PODCAST · education
The teacherhallpass’s Podcast
by teacherhallpass
Hall Pass is the podcast for teachers on the edge of burnout - or already deep in it - who are ready to stop surviving and start reclaiming their sanity. Hosted by a longtime educator who has been in the trenches (and the staff meetings), this show is your permission slip to question the system, protect your energy, and redefine what it means to be a ”good teacher.” Expect honest conversations, short bursts of real talk, and practical ways to take your life back - without quitting your job tomorrow (unless that’s your plan). No toxic positivity. No glitter. Just the pass you didn’t know you needed.
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S2 The Agency Problem E3 - The Capacity Problem
Episode 3: The Capacity Problem Program Notes & Sources Music: Whispers in the Dark by Aaron Paul - Low Main version This episode draws on neuroscience, stress biology, and nervous system research to explain why capacity — not ability — is the limiting factor for many students who appear disengaged. The sources below represent decades of rigorous research. None of it is fringe. All of it is relevant to anyone who works with, lives with, or is a young person. On Stress Biology and the Brain Robert Sapolsky — Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers (2004) Sapolsky is a neuroendocrinologist at Stanford and one of the clearest science writers alive. This book is the definitive popular treatment of chronic stress; what it does to the body, the brain, and behavior. The chapters on how stress affects cognition, memory, and decision-making are directly relevant to everything this episode argues about the overwhelmed student. Also worth your time: Robert Sapolsky — Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst (2017) A broader look at the biological underpinnings of human behavior. The sections on the adolescent brain and stress are particularly relevant to this series. On the Autonomic Nervous System and Shutdown States Stephen Porges — Polyvagal Theory Porges is a neuroscientist whose work on the autonomic nervous system fundamentally changed how researchers and clinicians understand threat response, social engagement, and shutdown. His framework — the three states of ventral vagal engagement, sympathetic mobilization, and dorsal vagal shutdown — explains the “nothing” look that this episode describes in ways that behavioral models simply cannot. Starting points: Stephen Porges — The Pocket Guide to the Polyvagal Theory (2017) — the most accessible entry point Deb Dana — The Polyvagal Theory in Therapy (2018) — a practitioner-friendly application of Porges’ work, written for therapists but useful for anyone working with dysregulated people The concept of neuroception — the below-conscious process by which the nervous system scans for safety — is particularly important for educators. Students are not choosing shutdown. Their nervous systems are choosing it for them. On Allostatic Load and Cumulative Stress Bruce McEwen — research on allostatic load McEwen, a neuroscientist at Rockefeller University, developed the concept of allostatic load — the cumulative wear on the body and brain from sustained stress. His work explains why chronic low-level stressors are as damaging as acute ones, and why baseline stress levels matter as much as in-the-moment demands. Key concept for educators: students are not blank slates when they walk through the door. They arrive with a stress load already accumulated. Understanding that load changes how you interpret what you see in the classroom. On Cognitive Load and Learning Cognitive Load Theory — John Sweller Sweller’s research established that working memory has a finite capacity, and that learning breaks down when that capacity is exceeded. While his work focuses on instructional design rather than emotional stress, it connects directly to what this episode argues: the brain can only manage so much at once, and stress competes directly with learning for those resources. On Boredom, Understimulation, and the Seeking Brain Jaak Panksepp — affective neuroscience and the SEEKING system Panksepp identified the SEEKING system — a primary emotional system in the brain that drives curiosity, exploration, and the pursuit of reward. This system doesn’t switch off when students are bored. It redirects. The student finding workarounds in security filters is a SEEKING system looking for a target. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi — Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience (1990) As noted in Episode 2 program notes, Csikszentmihalyi’s flow research is directly relevant here. Chronic understimulation is as much an enemy of flow as chronic overwhelm. Both put the brain outside the zone where genuine engagement is possible. On Adolescent Brain Development Frances Jensen with Amy Ellis Nutt — The Teenage Brain (2015) Referenced in Episode 1 notes and relevant again here. The adolescent brain’s heightened sensitivity to novelty and reward makes understimulation particularly costly during this developmental window. A brain wired for challenge, sitting in an environment that doesn’t provide it, will find challenge elsewhere. On Co-Regulation and the Role of Adults The concept of co-regulation — the way a calm, connected adult presence can help regulate a dysregulated nervous system — is drawn from attachment theory and polyvagal research. It is not a soft idea. It is a neurological one. Key researchers: John Bowlby — attachment theory foundations Dan Siegel — The Whole-Brain Child (2011, with Tina Payne Bryson) — accessible application of neuroscience to working with young people The implication for teachers: your regulated presence is not background noise. For some students, it is the primary condition that makes engagement possible. That is both a significant responsibility and, I’d argue, a significant source of meaning in the work. A Note on the Two Kinds of Capacity Problems This episode argues that understimulation and overwhelm produce nearly identical surface behavior — and require nearly opposite responses. This distinction is not widely recognized in educational policy or practice, which tends to treat all disengagement as a single problem requiring a single solution. If this episode resonated with you, the sources above will give you the research foundation to make that case — in a parent conference, a staff meeting, or a conversation with an administrator who is reaching for the wrong lever. The Agency Problem is produced independently. No sponsors. No agenda beyond the work. I worked with AI tools in developing this series — as thought partners and editors, not as authors. Everything in here came from two decades in classrooms. The AI helped me find the words. Questions, thoughts, or responses to this episode: [email protected]
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S2 Agency Problem E2
Program Notes & Sources This episode builds the theoretical foundation for the entire series. Self-Determination Theory is not a trend or a framework du jour — it is one of the most rigorously tested bodies of research in psychology, developed over five decades and replicated across cultures, age groups, and contexts. The sources below are the real thing. Follow them if something in this episode made you want to go deeper. The Foundation: Self-Determination Theory Edward Deci & Richard Ryan Deci and Ryan developed Self-Determination Theory beginning in the 1970s at the University of Rochester. Their work identified autonomy, competence, and relatedness as universal psychological needs — not preferences, not personality traits, but needs in the same category as food and sleep. The landmark academic paper: Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (2000). Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being. American Psychologist, 55(1), 68–78. For a readable, non-academic entry point: Edward Deci — Why We Do What We Do: Understanding Self-Motivation (1995) This book translates the research into plain language without dumbing it down. It’s the version I’d hand to a teacher or a parent. The official SDT research hub — papers, summaries, and applications across education, healthcare, and work: selfdeterminationtheory.org On Intrinsic Motivation and the Overjustification Effect Edward Deci — original studies on extrinsic rewards undermining intrinsic motivation (1971) Deci’s early experiments showed that introducing external rewards for activities people already found interesting reduced their intrinsic interest in those activities. This finding was controversial and has been replicated extensively. Alfie Kohn — Punished by Rewards (1993) Kohn synthesizes the research on rewards and motivation for a general audience and applies it directly to schools and workplaces. Blunt, well-sourced, and still relevant. If the overjustification effect surprised you, this book will change how you see gold stars, grades, and bonus structures. On Autonomy Support in Education Johnmarshall Reeve — research on autonomy-supportive teaching Reeve has spent decades studying what autonomy support looks like in actual classrooms — the specific teacher behaviors that increase student engagement versus those that undermine it. His work bridges SDT theory and classroom practice. Key paper: Reeve, J. (2009). Why teachers adopt a controlling motivating style toward students and how they can become more autonomy supportive. Educational Psychologist, 44(3), 159–175. On Teacher Autonomy and Burnout Christina Maslach — burnout research As introduced in Episode 1, Maslach’s framework identifies lack of control as one of the primary drivers of burnout. Her work connects directly to what this episode argues about teachers operating under chronic autonomy deprivation. Maslach, C., & Leiter, M. P. — The Truth About Burnout (1997) Self-Determination Theory applied to teachers: The same needs — autonomy, competence, relatedness — that drive student motivation also drive teacher motivation. Research by Roth, Assor, Kanat-Maymon, and Kaplan has shown that teachers who feel autonomy-supported by their administrators are significantly more likely to be autonomy-supportive with their students. The implication: you cannot build autonomous, motivated classrooms inside controlled, demoralized schools. The dynamic runs in both directions. On Meaningful Challenge and the Zone of Proximal Development Lev Vygotsky — Zone of Proximal Development When the student in this episode described the best assignments as projects that “go deep” and challenge without overwhelming, she was describing something Vygotsky theorized decades ago: the space between what a learner can do independently and what they can do with support. That zone — not too easy, not too hard — is where genuine learning happens. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi — Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience (1990) Csikszentmihalyi’s concept of flow describes the state of complete engagement that occurs when challenge and skill are in balance. His research maps almost perfectly onto what SDT predicts about competence and intrinsic motivation. If you want to understand why some assignments produce genuine engagement and others produce glazed eyes, this book is essential. On the Research Overall Self-Determination Theory has been applied across education, healthcare, parenting, sport, and organizational psychology. It is not a theory that tells you to remove all structure or let people do whatever they want. It is a theory about how to hold structure in a way that supports rather than undermines the people inside it. The distinction matters. Autonomy support is not permissiveness. It is respect — and it turns out respect is not just a nice thing to offer people. It is a condition for human functioning. Music by Aaron Paul “Whispers in the Dark” The Agency Problem is produced independently. No sponsors. No agenda beyond the work. I worked with AI tools in developing this series — as thought partners and editors, not as authors. Everything in here came from two decades in classrooms. The AI helped me find the words. Questions, thoughts, or responses to this episode: [email protected]
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S2 The Agency Problem E1: The Shift We Didn’t Notice
Episode 1: The Shift We Didn’t Notice Program Notes & Sources This episode introduces the central question of the series: what happens to human behavior when people lose meaningful control over their lives? The research below informed the ideas in this episode. These aren’t footnotes — they’re starting points if something in the conversation made you want to go deeper. On Childhood, Play, and the Loss of Unstructured Time Peter Gray — Free to Learn (2013) Gray is a developmental psychologist whose work documents the dramatic decline in children’s free play over the past several decades — and what that loss costs developmentally. If the section on structured time resonated with you, this book is the clearest and most readable treatment of the argument. On the Adolescent Brain Frances Jensen with Amy Ellis Nutt — The Teenage Brain (2015) A neurologist’s accessible look at what’s actually happening inside the adolescent brain — prefrontal cortex development, limbic system activity, and why teenagers respond to the world the way they do. Not written to pathologize adolescence. Written to explain it. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) nimh.nih.gov Their overview of adolescent brain development is a solid, free starting point for anyone who wants the neuroscience without a book commitment. On Autonomy as a Psychological Need Edward Deci & Richard Ryan — Self-Determination Theory (SDT) Deci and Ryan’s research established autonomy, competence, and relatedness as core psychological needs — not preferences, needs. Their decades of work show consistently that controlled environments reduce intrinsic motivation. If you want the academic foundation, their 2000 paper “Self-Determination Theory and the Facilitation of Intrinsic Motivation” in the American Psychologist is the landmark piece. For a more accessible entry point: Edward Deci — Why We Do What We Do (1995) On Stress, the Nervous System, and Behavior Robert Sapolsky — Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers (2004) The definitive popular science book on chronic stress and what it does to the body and brain. Sapolsky is one of the clearest science writers working. The chapters on how stress affects cognition and behavior are directly relevant to what this episode is arguing about student disengagement. Polyvagal Theory — Stephen Porges Porges’ work on the autonomic nervous system explains how the body moves between states of safety, mobilization, and shutdown — and why a nervous system under sustained stress literally cannot access the engagement and curiosity it needs to learn. The Pocket Guide to the Polyvagal Theory (2017) is the most accessible starting point. On Burnout Christina Maslach — Maslach Burnout Inventory & related research Maslach is the foundational researcher on burnout. Her framework — emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, reduced efficacy — remains the standard. For a readable synthesis of her work and its implications, look for Maslach & Leiter — The Truth About Burnout (1997). On Institutional Control and Compliance Alfie Kohn — Punished by Rewards (1993) Kohn’s critique of reward and punishment systems in schools is blunt and well-sourced. Whether you agree with all of it or not, it is a serious challenge to the assumption that compliance-based systems produce genuine learning. Relevant to the argument in this episode that quiet behavior has been mistaken for healthy engagement. A Note on the Research Nothing in this series is cherry-picked to make a point. Where the research is contested — and some of it is — that will be acknowledged in the relevant episode. The goal is clarity, not a brief for a predetermined conclusion. If you’re a teacher, a parent, or someone who works with young people and you want to talk through any of this, the best place to find me is [email protected] The Agency Problem is produced independently. No sponsors. No agenda beyond the work
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The Agency Problem - Introduction
The Agency Problem is coming soon and can be found in Apple Podcasts at https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-teacherhallpasss-podcast/id1825874538 Music: “Whispers in the Dark” by Aaron Paul The Agency Problem is produced independently. No sponsors. No agenda beyond the work. I worked with AI tools in developing this series — as thought partners and editors, not as authors. Everything in here came from two decades in classrooms. The AI helped me find the words. Questions, thoughts, or responses to this episode: [email protected]
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Hall Pass is the podcast for teachers on the edge of burnout - or already deep in it - who are ready to stop surviving and start reclaiming their sanity. Hosted by a longtime educator who has been in the trenches (and the staff meetings), this show is your permission slip to question the system, protect your energy, and redefine what it means to be a ”good teacher.” Expect honest conversations, short bursts of real talk, and practical ways to take your life back - without quitting your job tomorrow (unless that’s your plan). No toxic positivity. No glitter. Just the pass you didn’t know you needed.
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teacherhallpass
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