POPULARITY
We're excited to begin a brand-new season of “The Better Samaritan” with a special episode. A few months ago, Jamie Aten and Kent Annan were invited by One Collective to teach Spiritual First Aid training for Christians serving refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) impacted by the war in Ukraine. In this episode, Jamie and Kent share audio they recorded on the field and reflections while on the trip and after they'd been home a few weeks. You'll hear:: How they almost missed the trip before even taking off! Their experience arriving in Ukraine and insightful conversations with their driver, Miroslav. A conversation with Doug Lando from One Collective with Doug's thoughts about the humanitarian efforts and what the churches are doing. Why the podcast might have been named “Humanitarians in Cars Getting Coffee.” The war's effects on university students and how it has changed their lives. Marena's story. Final thoughts and reflections. RESOURCES: Video of the Ukrainians singing during the workshop Let's Not Forget About Ukraine: Three Practical Ways to Help The Grief in Ukraine and Our Chance to Live Out the Christian Promise How the War in Ukraine is Hurting the Global Food Supply Chain One Collective Spiritual First Aid Certificate Course "On Being a Good Neighbor" sermon draft by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. This episode was produced by WildfireCreative Theme Song: “Turning Over Tables” by The Brilliance Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | TuneIn | Stitcher | RSS Follow us on Twitter: @drjamieaten | @kentannan Follow on Instagram: @wildfirecreativeco (Note to the listener: In this podcast, sometimes we'll have Evangelicals, and sometimes we won't. Learning how to do better involves listening to many perspectives with different insights and understanding. Sometimes it will make us uncomfortable, sometimes, we'll agree, and sometimes we won't. We think that's good. We want to listen for correction– Especially in our blind spots.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Going back to the 90's for another dive back into Educational show Your Choice, Our Chance. This week we watched "Thanks, No Thanks" all about how far you will go to be popular and "Big Break" and about how marketing in the devil (?) Corey and Norm Peer Pressure Jill to join and answer questions like Have we ever shoplifted? Did our parents let us drink? and is that Ruffio?!?
For this week on the Intalksicated Reviews podcast we decided to educate ourselves with an important life lessons presented to us through the show You're Choice, Our Chance. In Penalty Kick we deal with Stinky Alcohol, haemophilia, terrible parents, skipping school and more. Corey and Norm plug their noses and answer questions like Did they skip much school? Does Norm really have to brag about his Nuclear family? and will these guys ever stop talking about the Fast and Furious franchise?
Episode # 60: Sandeep Dutt in conversation with Alex Bell, Director of www.PortlandEducation.co.uk with over 2,000 hours of leadership coaching experience and six years of bespoke vision-to-strategy consultancy for schools in the UK and globally. He was named Hundred's global ambassador of the year for 2020 and is co-founder of non-profits www.Xtalks.org included in the HundrED global collection 2020 and www.LinkOnlineLearners.org included in the OECD/HundrED Covid-19 solutions spotlight. He is co-founder and curator of www.Our-Chance.com, the world's first free online film festival about education futures, co-founder of global innovation www.Leadership-Lemonade.com and runs leadership development programmes for schools on and offline throughout the year. Alex shares how he grew up in harmony with nature, daydreaming in the countryside, and still claims to have the childlike simplicity in him! He feels that like Picasso was very clear, we need to unlearn and keep it simple, a futurist must do that. There is the need to be simple and clear and he loves the way, Sir David Attenborough in A Life On Our Planet shares the need for harmony with nature and peaceful co-existence, as the first step for saving the world, which is crumbling due to the rampant industrialisation and human consumption. There is the need to reinvent an organic model for learning, if the child does not feel the warmth of relationship, the child will perhaps put the village on fire. Love and Fear are two diametrically opposite ends, and we must all work to build relationships, this alone is the meaning of education. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/learningforward/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/learningforward/support
COVID was supposed to be the great equalizer, but in reality not all of us are affected the same. Vulnerable populations experience higher rates of infection and death, and worse social outcomes. Access to healthcare is not equitable. In this episode we dive into why this is a thing and what we can do about this as providers. What are you seeing in your hospital? What are you or your systems doing to reduce implicit bias? Send us your answer via on social media, @empulsepodcast, or through our website, ucdavisem.com. And stay tuned for the June 3 Heartbeat on what is it like to work in a hospital in the bronx and lessons learned. ***Please rate us and leave us a review on iTunes! It helps us reach more people.*** Hosts: Dr. Julia Magaña, Assistant Professor of Pediatric Emergency Medicine at UC Davis Dr. Sarah Medeiros, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at UC Davis Guest: Dr. Kara Toles (@kat04747), Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at UC Davis and the Director of Equity and Inclusion in the Department of Emergency Medicine. Dr. Makini Chisholm-Straker, Assist Professor of Emergency Medicine at The Icahn School of Medicine, and works at Mt. Sinai Hospital, NYC Resources: Chisholm-Straker, M. COVID-19 is Our Chance at Rebirth. Medium.com. Accessed on May 18, 2020. https://medium.com/undercurrents-press/rebirthviacovid-369e073d7654 Wadhera RK, Wadhera P, Gaba P, et al. Variation in COVID-19 Hospitalizations and Deaths Across New York City Boroughs [published online ahead of print, 2020 Apr 29]. JAMA. 2020;e207197. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.7197 https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2765524?guestAccessKey=bea1171d-1ecd-49df-a55f-2e11ed68ec40&utm_source=silverchair&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=article_alert-jama&utm_content=olf&utm_term=042920 Miller, H. Navajo Nation 3rd highest “state” per capita infections. Huffpost online May 14, 2020. https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_5e94b532c5b6a50d4ae6d7e7 Kara, H. The coronavirus pandemic is hitting black and brown Americans especially hard on all fronts. CNN online. May 8, 2020. https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/08/us/coronavirus-pandemic-race-impact-trnd/index.html Racial Data Transparency: States that have released breakdowns of COVID-19 data by race. Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center. Accessed on May 16, 2020. https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/racial-data-transparency Thank you to the UC Davis Department of Emergency Medicine for supporting this podcast and to Orlando Magaña at OM Audio Productions for audio production services.
In these troubling times, the Talking Transformation Podcast team remains committed to bringing you conversations from South Africa and beyond. We continue to speak with professionals working around the globe and ask them to share their perspectives and insights into the cities they are operating from. Heading up the University of Cape Town's Urban Real Estate Unit (URERU), Professor François Viruly is closing in on securing a co-host slot as he re-joins the conversation to discuss the economic impacts and challenges implied by SA’s extended lockdown and the continued uncertainty: what can government and industry collectively do to work together and bring greater certainty to the future? We revisit some of the themes from Diary Entry 3 and cover new territory relating to COIVD-19’s impact on the property and business sectors . We welcome the input of Ashraf Adam and the wealth of knowledge he has developed whilst serving the public sector. Presently he is the CEO at Mandela Bay Development Agency (MBDA). His extensive CV covers global, national, provincial and municipal institutions and he holds strong views and convictions which are frequently shared via the conventional and social media platforms. His recent article in The Herald titled “Our Chance to Press the Reset Button” made for very fascinating reading and we invited him to share those views and what led him to his conclusions in this episode. The role of Local Economic Development units in municipalities; the strength and weaknesses of our institutions here in South Africa; and the impact of an economic downturn on municipal efficiency and revenue collection: all are considered in this extended episode. As always, we hope you enjoy the episode and welcome feedback via twitter @talkingtransfo1 Recorded 15th April 2020 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/talking-transformation-po/message
Constitutional Rights vs Martial Law in times of crisis? |~| Our Chance to refocus in this Paradigm Shift? |~| What can us 2 stoners do to help you through?
The Net Assessment crew is back to discuss Carter Malkasian’s Foreign Affairs article, “How the Good War Went Bad: America’s Slow-Motion Failure in Afghanistan.” In this episode, Melanie and Chris are joined by Chris Brose, head of strategy at Anduril Industries. The trio dissect whether this peace deal is better than any other deal the United States could have struck in the past 18 years of fighting, and how much confidence the United States can have in the agreement. Are there facts on the battlefield that have made this agreement possible or is America just tired of fighting the war in Afghanistan? Also, Chris P. gives an attaboy to Mayor Pete, Chris B. tips his hat to Joe Biden, and Melanie gives a shout out to modern medicine. Links Carter Malkasian, “How the Good War Went Bad: America’s Slow-Motion Failure in Afghanistan,” Foreign Affairs, March/April 2020 John Glaser and John Mueller, “Overcoming Inertia: Why It’s Time to End the War in Afghanistan,” Cato, August 13, 2019 Lauren Egan, “Trump Calls Coronavirus Democrats' 'New Hoax,'” NBC News, February 28, 2020 Frank Bruni, “Mayor Pete Flew Sky High,” New York Times, March 1, 2020 Michele Flournoy and Stephen Hadley, "The US Deal with the Taliban is an Important First Step," Washington Post, February 29, 2020 Mark Esper, "This is Our Chance to Bring Troops Home from Afghanistan for Good," Washington Post, February 29, 2020 Ari Levy and Alex Sherman, "Vox Media to Cut Hundreds of Freelance Jobs Ahead of Changes in California Gig Economy Laws," Washington Post, December 16 ,2019 Katy Grimes, "California's AB5 Kills off 40-Year Lake Tahoe Music Festival," California Globe, March 1, 2020 Jeremy Brown, "The Coronavirus is No 1918 Pandemic," Atlantic, March 3, 2020
Going back to the 90s to find out all about the ills of drugs and alcohol with the teen education video series "Your Choice, Our Chance". Corey is joined by Bryant double dip into 2 episodes and answer questions like How good is Bryant's Bubbles impression? Is this a shared universe? and should we sign our name to this?
Episode 3 of Our Chance of Becoming Human - an audio scrapbook charting the journey of a PhD that's exploring how creating music together can have an effect on social integration. This episode bounces around finding connections between the work of feminist philosopher Adriana Cavarero, social anthropologist Tim Ingold, and professor of applied and social theatre, James Thompson. And there are a couple of new tunes in there as well.
Episode 2 of Our Chance of Becoming Human - a podcast charting the journey of a PhD that's exploring how creating music together can have an effect on social integration. This episode takes us from dialogue theory to storytelling to immigration detention to narrative therapy to Bakhtin and polyphony, with some musical interludes inspired by Greek poet Sappho.
Kathleen is talking about Pregnancy and technology with Alison Brown form the organisation Best Beginnings,and the baby buddy app, + Our Chance ( a new campaign)