking about, but it has those teaching tests and progressions that help us answer the question of, "What do I do next now that I can understand where my students are?" Mike: I think it's a great place to stop, Kristin. I want to thank you so much for joining us. It's really been a pleasure talking with you.  Kristin: Thank you for having me. I've had a great time.  Mike: This podcast is brought to you by The Math Learning Center and the Maier Math Foundation, dedicated to inspiring and enabling all individuals to discover and develop their mathematical confidence and ability.  © 2026 The Math Learning Center | www.mathlearningcenter.org

Stories and insights from Combined Healthcare NHS Trust
Beyond the Boardroom: Advocating Through The Barriers and Bias - Combinations 101

Stories and insights from Combined Healthcare NHS Trust

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 29:41


Frieza Mahmood and Ben Richards continue their conversation on leadership, exploring how we tackle workplace culture and why it matters to stand up for those who are often overlooked. They reflect on the different challenges people face, with Ben sharing personal experiences of how certain aspects of his identity impact everyday life, including where he feels able to travel.

OncLive® On Air
S16 Ep29: Novel Treatment Combinations for B-ALL May Help Patients Safely Achieve Remission: With Colin Vale, MD

OncLive® On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 10:19


In today's episode, we spoke with Colin Vale, MD. Dr Vale is an assistant professor in the Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology at the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia.In our exclusive interview, Dr Vale discussed data from a phase 2 trial (NCT03263572) evaluating blinatumomab (Blincyto) plus ponatinib (Iclusig) in patients with Philadelphia chromosome–positive B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In addition to underscoring the findings and their clinical significance, Vale expanded on how the combination can improve patient quality of life by helping patients avoid procedures like allogeneic stem cell transplant.

DJ & PK
Hour 3: Scott Garrard Previews USU & Villanova | Tim LaComb Examines BYU & Utah Jazz | Utah Jazz Lineup Combinations

DJ & PK

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 43:50


Hour three of DJ & PK for March 18, 2026: Scott Garrard, Scotty G & Friends Tim LaComb, SEG Media What will the Utah Jazz do lineup-wise?

UBC News World
Modern Fusion Dishes: How Unique Flavor Combinations Bring The World Together

UBC News World

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 8:04


Learn how culinary labs blend traditional Asian techniques like fermentation and umami with global flavors for fusion dishes that delight. From Rotterdam's evolving food scene to the process behind constantly changing menus, this episode examines the art of boundary-pushing gastronomy. Learn more at https://yummyyums.nl/fusion-food-concept Yummy Yums City: Rotterdam Address: 70 Benno Premselastraat Website: https://yummyyums.nl

Easy Ayurveda Podcast
Gurubodha 181: Gandhaka Rasayana Indications| Combinations of different medicine forms| Auto immunity Ayurveda perspective

Easy Ayurveda Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2026 48:02


Sign up to Easy Ayurveda Video Classes by clicking the link belowhttps://www.easyayurveda.com/video-classes/Video Course: “Ayurvedic food and Nutrition”https://www.easyayurveda.com/nutrition/Buy Tridosha Made Easy Bookhttps://www.easyayurveda.com/tridosha-made-easy-3/Buy Tridosha Made Easy Book in Spanish LanguageEl corazón de los doshas: Nuevo librohttps://www.easyayurveda.com/el-corazon-de-los-doshas/Click to know more about Easy Ayurveda Hospitalhttps://www.easyayurveda.com/hospital/Buy our new course on Marma Therapy Part 1https://www.easyayurveda.com/marma1Buy our new course on Marma Therapy Part 1Subscribe to Easy Ayurveda Video Classes https://www.easyayurveda.com/video-classes/Subscribe to our free Easy Ayurveda newsletter here (you can unsubscribe and stop them anytime) -  https://forms.aweber.com/form/58/2129766958.htm Buy our course on diabetes reversal, powered by Madhavbaug https://www.easyayurveda.com/diabetes Buy our online video course on Treatment of cardiac disorders with Ayurveda https://www.easyayurveda.com/heartMaster ECG in one week. Sign up for video course https://www.easyayurveda.com/ecgContact Dr. MB Gururaja BAMS MD (Ayu)https://www.easyayurveda.com/gururaja  Contact Dr. Raghuram YS BAMS MD (Ayu)https://www.easyayurveda.com/raghuram Buy Easy Ayurveda Ebooks https://www.easyayurveda.com/my-book Buy Easy Ayurveda Printed Books https://www.easyayurveda.com/books/

Fescoe in the Morning
Darryn Peterson is Special and the Best Head Coach GM Combinations

Fescoe in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 21:27


Darryn Peterson is Special and the Best Head Coach GM Combinations full 1287 Tue, 03 Feb 2026 12:43:27 +0000 qPigITr1L7ISPaLohf2JUpqfIjYXJzLG nfl,kansas city chiefs,andy reid,ku,sports Fescoe & Dusty nfl,kansas city chiefs,andy reid,ku,sports Darryn Peterson is Special and the Best Head Coach GM Combinations Fescoe in the Morning. One guy is a KU grad.   The other is on the KU football broadcast team,  but their loyalty doesn't stop there as these guys  are huge fans of Kansas City sports and the people  of Kansas City who make it the great city it is.   Start your morning with us at 5:58am!   2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc. Sports False https://player.amperwavepo

VetFolio - Veterinary Practice Management and Continuing Education Podcasts
Oral Regional Nerve Blocks: Application and Drug Combinations

VetFolio - Veterinary Practice Management and Continuing Education Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 46:16


Dental nerve blocks can enhance a veterinary patient's well-being during a dental procedure. In this VetFolio Voice podcast episode, you'll learn about the benefits of dental blocks as additional analgesia during these procedures, techniques for administering them, complications and how to avoid them, and what medications to use alone and in combination. Tune in to this episode and take the first step in mastering dental nerve blocks.

Jonesy & Amanda's JAMcast!

Jonesy & Amanda's JAMcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2026 5:33 Transcription Available


Okay, this is weird.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

City Ballet The Podcast
Episode 154: New Combinations: The Naked King

City Ballet The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 23:54


New Combinations Host and Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelan is joined by Artist in Residence Alexei Ratmansky this week as the countdown to the choreographer's next world premiere—and the 500th work created on the company—continues. Commissioned by Serge Lifar in 1935, the score, by the little-known neoclassical composer Jean Françaix, adapts Hans Christian Andersen's "The Emperor's New Clothes" for the stage. Among the ballet's unique challenges was the casting of the title character, which Ratmansky shares requires a "fearless" dancer with "charisma and a sense of humor." (23:53) Edited by Emilie Silvestri Music: "Sisyphus" by Andrew Wegman Bird Wixen Music Publishing, Inc. as agent for Muffet Music Co

City Ballet The Podcast
Episode 153: New Combinations: The Wind-Up

City Ballet The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 24:05


This week, New Combinations host and Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelan is joined by Resident Choreographer Justin Peck to discuss his upcoming world premiere. As Peck describes, the work takes inspiration from the score, the first movement of Beethoven's Symphony No. 3—the Eroica or "Heroic" Symphony—and celebrates the six "superheroes" of the cast. Choreographing to Beethoven presents unique challenges, but as Peck explains, this is part of why he chose the piece, along with the joy playing it brings to the NYCB Orchestra. (24:05)   Edited by Emilie Silvestri Music: "Sisyphus" by Andrew Wegman Bird Wixen Music Publishing, Inc. as agent for Muffet Music Co

Afternoon Drive
Thu. Jan 15: Nuggets beat Mavs | Quarterback-Head Coach combinations in the playoffs | Sean Payton and the turnaround of the Broncos

Afternoon Drive

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2026 50:33


The Nuggets earned another impressive win, beating the Mavericks in Dallas 118-109 last night. When Cam Johnson returns to the court, will he be coming off the bench as Peyton Watson has emerged as a bonafide starter? Jalen Pickett has really stepped up lately as well. A look at the quarterback/head coach combinations in the playoffs. Where does Bo Nix/Sean Payton rank among the playoff teams? Plus, a deep dive into the turnaround of the Broncos since Sean Payton has arrived. Catch a Thursday episode of Hot Takes with Eric Goodman and Bruce Haertl! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 81:46


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NXT865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until January 15, 2027.Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and Living Beyond Breast Cancer. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, Lilly, and Stemline Therapeutics, a Menarini Company Group.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

patients decisions framework clinical disclosure astrazeneca precision therapies medical education dialing combinations endocrine genentech her2 targeted therapy accreditation council pvi living beyond breast cancer multifactorial continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri practice aids peerview institute
PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions

PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 81:46


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NXT865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until January 15, 2027.Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and Living Beyond Breast Cancer. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, Lilly, and Stemline Therapeutics, a Menarini Company Group.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

patients decisions framework clinical disclosure astrazeneca precision therapies medical education dialing combinations endocrine genentech her2 targeted therapy accreditation council pvi living beyond breast cancer multifactorial continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri practice aids peerview institute
PeerView Internal Medicine CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions

PeerView Internal Medicine CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 81:46


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NXT865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until January 15, 2027.Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and Living Beyond Breast Cancer. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, Lilly, and Stemline Therapeutics, a Menarini Company Group.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

patients decisions framework clinical disclosure astrazeneca precision therapies medical education dialing combinations endocrine genentech her2 targeted therapy accreditation council pvi living beyond breast cancer multifactorial continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri practice aids peerview institute
PeerView Internal Medicine CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions

PeerView Internal Medicine CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 81:46


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NXT865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until January 15, 2027.Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and Living Beyond Breast Cancer. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, Lilly, and Stemline Therapeutics, a Menarini Company Group.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

patients decisions framework clinical disclosure astrazeneca precision therapies medical education dialing combinations endocrine genentech her2 targeted therapy accreditation council pvi living beyond breast cancer multifactorial continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri practice aids peerview institute
PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions

PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 81:46


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NXT865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until January 15, 2027.Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and Living Beyond Breast Cancer. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, Lilly, and Stemline Therapeutics, a Menarini Company Group.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

patients decisions framework clinical disclosure astrazeneca precision therapies medical education dialing combinations endocrine genentech her2 targeted therapy accreditation council pvi living beyond breast cancer multifactorial continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri practice aids peerview institute
PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Video
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Video

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 81:46


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NXT865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until January 15, 2027.Dialing Up Precision in HR+, HER2- MBC With New Endocrine Agents, Targeted Therapies, and Combinations: A Framework for Multifactorial Clinical Decisions In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and Living Beyond Breast Cancer. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, Lilly, and Stemline Therapeutics, a Menarini Company Group.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

patients decisions framework clinical disclosure astrazeneca precision therapies medical education dialing combinations endocrine genentech her2 targeted therapy accreditation council pvi living beyond breast cancer multifactorial continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri practice aids peerview institute
Bright Side
30 Food Combinations Sound Weird Until You Try Them ?

Bright Side

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2025 12:09


Sometimes you just get the strangest craving. Slathering mayo on a banana, peanut butter on pickles, mustard on Oreo cookies! Most just brush it off like, "That's insane, I can't do that." But others have given into their bizarre yet uncontrollable cravings. And they struck gold! These weird food combinations sound anything but delicious...until you try them! ??? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

On Iowa Podcast
Pinning Combinations - College: K.J. Pilcher and Dick Brigs (12/11/25)

On Iowa Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2025 43:09


The Gazette sports writer K.J. Pilcher has Dick Briggs on their weekly Pinning combinations podcast talking about Iowa wrestling from high school to college. Episodes are separated by college and high school.

Fescoe in the Morning
Chiefs OL Combinations and the Ripple Effect of the K-State Collin Klein Move

Fescoe in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2025 21:51


Chiefs OL Combinations and the Ripple Effect of the K-State Collin Klein Move full 1311 Thu, 04 Dec 2025 12:43:41 +0000 epuMdxCRAEoxxtsXAHvWrONXleodRSqX nfl,kansas city chiefs,kansas state,chris klieman,josh simmons,collin klein,sports Fescoe & Dusty nfl,kansas city chiefs,kansas state,chris klieman,josh simmons,collin klein,sports Chiefs OL Combinations and the Ripple Effect of the K-State Collin Klein Move Fescoe in the Morning. One guy is a KU grad.   The other is on the KU football broadcast team,  but their loyalty doesn't stop there as these guys  are huge fans of Kansas City sports and the people  of Kansas City who make it the great city it is.   Start your morning with us at 5:58am!   2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc. Sports False https://player.

Third Down Gamble
Interesting combinations (with Andrew Hoskins).

Third Down Gamble

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2025 77:58


Andrew Hoskins (Turf District Podcast) is our guest host.  The Argonauts have named their new Head Coach.  There are hundreds of CFL free agents, who might make a big splash if still available in February?  Rules: Commissioner Stewart Johnston's suite of changes still leaves questions.  Whither to opt out...  would a new television deal open up the contract beween the CFLPA and the CFL?  (CFL on CBC opening theme used with express permission; podcast recorded December 1, 2025).

Sky House Herbs
Make Your Own Cozy Tea Blends: My favorite Autumn Combinations

Sky House Herbs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2025 22:48


As the colder months arrive, I love leaning into warm, comforting herbal teas that are simple to prepare yet deeply supportive. In this video, I share some of my favorite quick and effective autumn tea blends that rely on the convenience of tea bags—perfect for those moments when we want herbal wellness without extra preparation.While I often work with loose herbs, I also appreciate the practicality and accessibility of high-quality tea bags, especially during busy fall and winter days. These blends offer nurturing support for the nervous system, digestion, and overall seasonal wellness.

PeerView Heart, Lung & Blood CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Prof. Nicolas Girard, MD, PhD / Pasi A. Jänne, MD, PhD - Making Precision Decisions for Patients With EGFRm NSCLC: Success Strategies With Targeted Options, Potent Combinations, and Emerging Agents

PeerView Heart, Lung & Blood CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2025 71:36


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/EVZ865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until October 29, 2026.Making Precision Decisions for Patients With EGFRm NSCLC: Success Strategies With Targeted Options, Potent Combinations, and Emerging Agents In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Daiichi Sankyo, Inc., and Johnson & Johnson.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Prof. Nicolas Girard, MD, PhD / Pasi A. Jänne, MD, PhD - Making Precision Decisions for Patients With EGFRm NSCLC: Success Strategies With Targeted Options, Potent Combinations, and Emerging Agents

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2025 71:36


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/EVZ865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until October 29, 2026.Making Precision Decisions for Patients With EGFRm NSCLC: Success Strategies With Targeted Options, Potent Combinations, and Emerging Agents In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Daiichi Sankyo, Inc., and Johnson & Johnson.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Prof. Nicolas Girard, MD, PhD / Pasi A. Jänne, MD, PhD - Making Precision Decisions for Patients With EGFRm NSCLC: Success Strategies With Targeted Options, Potent Combinations, and Emerging Agents

PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2025 71:36


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/EVZ865. CME/MOC/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until October 29, 2026.Making Precision Decisions for Patients With EGFRm NSCLC: Success Strategies With Targeted Options, Potent Combinations, and Emerging Agents In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by independent educational grants from AstraZeneca, Daiichi Sankyo, Inc., and Johnson & Johnson.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Paolo Ghia, MD, PhD - The Clock Strikes Innovation in CLL: Upfront Care With Newer, Time-Limited BTKi Combinations

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 53:28


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/EBAH/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NMX865. CME/MOC/EBAH/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until October 13, 2026.The Clock Strikes Innovation in CLL: Upfront Care With Newer, Time-Limited BTKi Combinations In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an independent educational grant from AstraZeneca.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Paolo Ghia, MD, PhD - The Clock Strikes Innovation in CLL: Upfront Care With Newer, Time-Limited BTKi Combinations

PeerView Oncology & Hematology CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 53:28


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/EBAH/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NMX865. CME/MOC/EBAH/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until October 13, 2026.The Clock Strikes Innovation in CLL: Upfront Care With Newer, Time-Limited BTKi Combinations In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an independent educational grant from AstraZeneca.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

PeerView Internal Medicine CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
Paolo Ghia, MD, PhD - The Clock Strikes Innovation in CLL: Upfront Care With Newer, Time-Limited BTKi Combinations

PeerView Internal Medicine CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 53:28


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/EBAH/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/NMX865. CME/MOC/EBAH/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until October 13, 2026.The Clock Strikes Innovation in CLL: Upfront Care With Newer, Time-Limited BTKi Combinations In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an independent educational grant from AstraZeneca.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

Dr. Joseph Mercola - Take Control of Your Health
Supercharging Supplements — The Power of Nutraceutical DMSO Combinations

Dr. Joseph Mercola - Take Control of Your Health

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 8:58


DMSO is an "umbrella remedy" capable of treating a wide range of challenging ailments due to its combination of therapeutic properties (e.g., reducing inflammation, improving circulation, and reviving dying cells). It also rapidly transports substances dissolved in it through the skin and throughout the body These benefits are also seen when DMSO is combined with a variety of natural therapies – in many cases, allowing the mixture to treat challenging conditions neither could treat alone DMSO is commonly combined with proven nutraceuticals, such as vitamins and antioxidants These combinations effectively treat a myriad of diseases, including skin cancer, prostate enlargement, cataracts, CRPS, fatigue, lost smell or hearing, osteoarthritis, COPD, and tinnitus This article will review the basics of botanical DMSO combinations, the literature supporting it, and show how these mixtures can be used to treat many additional challenging medical conditions

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Visual Exploration of the Evolving Role of Novel Oral SERDs, Other ER-Targeting Therapies, and Rational Combinations in ER+, HER2- MBC

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 41:33


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/CPE/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/AQV865. CME/MOC/NCPD/CPE/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until September 28, 2026.Visual Exploration of the Evolving Role of Novel Oral SERDs, Other ER-Targeting Therapies, and Rational Combinations in ER+, HER2- MBC In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and METAvivor. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an educational grant from Lilly.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

er patients exploration visual targeting oral disclosure rational therapies medical education combinations evolving role her2 accreditation council pvi continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri serds practice aids peerview institute cme moc ncpd cpe aapa ipce
PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
Komal Jhaveri, MD, FACP - Changing the Scenery in ER+, HER2- MBC With New Oral SERDs and Combinations: Foundations, Evidence, and Practicalities

PeerView Clinical Pharmacology CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 100:14


This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/MOC/NCPD/CPE/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/XYR865. CME/MOC/NCPD/CPE/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until September 24, 2026.Changing the Scenery in ER+, HER2- MBC With New Oral SERDs and Combinations: Foundations, Evidence, and Practicalities In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, and METAvivor. PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an educational grant from Lilly.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.

er patients foundations oral disclosure medical education combinations scenery her2 practicalities accreditation council pvi continuing medical education accme pharmacy education acpe komal jhaveri serds practice aids peerview institute cme moc ncpd cpe aapa ipce
City Ballet The Podcast
Episode 148: New Combinations: Jamar Roberts

City Ballet The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2025 33:43


Associate Artistic Director and host Wendy Whelan is back for another enlightening New Combinations conversation. This week, she's joined by choreographer Jamar Roberts, whose newest work for the company will premiere during the Fall Fashion Gala on October 8, timing he describes as "full-circle," considering his own forays into fashion design. His collaboration with designer Iris van Herpen has been uniquely fruitful, as well as his selection of music by Arca, with both informing this ballet that speaks to the times—"but dance," he adds, referring to the joy and beauty the work also inspires. (33:43)  Edited by Emilie Silvestri Music: "Sisyphus" by Andrew Wegman Bird Wixen Music Publishing, Inc. as agent for Muffet Music Co

The All In For Citrus Podcast
All In For Citrus, Episode 85 September 2025

The All In For Citrus Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2025 47:42


Varieties and rootstocks are the topics of the September episode of the All In For Citrus podcast. Earlier this month, a field day was held in Jason Griffin's grove near Lake Alfred, Florida. He is collaborating with the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) to evaluate several rootstock/scion combinations developed by UF/IFAS citrus breeders. Griffin has focused much of the trial work on the OLL variety line, which was developed by Jude Grosser, UF/IFAS professor of plant cell genetics. Both Griffin and Grosser are podcast guests this month. Grosser discusses his research developing the OLL varieties and why he believes they are a good fit for Florida growers. The OLL line grew out of his relationship with Orie Lee. Lee was a legend in citrus breeding circles and discovered an interesting tree in his research groves near Saint Cloud, Florida, where the original OLL cuttings were taken. Grosser has developed several OLL varieties that are now commercially available. Combinations like OLL-8 on UFR-4 rootstock have performed well. Grosser also recommended growers consider the Orange 14 rootstock, which has shown some tolerance to both diaprepes and HLB.   Griffin discusses his grove trials and why he selected the OLL line. Tolerance to HLB, good yield and quality are among the reasons he likes the varieties. There are several rootstock/scion combinations he highlights as favorites during the podcast. One of those is OLL-20 on a mutant X639 rootstock.  Griffin also talks about the importance of a solid production program to promote tree health and productivity. In addition to a solid fertilizer program, he is a big believer in compost and mulch to increase soil organic matter. More frequent and controlled irrigation is also an important part of his program.

Business Of Biotech
Cannabinoid And Psychedelic Combinations With Incannex Healthcare's Joel Latham

Business Of Biotech

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2025 57:27 Transcription Available


We love to hear from our listeners. Send us a message. On this week's episode, Joel Latham, President and CEO at Incannex Healthcare, talks about developing cannabinoid and psychedelic combination therapies for conditions as diverse as sleep apnea, rheumatoid arthritis, and generalized anxiety disorder. Joel walks through his funding strategy for the publicly-traded company, his desire to lead in a new category of medicine, and what comes next. Access this and hundreds of episodes of the Business of Biotech videocast under the Business of Biotech tab at lifescienceleader.com. Subscribe to our monthly Business of Biotech newsletter. Get in touch with guest and topic suggestions: ben.comer@lifescienceleader.comFind Ben Comer on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bencomer/

Lakers Detailed
Lineup Combinations, Kuminga, and Kawhi

Lakers Detailed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2025 90:11


raj and vinay cover the lineup combinations theyd like to see the lakers test out in the regular season

OncLive® On Air
S14 Ep16: Establishing the Rationale for ADC and ICI Combinations in TNBC

OncLive® On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2025 18:30


In this podcast, experts Virginia Kaklamani, MD, DSc, and Tiffany A. Traina, MD, FASCO, discuss the rationale for and data to support combining TROP2-targeting antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) to treat triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC).

City Ballet The Podcast
Episode 144: New Combinations: Heatscape

City Ballet The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2025 37:10


A brand-new season of City Ballet The Podcast launches today with a fresh New Combinations conversation between Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelan and Resident Choreographer Justin Peck. Commissioned by Miami City Ballet a decade ago, Peck is in the midst of rehearsing his Heatscape for its NYCB stage debut, with the help of original dancers and coaches Michael Sean Breeden, Patricia Delgado, and Jeannette Delgado. He shares what drew him to Bohuslav Martinů's Piano Concerto No. 1, a piece that both references earlier works and prefigures musical changes to come—an interesting parallel to Peck's Miami-inspired choreography and collaboration with artist Shepard Fairey on the ballet's scintillating backdrop. (37:09) Edited by Emilie Silvestri Music: "Sisyphus" by Andrew Wegman Bird Wixen Music Publishing, Inc. as agent for Muffet Music Co

Wheel Talk
#318 - Amazing Glaze: Food-Safe Recipes with Gabriel Kline & Bill Collins

Wheel Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2025 80:44


In this episode of Wheel Talk, we chat with potter Gabriel Kline, director of Odyssey Clayworks in Asheville, and chemist Bill Collins, Ph.D., co-authors of Amazing Glaze Food-Safe Recipes. They share how art and science come together to create vibrant, functional, and food-safe ceramics.Whether you're mixing your first glaze or expanding your library, this episode is full of insights to help you bring beauty and safety to your work.ResourcesAmazing Glaze Food-Safe Recipes: Innovative, Lab-Tested Techniques and Recipes by Gabriel Kline and Bill Collins, Ph.D. (Pre-order now for an October 2025 release)Anya Bartels PorcelainBook RecommendationsThe Complete Potter's Companion by Tony BirksFundamentals of Inorganic Glasses by Arun K. Varshneya and John C. MauroAmazing Glaze Recipes and Combinations: 200+ Surefire Finishes for Low-Fire, Mid-Range, and High-Fire Pottery by Gabriel Kline (2021)Amazing Glaze: Techniques, Recipes, Finishing, and Firing by Gabriel Kline (2017)-----Find more about Gabriel and Bill below-----@odysseyclayworksBill Collins, Ph.D.SponsorsL&L Kilns - The durable kiln that potters trust to fire evenly & consistently. Find your L&L kiln at hotkilns.comSoolla® - Soolla Studio Bags are designed by potters, for potters that come in 25+ colors and equipped with 30 pockets for all you tools, ribs, sponges, and more. Machine washable, durable, and quick drying canvas makes them perfect for wet tools. Find your new studio bag at soolla.co and save 15% at checkout with coupon code "WHEELTALK"Support the show on Patreon for as little as $3 per month: https://patreon.com/WheeltalkpodcastFollow us on Instagram:@wheeltalkpodcast@rdceramics@5linespotteryVisit our website:www.wheeltalkpotcast.comWheel Talk YouTube Channel

Cougar Sports Saturday
Cougar Tales: Breaking Down BYU Football's Uniform Combinations in 2025

Cougar Sports Saturday

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2025 5:47


Producer Nate Slack joins Mitch Harper and Matt Baiamonte to talk about the uniforms BYU will be wearing this season.

The Sip with Ryland Adams and Lizze Gordon
Tasting Shane's Favorite Food Combinations EVER!!!

The Sip with Ryland Adams and Lizze Gordon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2025 78:51


Use our code for 10% off your next SeatGeek order*: https://seatgeek.onelink.me/RrnK/THESIP10 Sponsored by SeatGeek. *Restrictions apply. Max $20 discount

The Sick Podcast with Tony Marinaro
A Look At Possible 2025-26 Habs Line Combinations | The Sick Podcast with Tony Marinaro July 18 2025

The Sick Podcast with Tony Marinaro

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2025 45:35


On this episode of The Sick Podcast, Stu Cowan joins Matt Ohayon to discuss the Canadiens' challenging 2025-2026 schedule, what happens if the team gets off to a bad start, how newcomer Joe Veleno could fit in the lineup, possible forward line combinations, worries about the penalty kill, a potential surprise at training camp and much more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Optimal Health Daily
3036: How to Maximize Nutrient Absorption and Food Combinations to Improve Digestion

Optimal Health Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2025 11:25


Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 3036: Dr. Neal Malik breaks down the science behind food combining and how strategic pairings like protein with carbs or iron with vitamin C can boost digestion, nutrient absorption, and blood sugar control. He also debunks common myths around vegetarian protein and reveals how to get the most out of turmeric's anti-inflammatory benefits. Quotes to ponder: "Combining certain foods may change how they are absorbed by the body." "When we eat a combination of plant-based foods, we still get all the protein the body needs." "Consuming turmeric with black pepper dramatically increases its rate of absorption." Episode references: Golden Milk Benefits (Healthline): https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/golden-milk-turmeric USDA Nutrient Database: https://fdc.nal.usda.gov National Institutes of Health - Office of Dietary Supplements: https://ods.od.nih.gov The American College of Sports Medicine: https://www.acsm.org Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Beau of The Fifth Column
Let's talk about the Senate briefing, obliteration, and combinations....

Beau of The Fifth Column

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2025 3:55


Let's talk about the Senate briefing, obliteration, and combinations....

Perpetual Chess Podcast
EP 440- GM Alexandr Fier: “I Blunder a Lot” – One of the World's Most Active Grandmasters on Intuition, Endgame Studies, and Maintaining His Love For the Game

Perpetual Chess Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2025 71:24


GM Alexandr Fier is a 5 time champion of Brazil and 9 time chess Olympian. He also recently qualified for the FIDE World Cup for the 8th time by finishing tied for first at the American Continental tournament. But aside from all of his impressive accomplishments, what interests me most about GM Fier is how frequently he competes.  Last year alone, he played nearly 200 classical games,, and he has now travelled to over 50 countries. In our conversation we discussed:  How he maintains his energy and positive outlook through a busy tournament calendar Why he thinks playing quickly gives him a competitive advantage. (Hence the nickname “No Fear”)  How he reacted to getting some harsh feedback from legendary trainer IM Mark Dvoretsky at age 18.  We also talked about GM Fier's recent qualification for the 2025 FIDE World Cup, his plans for the rest of 2025, and of course, chess books. It was a pleasure to chat with one of Brazil's top players, and I look forward to following his nonstop tournament adventures in the years to come. Thanks to our sponsor, Chessable.com! If you sign up for Chessable Pro in order to unlock discounts and additional features, be sure to use the following link: https://www.chessable.com/pro/?utm_source=affiliate&utm_medium=benjohnson&utm_campaign=pro And you can check out their new offerings here: https://www.chessable.com/courses/all/new/ https://www.perpetualchesspod.com/partners 0:02- Alexandr is one of the most active Grandmasters in the world- how does he stay motivated? 0:06- How does Alexandr prepare for opponents?  0:11- How did Alexandr begin to collaborate with Imperial sports?  0:13- How Alexandr qualified for the World Cup?  Mentioned: Fier-Shankland 2025 https://www.chess.com/events/2025-american-continental-chess-championship/05/Fier_Alexandrandr-Shankland_Sam 0:16- Why Alexandr plays quickly Mentioned: GM Giga Quparadze  18:00- What makes the World Cup special to Alexandr?  22:00- Alexandr's early Chess Development and Influences Mentioned:  Blokh's Combination Art, Domination by Kasparian, Laszlo Polgar's Chess: 5334 Combinations and Games  Navara-Fier 2015 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1787858 GM Navara's Blog Post: https://lichess.org/@/RealDavidNavara/blog/because-we-care/fauAwr9r 26:00- Was it challenging to get chess books as a kid in Brazil?  28:00- Is chess gaining popularity in Brazil?  Mentioned: GM Rafael Leitao, GM Henrique Mecking  31:00- When did Alexandr decide to pursue chess professionally?  33:00- What languages does GM Fier speak?  35:00- Alex's approach to following top games  37:28- How he Studies Openings and Uses Engines 39:00- Alexandr's favorite opening authors Mentioned: GM Ivan Cheparinov, Nikolaos Ntirlis, GM Alexei Kornev  Memories of Training with Dvoretsky 42:00- Alex's favorite chess books Mentioned: GM David Navara's Best Games, Tal-Botvinnik 1960, The Life and Games of Mikhail Tal  44:00- Memories of a training camp with legendary trainer Mark Dvoretsky Influences and Inspirations in Chess 48:00- Why GM Fier loves endgame studies  50:00- GM Fier's fondest memories Fier-Ryan 2009, Ireland https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1601053 Fier-Akopian 2017- https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1870136 54:00- Alex's passion for music  55:00- Upcoming tournaments and advice for Aspiring Chess Players 1:00:00- Thanks to Alex for joining! Be sure to follow him on Instagram and Facebook https://www.facebook.com/alexandr.fier/ https://www.instagram.com/pontocego/?hl=en If you would like to help support Perpetual Chess via Patreon, you can do so here: https://www.patreon.com/perpetualchess Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Morning Stream
TMS 2827: Squid Combinations

The Morning Stream

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 102:42


Every Hug Is a Motorboat. It's Palindrome Week! Edging in the yard. You're not evil, you're just wrong. At Korean BBQ You're the Lord of the Rings. Hoo Flung Dung. Dancing With me, Cheek to Cheek. Boat Sushi Train. Get on the bus! No Half Measures for Crazy Neighbor. Let Him Cook! Retirement Queen. Gary Cherone Defender. Very Juniper Forward. Horse Lovin Girls. Scott's Menstrual Cramps with Wendi and more on this episode of The Morning Stream. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.