
How to Teach and Learn – Education in the 21st Century (CFFL 0115)
Land Academy Show · Steven Butala & Jill DeWit
March 9, 201625m 2s
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Show Notes
How to Teach and Learn - Education in the 21st Century
Jack Butala: How to Teach and Learn - Education in the 21st Century. Every Single month we give away a property for free. It's super simple to qualify. Two simple steps. Leave us your feedback for this podcast on iTunes and number two, get the free ebook at landacademy.com, you don't even have to read it. Thanks for listening.
Steve: Jack Butala here from Land Academy. Welcome to our Cash Flow From Land show. In this episode Jill and I talk about modern education. How to teach, and learn, and educate in the 21st century. Jill this is not your grandfather's classroom. I don't-
Jill: Or mine.
Steve: Or yeah, exactly.
Jill: Not even mine.
Steve: I've been waiting to do this show for a long time. Before we get into it, let's take a call. Let's take a question from a caller.
Jill: You just made me think about, when you said my grandfather's class, you might think you, it makes me think of Little House on the Prairie. It could have been that.
Steve: Oh, my God. You know where I got that line, a long time ago?
Jill: Yeah, where is that?
Steve: It's was the Oldsmobile tagline for years and years and years; this is not your grandfather's Oldsmobile.
Jill: You know what Steven? That line would have been really good for our clichés the other day.
Steve: Yeah. Come up with something better Steve. That's what she's really saying.
Jill: Yeah. That's kind of what I'm saying.
Steve: Think a little harder Steve. I know you got it in you.
Jill: Not our classroom even. You know what? Hold on a moment. I think right now, I'll get more into it in a minute, but I even think that right now that the classroom, in four years even a lot changes. It used to be ten years for big changes. You know what I mean? Now the gap is getting smaller I think. The kids that are graduating college right now, four years from now what those kids are going to be going through is going to be leaps and bounds.
Steve: Before e get into this topic, let's take a question from a caller.
Jill: Thanks a lot. That would be Jill, back on track. Okay, all right, all right. Okay, Kelly from Kansas called in and asked, "Can I do this part time and keep my day job? I'm not unhappy, but I'd like to slowly start building up my plan B."
Steve: Excellent.
Jill: I like that.
Steve: I think you're more qualified to answer this than me.
Jill: Is it because I work part time? Is that where you're going with this?
Steve: No, that's not where I was going, but that's true too.
Jill: Thanks a lot. I rolled in here like right before the show.
Steve: Yeah. That's what happens. We have a lot that goes into this. It's not just 30 minutes of horsing around.
Jill: Do you know what though? Here's my point though. I'm mentally here. I may not physically be here. Correct? I'm in the car, we're talking.
Steve: There's a lot of work to this.
Jill: I know. Okay.
Steve: You can sub out, here's the thing about podcasts and radio shows, there's a lot you can sub out. You can sub out the sound engineering, but you can't sub the talent out, or the writing. All right? There's some stuff that goes on. It doesn't sound like, it sounds like this is just we sat down with the tape recorder and did this. Maybe that's good or bad, I don't know.
Jill: [inaudible 00:02:44] we talk about over coffee.
Steve: Yeah, but if you don't like that kind of show, you're probably not listening to this anyway.
Jill: Exactly.
Steve: That's fine.
Jill: Okay. Thank you. All right, so Kelly, can you do this part time and keep your day job? Absolutely. We have a number of people in our community that this is their end goal, sooner versus later, but we tell everybody, "Don't quit your day job yet. Let's make sure you get this going, you get in the system, you're financially stable, and then it's stupid for you to keep your day job," so for you Kelly, you can tone it up,