Podcast features campus efforts to grow Nebraska's teaching workforce

Brenden Trout student taught in 2018 in fifth grade at Elliott Elementary in Lincoln. February 20, 2018. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication
Brenden Trout student taught in 2018 in fifth grade at Elliott Elementary in Lincoln. February 20, 2018. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication

by Melissa Lee | Central Administration

The University of Nebraska has released a new episode of its “Leading Nebraska” podcast series, featuring the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s efforts to prepare the next generation of the state’s teachers.

Through the new systemwide Teachers Scholars Academy, along with other teacher education programs on campus, the university is helping to grow a diverse teaching workforce prepared to serve Nebraska children, families and communities.

The 40 students selected to serve as the university’s inaugural Teachers Scholars Academy cohort began the program in fall 2018. The academy allows them the opportunity to live and study together, conduct research and volunteer in the Lincoln community, among other activities to enrich their educational experience.

The Teachers Scholars Academy, made possible by a private gift from the William and Ruth Scott Family Foundation, aims to expose future teachers to Nebraska’s schools, communities and changing demographics through experiential learning. Teachers Scholars Academy cohorts are also under way at the University of Nebraska at Kearney and the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

“The goal of the Teachers Scholars Academy is to grow this next generation of educators that will serve Nebraska and can even go beyond Nebraska,” Guy Trainin, chair of UNL’s Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education, says in the podcast. “We’re really focused on this group of educators that would lead the next wave of education.”

With enrollment in Nebraska schools continuing to rise to more than 367,000 today – and with the demographics of those students changing as well – the state faces a critical need for a strong pipeline of highly skilled, highly prepared future teachers. The University of Nebraska, the state’s largest producer of teachers, is focused on addressing the need.

“You never know what the future classroom will look like. We know what they look like now, but it’s always changing,” Braden Foreman, coordinator of University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Teachers Scholars Academy, says in the podcast. “And that’s really exciting. I think what we’re doing is helping (academy students) be critical thinkers, which is a great way to help them be able to respond to that.”

The NU system’s “Leading Nebraska” podcast shares stories of researchers, students and educators across the four campuses who are growing the state’s workforce and improving quality of life. New episodes of “Leading Nebraska” are released monthly and feature experts from UNL, UNO, UNK and the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Topics include nursing, agricultural education, counterterrorism, healthcare, workforce development, cybersecurity and others.

Listeners may follow the “Leading Nebraska” podcast at: https://soundcloud.com/leading-nebraska