Episodios

  • Secretary of the State Stephanie Thomas
    Jun 16 2025

    Over the last three decades, Stephanie Thomas has dedicated her professional life to career advising and problem solving for nonprofit organizations, running her own business and serving as a state representative of the 143rd district. Sworn in on January 4th, 2023, Secretary Thomas was the first black person to be elected Secretary of the State of Connecticut.

    Since taking office, Secretary Thomas has led the implementation of significant election reforms in the state, including the rollout of early voting and a new centralized voter registration system. Secretary Thomas believes that a healthy, representative democracy relies on regular and active participation in civic life by all of us to promote authentic and ongoing civic engagement.

    She has met our communities in our own spaces, thereby cultivating a non-partisan dialog between the people and their government through programs such as her Connect and Cut series, civic trivia events at local libraries.

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    56 m
  • Julia Miller, 2025 Connecticut Teacher of the Year
    Apr 14 2025

    The 2005 Connecticut Teacher of the Year, Julia Miller is a proud New Haven Public Schools teacher, parent, and alumni. Julia is a social studies teacher committed to anti-racist education and project based learning. Her goal for her students is for them to become informed and active community members who feel empowered to make change.


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    52 m
  • Greg Frank and Brian Zawodniak and Teaching Through Living History
    Apr 1 2025

    Greg Frank is a social studies teacher from South Windsor who has taught high school and middle school history for 30 years. Greg used to be a Civil War reenactor and is now Revolutionary War re-enactor.

    He met Brian Zawodniak in college, when they were members of Phi Alpha Theta, the national history Honor Society. A teacher at JFK Middle School in Enfield, Brian has taught geography and U.S. History for 17 years. He is a Revolutionary War loyalist reenactor. The two discuss teaching through living history and historical reenactment.

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    52 m
  • Rhonan Mokrisi and Embracing Authenticity as Historian
    Mar 11 2025

    Rhonan Mokrisi is a native of Connecticut, who graduated from Boston College undergraduate and Southern Connecticut State University as a grad student. For 29 years, he has been teaching at his alma mater, Salisbury School, in the far northwestern part of Connecticut. During Covid, Rhonan made some changes as a teacher, moving from focusing on content to skills to embrace authenticity with students in the role of historian, as he himself was learning about the often forgotten or overlooked roles his home state played throughout history.

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    40 m
  • Matt Warshauer and Teaching the 9/11 Generation
    Nov 25 2024

    Matt Warshauer returns to the podcast. He's been working as a history professor at Central Connecticut State University, as the host to the Connecticut History Day, and a member of the Connecticut Council for the Social Studies Board of Directors. On this episode, Matt discusses his new book, “Creating and Failing the 9/11 Generation: The Real Story of September 11”.

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    56 m
  • Melissa Zablonski and Communicating Complex History to Younger Audiences
    Nov 24 2024

    Melissa Zablonski has taught social studies at Putnam High School for nine years, including U.S. History, AP U.S. History, Psychology, Anthropology, and the Black, African-American, Puerto Rican and Latino studies class. In 2022, she earned her doctorate degree in education after completing research on building capacity of teachers to serve English learners in their mainstream classrooms.

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    1 h y 3 m
  • Steve Thornton and The Shoe Leather History Project
    Oct 28 2024

    Steve Thornton has spent his adult life as an activist and organizer, working with various groups for social, economic, racial, and environmental justice. He is the author of A Shoeleather History of the Wobblies: Stories of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in Connecticut (Red Sun Press, 2013), Wicked Hartford (The History Press, 2017), and Good Trouble: A Shoeleather History of Nonviolent Direct Action (Hard Ball Press, 2019).

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    47 m
  • Yasmeen Galal and Snigtha Mohanraj: Student Perspectives on the Intersections of Civics and Sciences
    Oct 7 2024

    Snigtha Mohanraj is a rising senior and volunteers with local climate groups, conducts independent research regarding water contaminant removal and works on addressing educational disparities in New Haven. She enjoys the intersection of civics with other fields such as environmental science. Yasmeen Galal, who graduated high school in May of 2024, took on various advocacy roles, including serving as the president of Connecticut Student Council and as a student representative on Connecticut's Board of Education. She's interested in the intersection between technology and policy, to ensure that society can advance technology while keeping humanity at the forefront.

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    52 m