Episodios

  • What Students Actually Need From Adults
    Feb 10 2026

    Schools play an important role in setting expectations and addressing real world consequences, parents must support that work by allowing educators to hold students accountable in meaningful ways. The episode highlights why consistency, boundaries, and partnership between families and schools are essential for preparing young people for life beyond the classroom.

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    6 m
  • Dealing with Families, What Has Changed?
    Feb 4 2026

    Parent behaviors are reshaping the teacher family relationship. Archetypes like the helicopter and lawnmower parent directly affect teachers’ autonomy, workload, and emotional bandwidth. This episode explores how constant monitoring and escalation strain trust, shift power dynamics, and contribute to stress and burnout and what it means for classroom culture, communication, and long term partnerships with families.

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    34 m
  • School Choice or School Coercion?
    Jan 28 2026

    This episode explores how the dominant framework of school choice can reward advantage instead of fulfilling the public promise to educate every child. We examine the long-term effects of inequitable systems, the risks of short-term thinking, and the consequences for millions of children.

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    16 m
  • When Lawyers Get Paid and Classrooms Don’t
    Jan 21 2026

    What if part of your child’s school budget never made it to the classroom?

    A single lawsuit over a student’s IEP shines a light on a problem most families never hear about. Across the country, school leaders are spending more time in courtrooms than classrooms, navigating legal battles just to keep schools running.

    In one jaw-dropping case, a federal judge ordered an Illinois school district to pay $248,000 in legal fees, the equivalent of funding 17.5 students for an entire year. That is money that could have gone to teachers, services, or student support. Instead, it went straight to attorneys.

    Meanwhile, districts like Shelby County, Tennessee are facing legal pressure so intense it is pulling leadership away from kids and toward survival mode.

    This episode breaks down the vicious cycle where lawsuits quietly drain school resources, why it keeps happening, and what communities can do to stand behind the educators caught in the middle.

    If you care about what happens to education dollars after they leave the classroom, this is a conversation you will not want to miss.



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    29 m
  • The Homogeneity Trap: Why One Bad School Story Makes Us Judge Them All
    Jan 14 2026

    Brian breaks down the “homogeneity effect”, our brain’s tendency to lump everyone in a group together. One teacher messes up, one school fails, and suddenly people think all public schools are bad. He explains why this mental shortcut is misleading, how local challenges shape school outcomes, and why public schools are far more diverse and resilient than headlines suggest.

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    43 m
  • Is Student Recruitment a Misuse of Taxpayer Dollars?
    Dec 15 2025

    This episode addresses a question that public school district leaders are asking nationwide. Should public schools spend money to recruit families? Public schools were never supposed to run enrollment campaigns. But the funding model changed, family behavior changed, and doing nothing now costs more than acting.

    In this episode, we unpack why outreach is no longer optional and why it is actually responsible use of taxpayer dollars. Learn the costs of inaction, the return on outreach, and how districts can justify campaigns with data and transparency.


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    16 m
  • WEBINAR: Results of National Parent Poll
    Dec 2 2025

    This episode is a recording of Caissa K12’s National Parent Poll results webinar, which is a part of our annual research to assess family attitudes across school choice. To view the video recording, visit our youtube channel or use the following link: https://youtu.be/nK1-avCzvSY?si=b5U1R-lGrmmaQdJ8


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    54 m
  • How A Country Shrinks
    Nov 18 2025

    Countries rarely fall with a crash; they shrink by decisions that feel “reasonable.” We tell a real, policy-based story from Iran through the eyes of “Leila,” a student who watches her access to quality education get taken away. Then we hold up the mirror: when we say “I don’t care if vouchers hurt other kids,” are we starting down the same slippery slope? This episode connects our new national poll on vouchers to real classroom ripple effects and explains why starving “their” schools shrinks your own future.

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    26 m