Synopsis
The Media and Social Change Lab (MASCLab) is a hub for multimodal and digital scholarship that explores the relationship between media and social change. Our podcast tells stories of real-world learning at lab member research sites and beyond.
Episodes
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Season 5, Episode 6: New York, New York - A Brief History of the Broadway Musical
27/04/2023 Duration: 18minNew York, New York - A Brief History of the Broadway Musical: New York’s Broadway theater district has a world-renowned reputation as the center of the American theater world, particularly musical theater. Kate Elizabeth Orgera discusses how New York City created and shaped musical theater, and how Broadway has influenced New York City in turn. Talk to us on Instagram and Twitter @MASCLab! Check out www.masclab.org/podcast-working-group for the episode transcript and to learn more! Episode produced and edited by: Kate Elizabeth Orgera Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Instrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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Season 5, Episode 5: NYC Mom Chat
27/04/2023 Duration: 36minNYC Mom Chat: What is it like to be a mom in New York City? Three graduate students discuss various aspects of being moms to young children in NYC. Talk to us on Instagram and Twitter @MASCLab! Check out www.masclab.org/podcast-working-group for the episode transcript and to learn more! Episode produced and edited by: Jacqueline Cofield Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Instrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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Season 5, Episode 4: Big Apple Educators
27/04/2023 Duration: 47minBig Apple Educators: What's unique about being a teacher in New York City? This episode investigates this question through the stories of three New York City educators with backgrounds in environmental justice education, art education, deaf education, international education, and adult education. Talk to us on Instagram and Twitter @MASCLab! Check out www.masclab.org/podcast-working-group for the episode transcript and to learn more! Episode produced and edited by: Joy Yang Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Instrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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Season 5, Episode 3: The Rat Takeover
27/04/2023 Duration: 12minThe Rat Takeover: When was the last time you saw Rats? Do you like them or are you like most of us? Terrified of them? And where were they? In the subway, in the rubbish on the streets or did you see them scurry across the road? This episode chronicles the ecosystem and history of New York City's rat population. Though they cause a lot of damage to the city, are they underrated creatures? Talk to us on Instagram and Twitter @MASCLab! Check out www.masclab.org/podcast-working-group for the episode transcript and to learn more! Episode produced and edited by: Avukile Zoya Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Instrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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Season 5, Episode 2: NYC Open Streets And Public Space
27/04/2023 Duration: 08minNYC Open Streets And Public Space: Streets are often seen as a place of transit, exclusively for the person on the move, but streets also have a history as spaces for community, as public spaces where people come together rather than just pass by one another. This podcast episode shares a brief history of the New York City Open Streets program and how it has shaped public space in New York City since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. Talk to us on Instagram and Twitter @MASCLab! Check out www.masclab.org/podcast-working-group for the episode transcript and to learn more! Episode produced and edited by: Michael Cerda Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Instrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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Season 5, Episode 1: Unique New York
27/04/2023 Duration: 04minUnique New York: This season, the MASC Lab’s Podcasts series focuses on themes connected to place, in this case New York City, and the many interconnected realities of life in the big apple. Our process is inquiry based and we chose this season’s focus by starting with the question: What is unique or strange about NYC? Our collaborative podcast series this semester grew out of that question, in one way or another. Talk to us on Instagram and Twitter @MASCLab! Check out https://www.masclab.org/podcast-working-group for the episode transcript and to learn more! Season produced and edited by: Jacqueline Cofield, Avukile Zoya, Joy Yang, Michael Cerda, Kate Elizabeth Orgera, and Shoshana Gottesman Episode produced and edited by: Jacqueline Cofield, Michael Cerda, Kate Elizabeth Orgera, and Shoshana Gottesman Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Instrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the fa
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Season 4, Episode 4: Sound Capsule 2020
23/11/2021 Duration: 30minSound capsule 2020: Loops and samples, presence and collective memories, creativity and remixing multiplicities in music education In what ways can sound snippets, traces, and edges that hold intimate and every day personal and collective feelings and memories of our lives during this pandemic spark creativity and reflection? How can this practice meet educational spaces of all kinds? In this episode from the series “Sounds of the Pandemic,” MASCLab member Shoshana Gottesman shares her composition of sounds from the pandemic submitted by members of the MASC Lab alongside the loops and samples of music producer and Teachers College doctoral student Chucky Kim. From there, Shoshana and Chucky explore together how this kind of co-creating through sampling, beatmaking, soundscapes, loops, remixes, and found sounds within music education is a way to facilitate creative moments within the framework of community especially during this time of pandemic. Talk to us on Twitter @MASCLab! Check out masclab.org/podcast
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Season 4, Episode 3: Multimodal Research and Gen Z Online Identities
20/09/2021 Duration: 24minMASCLab members Xiaoyi Gabby Zhou, Joe Riina-Ferrie, and Lívia Barros Cruz chat with Catherine Cheng Stahl, a Doctoral Fellow at the Department of Curriculum and Teaching of Columbia University, Teachers College. She discusses how she used multimodal research methods to explore how Gen Z youth navigate their identities on digital spaces. Talk to us on Twitter @MASCLab! Check out masclab.org/podcast for the episode transcript and to learn more! Produced and edited by Xiaoyi Gabby Zhou Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Illstrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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(Re)Search for Solutions Episode 6: Guns and the Criminal (In)Justice System
10/05/2021 Duration: 29minEpisode 6 of (Re)Search for Solutions takes a hard look at how in some cases, communities, especially communities of color, are harmed by efforts claiming to be in service of stopping gun violence. We look at one of the most well-known examples of discriminatory policing, “Stop and Frisk,” and how these types of ineffective practices become legitimized. Sonali interviews Ekow Yankah, a Professor at the Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University, and Sarah Lustbader, a public defender in New York City, about criminal law and policing as they relate to gun violence. Iesha Sekou, the CEO and founder of Street Corner Resources, also paints a picture of the profound effects gun violence has on communities. Visit the episode 6 page on researchforsolutions.com for transcripts and other resources. Production Team: Azsaneé Truss, Joe Riina-Ferrie, Sonali Rajan, and Lalitha Vasudevan Editing: Azsaneé Truss with the help of the (Re)Search for Solutions team Special thanks to Joe for mastering this episode! Music: “
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Season 4, Episode 2: Alone Together: Sounds of the Pandemic
16/04/2021 Duration: 10minIn this episode, Katie Newhouse introduces our series on sounds of the pandemic. She stitches together short sound collages submitted to our group project by Gabby Zhou, Kyle Oliver, and Shoshana Gottesman. Talk to us on Twitter @MASCLab! Check out masclab.org/podcast for the episode transcript and to learn more! Produced and edited by Katie Newhouse. The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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Season 4, Episode 1: The #JustLit Project Tackles Racial Literacy
01/04/2021 Duration: 26minIntroducing: Season 4 of the MASCLab podcast! MASCLab alum Azsaneé Truss chats with a few members of the #JustLit Project team: Katie Harlan-Eller, Noelle Mapes, and Jenice Mateo-Toledo, and the founder of the project, Professor Detra Price-Dennis. She discusses how they’ve gone about curating multimodal sets of resources for K-12 teachers, specifically those they curated around the topic of racial literacy. Talk to us on Twitter @MASCLab! Check out masclab.org/podcast for the episode transcript and to learn more! Produced and edited by Azsaneé Truss Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Illstrumentalist The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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(Re)Search for Solutions Episode 5: Security Studies And Guns
09/10/2020 Duration: 24minWhat if we considered gun violence as an issue of national security? Increasingly, terrorist groups, and specifically white supremacist extremist terrorists, have been turning to guns as instruments of terror for attacks in the United States. Sonali sits down with Lou Klarevas, political scientist and author of Rampage Nation: Securing America from Mass Shootings, to talk about the intersection of gun violence and security studies. They discuss how and why most deadly terrorist attacks in the United States are now perpetrated using firearms. And she talks with Colin Clarke, a Senior Research Fellow at The Soufan Center about the rise of white supremacist extremist terrorism in particular. Finally, she talks with her sister, Anjana Rajan, who has worked on designing an approach to identifying and preventing attacks by white supremacist extremists using cryptography as a fellow at The Aspen Institute. Listen to find out more about the intersection between gun violence research and national security. Visit the
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(Re)Search for Solutions Episode 4: This is Our Lane
21/08/2020 Duration: 28minIn 2018, the NRA tweeted, “Someone should tell self-important anti-gun doctors to stay in their lane,” in response to a paper released by the American College of Physicians (ACP) about Reducing Firearm Injuries and Death in the United States. Soon after, medical professionals from around the country responded with their stories using the hashtag #ThisIsOurLane. Episode 4 of (Re)Search for Solutions reflects on the crucial role emergency medicine physicians, who are on the front lines of responding to firearm injuries, play in developing solutions. We spoke with Dr. Megan Ranney, an emergency physician and faculty at Brown University and co-founder of the AFFIRM Research collective. She tells us how AFFIRM includes the perspectives of more than 40,000 healthcare professionals, public health experts, and researchers to find ways to reduce gun violence. Additionally, Dr. Ameera Haamid, an emergency medicine physician at Cook County Hospital in Chicago and the Assistant Medical Director of the Chicago West EMS
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Season 3, Episode 2 - What is Media Literacy?
10/07/2020 Duration: 16minWhat is media literacy? And more importantly, why does it matter? MASCLab member Azsaneé Truss has a conversation with TC Professor and MASCLab co-director Ioana Literat about media literacy. Production Team: Azsaneé Truss, Ahram Park Editing: Azsaneé Truss Music: Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Illstrumentalist You can find more media literacy resources at NAMLE.net
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(Re)Search for Solutions Episode 3: Firearm Suicide Prevention
17/06/2020 Duration: 24minIn Episode 3 of (Re)Search for Solutions, we discuss firearm suicide prevention. Firearm suicides make up about two-thirds of deaths by firearms, but suicide is sometimes downplayed in conversations about preventing gun violence. Sonali interviews Kerry Keyes, psychiatric epidemiologist at Columbia University, about her research on gun violence and suicide. Kerry also shares how suicide has affected her and her family. Sonali also talks with Doreen Marshall, Vice President of Programs at the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention [AFSP] about their efforts to prevent firearm suicide and to support survivors of suicide loss. Visit AFSP.org for more resources and support. If you are in crisis, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255). Special thanks to Kyle Oliver for help with mastering this episode. Talk to us on Twitter using the hashtag #R4S! Production Team: Azsaneé Truss, Joe Riina-Ferrie, Sonali Rajan, and Lalitha Vasudevan Editing: Joe Riina-Ferrie with the
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(Re)Search for Solutions Episode 2: Adverse Childhood Experiences and School Safety
07/04/2020 Duration: 21minIn Episode 2 of (Re)Search for Solutions, we talk about adverse childhood experiences, or “ACEs,” and how they can help us think more broadly about the impacts of gun violence and how to prevent it. We focus on the implications for school safety practices in particular. Lalitha Vasudevan interviews our usual host, Sonali Rajan, Professor at Teachers College and the Mailman School of Public Health, about her work on how researchers can think of gun violence as an “adverse childhood experience.” Sonali talks with Danielle Kassow from Trauma Free NYC about ACEs and how schools can take a “trauma informed” approach to gun violence prevention. And Sonali sits down with Laurie, the director of her son’s pre-school, to talk about how they approach school safety while being mindful of the needs of their students. Special thanks to Kyle Oliver for help with mastering this episode. Talk to us on Twitter using the hashtag #R4S! Production Team: Azsaneé Truss, Joe Riina-Ferrie, Sonali Rajan, and Lalitha Vasudevan Edi
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Season 3, Episode 1 - Creative Technologies
20/01/2020 Duration: 23minIntroducing: Season 3 of the MASCLab podcast! MASCLab member Thomas Sendgraff sits down with Erin Riley, Director of the Greenwich Academy Makerspace, FabLearn Fellow, & Instructor of the Creative Technologies course at Teachers College, to talk about Makerspaces and the world of Creative Tech. The (new!) Media and Social Change Podcast theme song is Grandma's Impala by Sarah, The Illstrumentalist.
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(Re)Search For Solutions Episode 1: Cleaning And Greening
09/12/2019 Duration: 19minEpisode 1 of (Re)Search for Solutions discusses greening - the conversion of an overgrown vacant lot to a small, grass-covered community space - as a non-policy-based solution to gun violence. We interviewed Professor Charlie Branas, Chairman of Epidemiology at the Mailman School of Public Health, and Keith Green, Director of the Philadelphia LandCare Program at the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society (PHS), about their research into the effects of greening in Philadelphia. Talk to us on Twitter using the hashtag #R4S! Production Team: Azsanee Truss, Joe Riina-Ferrie, Sonali Rajan, and Lalitha Vasudevan Editing: Azsanee Truss with the help of the (Re)Search for Solutions team Music: “Research Area” by Poitr Pacyna Website: ResearchforSolutions.com The views expressed in this episode are solely those of the speaker to whom they are attributed. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the faculty, administration, staff or Trustees either of Teachers College or of Columbia University.
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Introducing: (Re)Search For Solutions
02/12/2019 Duration: 04min(Re)Search for Solutions is a podcast where we cover research about pressing issues in our world today. This season of (Re)Search for Solutions is a limited series focusing on unexpected and creative ways that researchers are looking at solutions to the persistence of gun violence. Subscribe to the (Re)Search for Solutions podcast feed on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, SoundCloud, & Google Play! Talk to us on Twitter using the hashtag #R4S! Production Team: Azsanee Truss, Joe Riina-Ferrie, Sonali Rajan, and Lalitha Vasudevan Editing: Azsanee Truss with the help of the Research for Solutions team Music: “Research Area” by Poitr Pacyna Website: ResearchforSolutions.com
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Season 2, Episode 7 - Live from Podfest 2019
04/09/2019 Duration: 25minMASCLab’s Podfest is A Celebration of Podcasting and Media-Makeing held each year at Teachers College, Columbia University. The event is hosted in the state-of-the-art Smith Learning Theater to provide an interactive and immersive environment for students, researchers, practitioners and community members to come together and share in the experience of listening. Our 2019 Podfest included a bit of live podcasting, where we hosted a panel to discuss all things multimodality. The panel included Lalitha Vasudevan, Ioana Literat, Haeny Yoon, Katie Newhouse, and Dalia Constantine. Listen in as they answer questions about making and youth story-telling, being open to various modes of inquiry, and the importance of multimodal research as a whole. The Media and Social Change Podcast theme song is Kelp Grooves by Little Glass Men (CC BY 2.0): http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Little_Glass_Men/Kelp_Grooves/Kelp_Grooves