Moving the Needle podcast artwork

PODCAST · education

Moving the Needle

When it comes to education these days, there’s a lot to think about: flipped classrooms, instructional technology, accreditation, authentic assessment, copyright, asynchronous learning, multimedia tools, hybrid learning. Moving the Needle delivers frank conversations with instructors, learners, leaders, and creators about all things teaching and learning. Listen to their stories, learn from hard-won experience, and let these ideas help you move the needle in your own teaching. Moving the Needle is produced by the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

  1. 75

    AI Faculty Development: Inside the AIM-High Program

    Co-host Dave Bunnell speaks with Cheryl Fisher and Cory Stephens Co-Directors of AIM-High - AI in Maryland Higher Education. Maryland's statewide professional development program that helps academic and clinical nurse educators integrate generative artificial intelligence in their teaching. 

  2. 74

    AI, Unscripted Series Wrap Up

    Host Scott Riley joins AI, Unscripted hosts, Jennifer Potter and Mary Crowley-Farrell to reflect on episodes from Season 2. They discuss what they consider the most impactful takeaways as well as how to best build on the conversations that were started by the AI, Unscripted series.

  3. 73

    AI, Unscripted - Data Privacy, Student Rights, and the Real Cost of "Free" AI Tools

    Cohosts Jennifer Potter and Sam Collins welcome Virginia L. Byrne, Associate Professor of Higher Education & Student Affairs, Morgan State University studies technology equity and AI's impact on student privacy. Dr. Byrne reframes AI literacy not as learning to use tools, but as developing the critical thinking to push back against vendors and protect what matters most: student agency, equity, and the irreplaceable human judgment that keeps harm out of the loop.

  4. 72

    Episode 59 - Phenomenology: Understanding the Lived Experience of Learning

    Scott Riley and Dr. Eric Belt discuss the concept of phenomenology and how it can be useful when conducting educational research. 

  5. 71

    Ai, Unscripted - Teaching the Teachers: Preparing Pre-Service Educators for an AI Future

    Cohosts Mary Crowley Farrell and Ron Hansen welcome Dr. Kris McGee, Professor, Department of Educational Professions, Frostburg State University.  Dr. McGee explains how she uses transparency and modeling to teach pre-service teachers how to use AI as a partner while keeping the teacher's voice and human connection at the center of learning. From creating differentiated texts for diverse reading levels to rethinking lessons that didn't land, she demonstrates how AI can handle the tedious work so teachers can focus on what matters most: the relationships and empathy that no tool can replace.

  6. 70

    AI, Unscripted - Sustainable AI: Balancing Innovation with Environmental Responsibility

    Hosts Jennifer Potter and Mary Crowley-Farrell welcome Dr. Burch Fisher, Associate Research Scientist, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. Burch helps to unpack the data behind the environmental impact of AI and why informed decision-making beats all-or-nothing thinking when it comes to responsible AI use in education.  

  7. 69

    Episode 58 - From Time Served to Competence Earned: Rethinking Medical Education

    Scott Riley and Dave Bunnell  discuss the current global shift in health professions education known as Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME) that emphasizes demonstrated competence rather than time spent in training. Dr. Bunnell explains the reasons for the change and how it is being implemented.

  8. 68

    AI, Unscripted - How We Say It Matters: AI for Thoughtful Faculty Communication

    Cohosts Mary Crowley-Farrell and Ron Hansen speak with David Leasure, Director of Faculty and Professor, First Year Experience Department, University of Maryland Global Campus. David shares how his team is using AI to help faculty communicate more effectively while saving time for what matters most.

  9. 67

    AI, Unscripted - Beyond the Podium: AI-Powered Speech Coaching at the Community College

    Cohosts Jennifer Potter and Mary Crowley-Farrell welcome Zach Runge, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies at Harford Community College and an adjunct professor at Towson University. Zach explains how he built custom AI tools to integrate into writing assignments for students in his speech class that support student voice, confidence, and ethical engagement without replacing authentic learning.  

  10. 66

    Episode 57 - Bringing Play and Experimentation into Professional Education

    Cohost Erin Hagar welcomes Dr. Krista Tookhan, Assistant Professor in the School of Medicine. Dr. Tookhan explains how she brings fun and creativity into her classroom inventing games that inspire her students and lead to better performance overalll.

  11. 65

    AI, Unscripted - From Policy to Participation: Co-Creating AI Guidelines with Students

    What if the solution to AI policy challenges isn't stricter rules but bringing students into the conversation? AI, Unscripted returns for another season on MTN with Yasmine Kotturi, Assistant Professor, UMBC. Dr. Kotturi shares her groundbreaking approach to AI governance in higher education with co-hosts Jennifer Potter and Mary Crowley-Farrell. Instead of top-down policies that students resist, Dr. Koturri’s research demonstrates how participatory policy design transforms the conversation, turning enforcement into engagement and compliance into critical thinking. Yasmine Kotturi: https://ykotturi.github.io/

  12. 64

    Episode 56 - When Learning Sings: Music, Memory, and the Social Life of Education

    Cohost Dave Bunnell welcomes Dr. Rayne Loder, PhD, PA-C, Tufts University School of Medicine. Rayne discusses her innovative approach of using music to teach foundational concepts in medical education.

  13. 63

    Episode 55 - Revisiting Trauma-Informed Pedagogy: A Faculty Development Perspective

    Erin Hagar welcomes back Dr. Mary Jo Bondy and Dr. Karen Gordes. Following up on their introduction of Trauma Informed Pedagogy introduced in episode 27, they discuss a faculty development initiative they designed to share their knowledge of trauma informed pedagogy across the UMB campus, its impact, and their hopes going forward.

  14. 62

    AI, Unscripted - Ask Us Anything: Series Wrap-Up

    Scott Riley joins the hosts of AI Unscripted to answer questions from the audience about AI in the classroom and to reflect on what the team learned while working on the series as well as what they'd like to explore in future episodes.

  15. 61

    Special Edition, AI, Unscripted - AI as a Critical Friend: Supporting Reflection in Graduate Learning

    Jennifer Potter and Mary Crowley-Farrell talk with Liyan Song, PhD, Towson University, about how she leverages Blackboard Ultra’s AI companion to prompt deep reflection in her instructional design students.

  16. 60

    Episode 54 - Mentoring Networks and Belonging: Supporting International Postdocs in Biomedical Research

    Erin introduces a new cohost, Dave Bunnell who chats with his first guest, Jenn Aumiller about what she learned about mentorship, equity, and belonging in academic science through her research on mentoring experiences of Indian biomedical postdocs in the U.S.

  17. 59

    Special Edition AI, Unscripted - Clinical Judgment Meets AI: Teaching for Nursing Practice

    Co-hosts Mike Mills and Mary Crowley-Farrell speak with Denyce Watts-Daniels, Associate Professor in Nursing at Coppin State about her use of Generative AI to create case studies relevant to her nursing students.

  18. 58

    Special Edition AI, Unscripted - Writing with Machines: AI in the English Classroom

    Cohosts Jennifer Potter and Mary Crowley-Farrell interview Eleanor Welsh, Professor of English Chesapeake College. Eleanor recounts her journey from AI skeptic to advocate, showing how she now uses AI to enhance research writing and film studies. Her approach to source verification and critical evaluation offers accessible entry points for humanities faculty. 

  19. 57

    Special Edition AI, Unscripted - Truth, Data, and AI: Journalism's Role in Uncertain Times

    Cohosts Mike Mills and Mary Crowley-Farrell talk with Derek Willis from the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland about how he teaches students to use AI to evaluate data and question truth claims in the journalistic process. He offers a crucial civic and interdisciplinary perspective, grounded in journalistic ethics and process thinking.

  20. 56

    Episode 53 - Paying it Forward: The Power of Mentoring

    Host Erin Hagar speaks with Dr. Hee Hwan Park, DDS, Clinical Assistant Professor and Ryan Kasraii, a 4th year Dental student at UMB School of Dentistry. Dr. Park and Ryan talk about their mentoring relationship and how it fostered connection and became a powerful motivator for learning.

  21. 55

    Special Edition AI, Unscripted - Therapy Bots & Ethical Practice: AI in Mental Health Education

    Amanda Draheim, PhD, Goucher College explains how she is using custom bots and AI tools for case conceptualization and student reflection. Her approach blends creativity, ethics, and wellness, making AI feel humane and pedagogically sound.

  22. 54

    Special Edition AI, Unscripted - Ask the AI: Business Assignments That Boost Engagement

    Cohosts Mary Crowley-Farrell and Mike Mills speak with Bill Carter, Associate Professor, University of Baltimore Merrick School of Business, about how he is incorporating AI into his assignments to boost engagement and critical thinking skills.

  23. 53

    Special Edition AI, Unscripted - AI & Information Literacy: Teaching Students to Think Critically

    In this week's episode, co-hosts Jennifer Potter and Mary Crowley-Farrell kick off the AI, Unscripted mini-series on MTN with a conversation with Ben Shaw from University of Maryland, College Park. Ben shares how he developed an accessible AI literacy module that faculty across disciplines can implement. His approach focuses on helping students evaluate AI-generated content critically—a foundational skill for any AI-enhanced course. Go to: UMCP AI and Information Literacy Module to access the instructional module Ben refers to in this episode.  

  24. 52

    Episode 52 - Introducing the "AI, Unscripted" team

    In this episode, Scott Riley is joined by the team that is behind a new special edition limited series of Moving the Needle, called AI Unscripted. This mini-series features Maryland faculty from across the state sharing their experiences of how they are utilizing AI in the classroom. The team talks about their motive for creating the series, guests that will be featured, ideas that will be explored, and what they are hoping listeners take away.

  25. 51

    Episode 51 - Behind the Screens - Building Community in Online Classrooms

    Host Scott Riley and Dr. Eric Belt discuss building community in a virtual environment, establishing instructor presence and building a framework to maintain rigor.

  26. 50

    Looking Back and Checking In: Our 50th Episode

    Hosts Erin Hagar and Scott Riley discuss their favorite episodes from the series and then share some reflections from faculty participants in UMB's Edge program, which stands for Educator Development for Growth and Effectiveness. The hosts discuss the takeaways of the 17 faculty members after their year long faculty fellowship spent digging deep into their practice.

  27. 49

    Episode 49 - Award Winning Educators: Teaching Teachers to Teach

    Host Scott Riley interviews Dr. Sahar Alameh, winner of the University of Kentucky's Great Teacher award for her work in supporting K–12 teachers and students in constructing and evaluating scientific explanations and helping them develop informed understandings of science and its nature. 

  28. 48

    Episode 48 - From Textbooks to Tech: Innovations in PA Education with VR

    Host Scott Riley speaks with Dr. Cheri Hendrix, Assistant Dean for Physician Assistant Education at UMB about how she is using Virtual Reality to train the next generation of Physician Assistants.

  29. 47

    Episode 47 - Building Bridges in SoTL: The Ed Crafters Community Connection

    Host Scott Riley chats with Sol Roberts-Lieb and Eric Belt about the new Ed Crafters Community Connection (EC3)—a virtual learning community created by the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning (FCTL) to encourage faculty to learn, collaborate, and grow in the SoTL space.

  30. 46

    Episode 46 - Award Winning Mentorship: Dissolving Imposter Syndrome with Dr. Alison Duffy

    Host Scott Riley speaks with Dr. Allison Duffy, PharmD, BCOP, about her "Mentor of the Year" award -  her thoughts on what defines mentoring, what it means to be a good mentor, and her suggestions for how to become a better mentor.

  31. 45

    Episode 45 - From Theory to Practice: Cognitive Insights into Multimedia Learning

    Host Scott Riley chats with Eric Belt, EdD, Sr. Academic Innovation Specialist and researcher at the FCTL. They take a deep dive into Richard Mayer's Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning and talk about what they've learned and how they plan to change their teaching as a result of their new learning.

  32. 44

    Episode 44 - Rethinking Classroom Boundaries: UMB's New HyFlex Teaching Space

    Host, Erin Hagar, speaks with Kevin Engler and Tony Delane, members of the FCTL team about the new hyflex classroom recently completed at UMB. They explore the possibilities in teaching that the classroom, which is designed to virtually eliminate the difference in experience for remote and in-person students, presents.

  33. 43

    Episode 43 - A Conversation with Dr. Adam Puche, UMB’s 2024 Educator of the Year

    In this episode, host Erin Hagar speaks with Dr. Adam Puche, UMB's 2024 Educator of the Year. Their conversation explores the values that guide his teaching, strategies he uses in the classroom and innovations that he has helped to implement in the Anatomy curriculum at the School of Medicine.

  34. 42

    Episode 42 - Empowering Educators through Collaborative Course Design

    Scott Riley chats with his co-host, Erin Hagar, about the Summer Course Design Institute at UMB that she established and ran. Erin discusses the Institute's approach to helping faculty develop or significantly revise a course in a small cross-discipline cohort with one-on-one support.

  35. 41

    Episode 41 - Award Winning Pedagogy: Neuro-Simulation with Dr. Nicholas Morris

    Host Scott Riley speaks with Dr. Nicholas Morris, Associate Fellowship Director of the Neurocritical Care Fellowship at the University of Maryland School of Medicine about his work in using simulation to help teach and assess competency in emergency neurology. 

  36. 40

    Ep 40 - A Faculty Coaching Mock Session

    Have you wondered what a coaching session sounds like? Well, in this episode, you can listen in! Two professional development coaches perform a mock session that includes all the elements of coaching—agenda setting, powerful questions, and accountability-- while exploring the tricky topic of faculty teaching evaluations.  For more information on the UMB Coaching program visit: https://www.umaryland.edu/fctl/services/professional-development-coaching/

  37. 39

    Episode 39 - Developing Your Course's Parallel Skill: A Workshop

    Host Erin Hagar diverges from her traditional format and walks listeners through a short workshop created to help instructors design parallel skills into their course.  Parallel skills being defined as skills, knowledge or attitudes that you hope to foster in your students that are connected and related to your course but not the topic itself.

  38. 38

    Episode 38 - Celebrating End-of-Year Success Stories

    Co-hosts Erin Hagar and Scott Riley wrap up the academic year by inviting faculty to share their successes from the past year, what worked and why.

  39. 37

    Episode 37 - UMB's FCTL (A Bird's Eye View)

    Dr. Christina Cestone, Assistant Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs and Development at UMB speaks with Host Scott Riley about the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning, why it was created, its long term goals  and how it fits into UMB's overall strategy. 

  40. 36

    Episode 36 - The Rise of Microcredentialing: An Accessible Path in Higher Education

    Cohost Scott Riley speaks with Dr. Gregory Brightbill about The Learning Institute at UMB. Greg explains the Institute's mission and how it aligns with UMB's core values, what kinds courses are available, who can take them and how they can be used professionally.

  41. 35

    Episode 35 - Teaching-Focused Faculty: Possible Pathways and Prospects

    Co-host Scott Riley welcomes Dr. Samantha Fuld, DSW, and together they discuss the findings of a recent committee on teaching-focused faculty (TFF) as well as the pathways and prospects for those interested in this trajectory. 

  42. 34

    Episode 34 - Curriculum Complexities : A Case Study from the UMB Medical Cannabis Program

    Host Erin Hagar chats with Dr. Leah Sera, Program Director of the Medical Cannabis program about the challenges of designing a curriculum that as the first of its kind in the nation has no precedent or template. to guide development. 

  43. 33

    Episode 33 - From Student to Faculty: Thoughts from a Current Graduate Teaching Assistant

    Host Erin Hagar speaks with Vashti Adams, a PhD student in UMB's School of Social Work, who also served as a Graduate Teaching Assistant in the new online MSW program here at UMB. Vashti discusses her journey as a learner, the influences that have shaped her and what she hopes to carry forward as she prepares for a future faculty position.

  44. 32

    Episode 32 - UMB FCTL Welcomes a New Director

    Host Erin Hagar speaks with Sol Roberts-Lieb, EdD about his new role leading UMB's Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning. Sol talks about the unique needs, strengths, and opportunities at UMB as well as his vision for a thriving FCTL that is truly responsive to faculty needs.

  45. 31

    Episode 31 - An Interview with UMB’s 2023 Educator of the Year, Dr. Christy Chang

    Host Erin Hagar speaks with the 2023 winner of UMB's Educator of the Year award, Dr. Christy Chang. Dr. Chang discusses her approach to teaching and her commitment to her students and faculty.

  46. 30

    Episode 30 - CIRTL 2.0 Now at UMB

    Co-host Dr. Scott J Riley speaks with Jenn Aumiller, Director of  Career and Professional Development at UMB about the university becoming a member of the CIRTL network and what that means for UMB faculty and students.

  47. 29

    Episode 29 - UMB Faculty Share Tips to Start the Semester

    Erin Hagar and Scott Riley cohost this special episode to kick off the academic year. Together they sift through advice that UMB faculty members have offered about how they confront the challenges of teaching. 

  48. 28

    Episode 28 - Virtual Horizons: Navigating Health Education’s Future through VR

    Co-host Scott Riley, chats with Dr. Jack Pottle, co-founder of Oxford Medical Simulation about  how virtual reality is changing the way medical training is delivered.

  49. 27

    Episode 27 - The Impact of Trauma on Learning

    Host Erin Hagar speaks with Dr. MJ Bondy and Dr. Karen Gordes about their work to help educators understand how the neuroscience of trauma impacts our ability to learn, and what we might do to mitigate these impacts. 

  50. 26

    Episode 26 Education Research - Peeking Behind the Veil Part 2

    Co-host Dr. Scott Riley welcomes back Dr. Violet Kulo and Dr. Eric Belt for a follow up conversation about educational research that answers questions such as: What are commonly used quantitative and qualitative tools? How do they work? How can I use this in my field?

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

When it comes to education these days, there’s a lot to think about: flipped classrooms, instructional technology, accreditation, authentic assessment, copyright, asynchronous learning, multimedia tools, hybrid learning. Moving the Needle delivers frank conversations with instructors, learners, leaders, and creators about all things teaching and learning. Listen to their stories, learn from hard-won experience, and let these ideas help you move the needle in your own teaching. Moving the Needle is produced by the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

HOSTED BY

needle

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Moving the Needle have?

Moving the Needle currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Moving the Needle about?

When it comes to education these days, there’s a lot to think about: flipped classrooms, instructional technology, accreditation, authentic assessment, copyright, asynchronous learning, multimedia tools, hybrid learning. Moving the Needle delivers frank conversations with instructors, learners,...

How often does Moving the Needle release new episodes?

Moving the Needle has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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You can listen to Moving the Needle on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

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Moving the Needle is created and hosted by needle.
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