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    stanforduniversity

    Explore "stanforduniversity" with insightful episodes like "Resilience Redefined | Adina Glickman | San Francisco Bay Area, CA", "Is Polarization Pushing Us To Hate Each Other?", "Episode 69: The Prehistory of Your Research Topic (Robert Parnica)", "YCBK 71: 13 Things to Consider Doing if Waitlisted" and "Episode 39: Using Archives to Resist Erasure (Josue Hurtado)" from podcasts like ""the little black fish", "Not Another Politics Podcast", "An Archivist's Tale", "Your College Bound Kid | Admission Tips, Admission Trends & Admission Interviews" and "An Archivist's Tale"" and more!

    Episodes (25)

    Resilience Redefined | Adina Glickman | San Francisco Bay Area, CA

    Resilience Redefined | Adina Glickman | San Francisco Bay Area, CA

    Adina is the founder of Stanford’s Resilience Project. She has worked with highly accomplished and ambitious students for years to help them learn, adapt, and excel. Adina and I engaged in this dialogue to discuss the dilemmas parents and their children face in this time of uncertainty. Some children are back home as colleges and dorms are closed, and others are in lockdowns elsewhere. For the first time, parents and children could be a potential threat to one another in a way that has never been experienced before. They struggle to find space and navigate their dynamic while being confined behind closed doors. As a result, children might feel the pressure of being judged for not doing enough and parents might be having a hard time navigating how to take care of their children while trying to keep their sanity intact.

    Adina brings a positive light to this heavy conversation by inviting us to slow down and reminds us that everyone is impacted by these unforeseeable circumstances (not only you). Therefore you cannot possibly fall behind by being patient and just focusing to take care of yourself. She emphasizes that to learn, one needs to have perspective which seems to be an impossible way of coping in this era of uncertainty. She warns that with the current level of anxiety and rich resources that are out there one might feel pressured and confused. To untangle this confusion, she recommends that we look into resources that offer us validation of how we feel and where we want to be at this moment in time. She frees us from the misconception of seeking resilience while you are still in the midst of the crisis, and offers reassurance that it will come when the time is right.

    Follow Adina Glickman on Twitter | Follow Dr. Sara on IG | Join our community for resources and material discussed in the black fish podcast episodes.

    About Adina Glickman

    Adina is a Certified Integral Coach who has helped thousands of students at large research universities, community and state colleges, and small liberal arts schools, achieve their academic and personal goals through her Resilient Learner coaching model. During her 18 years at Stanford University, she founded The Stanford Resilience Project and created The Duck Stops Here, an academic skills blog for Stanford students that is open to the public. She co-founded The Academic Resilience Consortium, an international collective of faculty and higher education professionals from 250+ schools in sixteen countries. Adina is the author of The Resilient Learner: Eight Pillars of Student Success (in press), and is the co-author of “Over the Influence: A Harm Reduction Guide to Managing Drugs and Alcohol” (Guilford, 2003). Adina received her BA in Music from Reed College and her Master’s degree in Social Work from New York University and worked in community mental health for ten years before moving into educational consulting and coaching. More about Adina here.

    Is Polarization Pushing Us To Hate Each Other?

    Is Polarization Pushing Us To Hate Each Other?

    We’re constantly told by journalists and academics that America is too divided. That people no long just oppose members of the opposite party, but actually hate them. That something is broken, not just in our politics but in American life generally.

    On this episode, we take these issues to one of the leading scholars in the world on polarization, Dr. Shanto Iyengar from Stanford University. We focus specifically on one of his papers, https://pcl.stanford.edu/research/2015/iyengar-ajps-group-polarization.pdf, that argues that affective polarization really has gotten as bad as the experts say, and we discuss what we can do about it.

    Episode 69: The Prehistory of Your Research Topic (Robert Parnica)

    Episode 69: The Prehistory of Your Research Topic (Robert Parnica)
    Robert Parnica, Senior Reference Archivist at the Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives, tells us why archivists need to be active in society, why archivists are always needed even in online environments, how curated collections of digital surrogates can be their own natural archives, and how he helps researchers use his archives' rich collection of records relating to communism and human rights.

    YCBK 71: 13 Things to Consider Doing if Waitlisted

    YCBK 71: 13 Things to Consider Doing if Waitlisted
    In this episode you will hear: (6:28) In this week’s news, a Wall Street Journal article “Colleges have been under pressure to admit needier kids. It’s backfiring”, by Catherine Rampell. A pair of university professors from Stanford and the University of Virginia have studied the disadvantages of schools who user certain “economic opportunity” measures to admit students. The results have been neglecting those families who don’t show up as poor, but have a significant need for aid. Mark and Anika discuss whether we agree with the research conclusions. Mark and Anika discuss the history of the recent interest in attracting low income kids. Mark and Anika comment on the title of the article and they share whether they believe the authors proposals are realistic or utopic. (18:08) We are in Chapter 71 of 171 Answers and it’s about what your child can do if they become waitlisted. Mark and Anika discuss about a half dozen ideas from Mark’s book 171 Answers. The book looks at 13 reasons but Mark and Anika discuss their favorite responses in case you are waitlisted. Mark and Anika agree on about four ideas as their favorites and they each have a few of their own that they like. Mark clarifies that a student needs to request to be on the waitlist and he talks about how you do this has changes over the years. (30:01)  For our question segment – we are responding to the breaking news around the College Board rolling out what they are calling the Environmental Context Dashboard (ECD) so Mark is addressing questions that he has been receiving and this week he reviews the cases against the ECD. In part 2 of this 4 part discussion, Mark will share about 8-10 of the strongest arguments against the ECD being a good idea. In part 3 of 4 Mark will share the reasons why the ECD is a good idea. We recommend listening to both part 2 and part 3 as you think through and decide whether you think the ECD is a prudent idea. (48:55)  Mark Interviews Dr. Josie Urbistondo, a professor of writing at the University of Miami. In part 1 of 3, Dr. Josie Urbistondo gives her background including her education, her time as a professor at the University of Miami She shares her opinion on the greatest strength of the University of Miami Josie also talks about her company which is called, “Write your Acceptance” Josie talks about three common mistakes students make in their essays. The first is what she calls “the Resume roll call essay Next Dr. Urbistondo talks about the Apology Tour essay, Then she describes to the Rant and Rave diatribe After this we talk about “Essay Real Estate” Josie talks about the purpose of the Personal Statement Finally, Josie tells us what she means by “fan girling on yourself (60:43) Mark’s recommended resource of the week is @commonapp because when you follow them on Twitter, you will get great tips on completing your application, and helpful information. Marks recommend their blog and you can see a link for their blog by going to their @Commonapp twitter account and you will see a tweet on May with a link to their blog. Finally, Mark also recommends their webinars  Don’t forget to send your questions related to any and every facet of the college process to   Every episode of Your College-Bound Kid will align with a chapter from the book 171 Answers to the Most-Asked College Admission Questions. To get a copy visit  and if you want to see what future episodes will cover just click the red button “See exactly what 171 Answers covers.

    Episode 39: Using Archives to Resist Erasure (Josue Hurtado)

    Episode 39: Using Archives to Resist Erasure (Josue Hurtado)
    Josue Hurtado, Coordinator Public Services and Outreach at the Special Collections Research Center of Temple University, discusses his beginnings in archives at Stanford University, his work with records relating to the AIDS crisis while working at University of California San Francisco, his work at the Bentley Historical Library of the University of Michigan, his current position and his work as the coordinator of the Committee for Diversity & Inclusion for the Mid-Atlantic Archives Conference.