Teaching Matters | Controversial Topics, CogSci Fads, Great Teachers

29/09/2025 1h 12min

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Episode Synopsis

Paul Hazzard is joined by Dr Rachael Jefferson, Dr Shauna McGill and John Gibbs for a rich conversation about:– How teachers handle controversial classroom issues– The debate around teacher educators and the “science of learning”– What makes a great teacher, inspired by John Tomsett’s researchAnd, as always, Banana Time.Handling Controversial TopicsPrompted by Thomas Michael’s TES article (2025), the panel explored how teachers approach sensitive subjects such as immigration, climate change and conspiracy theories.• Shauna cited Bittman & Russell (2016), showing deliberate discussion of controversial issues boosts students’ political knowledge, moral awareness and self-efficacy. She stressed impartiality, clear boundaries and parental involvement.• Rachael argued neutrality is a myth. Teachers always bring perspective, so should act as facilitators using Harvard Project Zero routines (“Claim–Support–Question”, “See–Think–Wonder”) to develop critical thinking and give voice to marginalised perspectives.• John recalled A-level politics students testing conspiracy narratives (e.g. 9/11 as an “inside job”). He urged space for doubt while challenging absurdities, warning that social media makes impartial navigation harder.🔅 Nutshell: Teachers don’t need all the answers – they need courage to open discussion, model critical thinking and accept mistakes.Teacher Training or Sales Pitch?The panel discussed Jim Hewitt & Nidhi Sachdeva’s Substack article “When teacher training feels like a sales pitch and how to push back”.• Rachael welcomed critique but noted both authors’ reliance on cognitive science of learning, often detached from practice.• Shauna emphasised the reciprocal nature of teacher education, with theory adapting to varied contexts.• John interpreted the article as critique of how research becomes distorted into fads (multiple-intelligences tests, scripted lessons, colour-coded pens). He warned against pseudo-science used by managers for control.• The panel challenged the “science of learning”, with Rachael branding it reductionist and neoliberal, flattening diversity and creativity into one-size-fits-all models.🔅 Nutshell: Teacher education should balance theory, practice and professional trust – not reduce teachers to technicians.What Makes a Great TeacherDrawing on John Tomsett’s 2025 school visits, the panel considered traits of great teaching.• Shauna championed relational pedagogy, referencing Worth & McLean’s research on shortages and reliance on unqualified staff. Qualifications matter, but so does relationship-building.• Rachael recalled her mother’s mantra: “Noisy class, noisy teacher.” Pupils mirror teachers’ behaviour and mood; authenticity and enthusiasm are vital yet cannot be faked.• John likened teaching mastery to Morecambe & Wise’s comedy – effortful at first, later effortless through trust and familiarity. He cautioned against reducing teaching to scripts or checklists.• All agreed that autonomy and trust, seen in high-performing systems like Finland, are crucial to retention and motivation.🔅 Nutshell: Great teaching blends enthusiasm, authenticity, relationships and expertise. Systems that clip teachers’ wings drain joy and professionalism.Banana Time• Shauna quoted George Washington Carver: “Education is understanding relationships”, paired with Brian K. Vaughan’s reminder that every relationship carries risk – itself an education.• John offered the Greek word akrasia: knowing what’s right but failing to act.• Rachael stressed the need for harmony between theory and practice.Follow us, we're worth it:🔗 Website🔗 Spotify🔗 Instagram🔗 Bluesky🔗 X (Twitter)#leadership #education #teacher #school #schoollife #inspiration #support #podcast #video