059 – S2 E23 – Endurance, formal and informal learning opportunities, and the ability to digest fear episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 16, 2024 · 1H 6M

059 – S2 E23 – Endurance, formal and informal learning opportunities, and the ability to digest fear

from homeroom · host Rée the Interdisciplinarian

homeroom is an international podcast bridging the education gap between the classroom and the living room by starting conversations impacting the next generation. In this episode, I speak with Ann—a Paralympian, a Doctor of Occupational Therapy, and now a farmer—about her earliest memories of being formally and “informally” educated. We talk about how the education system does and does not prepare students for the real world, and what kind of mind shifts we need to make about the future roles of teachers and students going forward. We also discuss fear, and Ann’s understanding of it that has completely revolutionized the way I think about fear. Check out our conversation, join our ongoing discourse on social media, and subscribe for more. https://www.instagram.com/homeroomed You can also find a computer-generated transcript of our episode at https://www.homeroomed.com — Celebrated as the first Native Hawaiian Paralympian, Ann Yoshida is a world champion surfer and paracanoe paddler who comes from a strong line of waterwomen. She credits her grandmother for her lifelong love of the water. Her father, a fisherman, her mother an avid surfer, Yoshida lived life in and around the ocean off Oahu, fishing, snorkeling, and swimming at her family’s beach house on Kawela Bay and later in her teenage years discovering the thrill of surfing. She grew up participating in many competitive sports as a gymnast, color guard, and swimmer, but it wasn’t until a car accident in 2000 left her paralyzed from the chest down that Yoshida’s path to Paralympian and world champion athlete was paved. At the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Yoshida was the first person to represent the United States in paracanoe at a Paralympic Games. There she competed in the Paracanoe KL-1 200m (kayak). Prior to the games, she earned medals at the 2012 IVF Va’a World Sprint in Canada and the 2013 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Germany. She holds the title of 2016 ICF Canoe Sprint and Paracanoe World Champion, VL-1 200m (International Canoe Federation). That same year, Yoshida surfed as a member of Team Hawaii at the 2016 Stance ISA World Adaptive Surfing Championship and was crowned the 2017 Stance ISA World Adaptive Surfing Champion, Adaptive Surfing AS-4 (International Surfing Association), the following year. Yoshida is a dedicated athlete with AccesSurf, a nonprofit that follows the spirit of Duke Kahanamoku and empowers people with disabilities through accessible water programs, ocean recreation, and therapeutic instruction. She has inspired many throughout the world with her athleticism, perseverance, and Aloha spirit. https://www.instagram.com/annyoguava — Rée is a visual storyteller and educator exploring the consequences that mass education has on creativity, identity, and interpersonal connection. https://www.instagram.com/theinterdisciplinarian

homeroom is an international podcast bridging the education gap between the classroom and the living room by starting conversations impacting the next generation. In this episode, I speak with Ann—a Paralympian, a Doctor of Occupational Therapy, and now a farmer—about her earliest memories of being formally and “informally” educated. We talk about how the education system does and does not prepare students for the real world, and what kind of mind shifts we need to make about the future roles of teachers and students going forward. We also discuss fear, and Ann’s understanding of it that has completely revolutionized the way I think about fear. Check out our conversation, join our ongoing discourse on social media, and subscribe for more. https://www.instagram.com/homeroomed You can also find a computer-generated transcript of our episode at https://www.homeroomed.com — Celebrated as the first Native Hawaiian Paralympian, Ann Yoshida is a world champion surfer and paracanoe paddler who comes from a strong line of waterwomen. She credits her grandmother for her lifelong love of the water. Her father, a fisherman, her mother an avid surfer, Yoshida lived life in and around the ocean off Oahu, fishing, snorkeling, and swimming at her family’s beach house on Kawela Bay and later in her teenage years discovering the thrill of surfing. She grew up participating in many competitive sports as a gymnast, color guard, and swimmer, but it wasn’t until a car accident in 2000 left her paralyzed from the chest down that Yoshida’s path to Paralympian and world champion athlete was paved. At the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Yoshida was the first person to represent the United States in paracanoe at a Paralympic Games. There she competed in the Paracanoe KL-1 200m (kayak). Prior to the games, she earned medals at the 2012 IVF Va’a World Sprint in Canada and the 2013 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Germany. She holds the title of 2016 ICF Canoe Sprint and Paracanoe World Champion, VL-1 200m (International Canoe Federation). That same year, Yoshida surfed as a member of Team Hawaii at the 2016 Stance ISA World Adaptive Surfing Championship and was crowned the 2017 Stance ISA World Adaptive Surfing Champion, Adaptive Surfing AS-4 (International Surfing Association), the following year. Yoshida is a dedicated athlete with AccesSurf, a nonprofit that follows the spirit of Duke Kahanamoku and empowers people with disabilities through accessible water programs, ocean recreation, and therapeutic instruction. She has inspired many throughout the world with her athleticism, perseverance, and Aloha spirit. https://www.instagram.com/annyoguava — Rée is a visual storyteller and educator exploring the consequences that mass education has on creativity, identity, and interpersonal connection. https://www.instagram.com/theinterdisciplinarian

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059 – S2 E23 – Endurance, formal and informal learning opportunities, and the ability to digest fear

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UEN Homeroom Utah Education Network, Dani Sloan, Matthew Winters This podcast is UEN’s chance to tell the stories and talk about the issues impacting Utah’s amazing teachers. We feature educators and leaders from Utah and around the nation in a fun and informative podcast. Equipping ELLs Beth Vaucher, ELL, ESL Teachers Equipping ELLs is a podcast for ESL specialists and homeroom teachers who are looking for effective and engaging ways to support their English Language Learners without adding to their endless to-do list. Each week you’ll hear tips, strategies, and inspirational stories that will empower you to better reach your ELL students, equip them with life-long skills, and strengthen relationships with colleagues and parents. Your host, Beth Vaucher, is an ESL certified homeroom teacher with over 10 years of experience teaching in the US and internationally. Learn more at www.inspiringyounglearners.com. The SRI Homeroom SRI Education Down-to-earth discussions of the most pressing challenges facing America's students, educators and families, and the work being done to address them.Featuring interviews with some of the nation's most dedicated researchers, data experts, developers and educators.From SRI Education, a division of SRI. Homeroom Attendance Edward DeShazer You know that look teachers give each other in the hallway? The one that says everything without saying a word?That's what this show is.Homeroom Attendance is the podcast for educators who are done with the watered-down professional development and ready for real talk about what it actually takes to show up, lead well, and build a culture that doesn't burn people out.Every episode, host Edward DeShazer brings lived experience, practical tools, and honest conversation straight to the teacher lounge. Whether you're a classroom teacher, a school leader, a counselor, or an administrator, there is something here for you.No Pinterest PD. No corporate buzzwords. Just the kind of conversation educators actually need.Each episode delivers a clear takeaway, a mindset reframe, and one action step you can use today or tomorrow. Because the best professional development doesn't make you feel talked at. It m

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This episode was published on August 16, 2024.

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homeroom is an international podcast bridging the education gap between the classroom and the living room by starting conversations impacting the next generation. In this episode, I speak with Ann—a Paralympian, a Doctor of Occupational Therapy, and...

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