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Make EdTech 100 with LindyHoc
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Make EdTech 100 with LindyHoc

Author: Lindy Hockenbary

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Technology in education shouldn’t feel overwhelming, confusing, or disconnected from what actually works in classrooms. This show keeps it real. Each week, educator and K–12 EdTech Advisor Lindy Hockenbary shares practical strategies, stories from real teachers, and no-nonsense conversations about how to use tech in ways that feel human, joyful, and grounded in learning.
Whether you’re a teacher, a school leader, or an EdTech product builder, this show helps you Make EdTech 100 — real, relevant, and rooted in what matters most: kids.
8 Episodes
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In this episode, Lindy is joined by Aaron Makelky to break down what educators need to understand about agentic AI.We’ve moved beyond text generation. We’re now in the age of agents—systems that act autonomously, navigate browsers, execute tasks, and even help build new AI tools.Lindy and Aaron unpack recent AI releases, including Codex, agentic browsers, and the viral Open Claw experiment. They explore what’s hype, what’s real, and what this acceleration means for assessment, data privacy, and the future relevance of classroom work.Connect with Aaron Makelky:https://aaronmakelky.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaron-makelky-m-a-ed-038b852a3/https://x.com/theaaronAbout Aaron: Aaron Makelky spent 16 years as a high school social studies teacher and coach before transitioning to tech. Now a Community & Developer Relations Marketing Manager at a San Francisco-based tech company (working remotely), he focuses on making AI accessible for non-technical people. He's trained schools, law firms and nonprofits on AI implementation. His content and workshops are all about cutting through AI hype to show practical applications that actually work.Tools mentioned in the episode:https://www.perplexity.ai/comethttps://chatgpt.com/atlas/ https://www.diabrowser.com/https://openai.com/codex/ https://openclaw.ai/ 
What happens when a Montana librarian starts an esports team?In this episode, I sit down with Marne Bender — educator, librarian, esports coach, and fellow Montanan — to talk about creating spaces where students belong. From building a state championship esports program to transforming the school library into a makerspace hub with 3D printers and coding robots, Marne shares how she makes EdTech 100% work for her students.We dive into rural innovation, esports misconceptions, digital literacy in the age of AI, and why sometimes the best ideas start with “Let’s just try it.”If you care about belonging, creativity, and preparing kids for careers that don’t exist yet, this one’s for you.   East Helena Public Schools: https://www.ehpsmt.gov/Connect with Marne: mbender@ehps.k12.mt.us   More about Marne:With 16 years in education at East Helena Public Schools, Marne is currently a Library Media Specialist working with preschool, kindergarten, and high school students. She's helped grow Montana’s high school esports scene for the past seven years and loves creating opportunities for students to explore new passions. She loves yapping about books, tinkering with 3D printers and robots, and encouraging curiosity in all learners. Outside of school, she spends as much time as possible in the mountains of Montana with her family.
In this episode, I’m stepping out from behind the mic to share a bit about who I am and how my journey in rural Montana shaped the way I think about education and technology. From teaching in a literal one-to-one computer lab before one-to-one was a thing, to supporting educators in small, under-resourced schools, these early experiences cemented my belief that pedagogy must always lead and technology should serve learning—not the other way around.Meet Lindy: https://www.lindyhoc.com/meet-lindyConnect with me on socials:FacebookInstagramTikTokYouTubeLinkedIn
Students live in a world of video—and school can’t pretend otherwise. In this episode of Make EdTech 100, Lindy makes the case for why teacher-created video is no longer optional in K–12 learning. Backed by research on student-teacher relationships, belonging, and engagement, this episode unpacks why your presence matters more than polished production. You’ll walk away with concrete ways to use short, authentic videos for instruction, feedback, and connection—plus ideas for making video more engaging without spending more time.Blog and infographic: https://www.lindyhoc.com/post/lights-camera-learning-what-the-research-says-about-teacher-created-videos For even more research: A Teacher’s Guide to Online LearningThe LindyHoc YouTube to follow Lindy’s video journey: https://www.youtube.com/@LindyHoc 
We gave kids technology… and forgot to teach them how to use it. In this episode of Make EdTech 100, Lindy sits down with Dr. Kelli Erwin from Learning.com to unpack what schools are missing in a world where technology is everywhere—even when screens are banned.From misinformation and echo chambers to AI, addiction, and algorithmic influence, this conversation reframes “digital citizenship” as something bigger: real citizenship in an AI-driven world. Dr. Erwin shares how Learning.com’s curriculum helps students (and teachers) build the skills to evaluate information, make thoughtful choices, and use technology with purpose—whether that happens in a tech class, social studies, or PE.You’ll hear why fear-based approaches and blanket bans fall short, how education is the antidote to overwhelm, and what it really means to Make EdTech 100 by balancing technical skills with human ones. If you’ve ever wondered how to prepare students for a future they’re already living in, this episode is your roadmap.Resources:learning.com https://www.learning.com/resources/ai-resource-center/: Learning.com’s new AI Resource Center which includes an AI Policy Hub, PD, webinars, guides, toolkits, and more designed as a free resource to help teachers.
What happens when we stop treating technology as either the hero or the villain in education?In this episode, Lindy is joined by Merissa Sadler-Holder, French teacher and founder of Teaching with Machines, for a thoughtful, grounded conversation about what it really means to teach with technology, especially in the age of AI.Together, they unpack the difference between AI literacy and AI fluency, explore why “find the gray” is essential in today’s classrooms, and challenge the all-or-nothing thinking around devices, policies, and generative AI. Merissa shares how her background as a language teacher shaped her approach to tools like Google Translate and how those lessons directly apply to today’s AI moment.You’ll hear why:Technology isn’t the magic fix and it isn’t the root problem eitherPolicy should create safe space, not shut down explorationTeachers don’t have to be AI experts to model AI fluencyMessy learning is a feature, not a flawThe future of education is human-centered, not machine-drivenThis episode is a must-listen for educators who feel caught between fear and possibility and are ready to design classrooms that prepare students for a future we’re still buildingBecause teaching with machines doesn’t replace your expertise. It amplifies it.Connect with Merissa: http://teachingwithmachine.com/
What if video wasn’t one more “thing” on your plate, but a pathway back to joy in teaching?In this episode, Lindy sits down with Erika Sandstrom, the legendary Green Screen Gal, to explore how video can transform classrooms into spaces of creativity, confidence, and connection. From jump cuts and quick wins to mindful media and “breathing bubbles,” Erika shares how even the most camera-shy teachers and students can use video to tell powerful stories.You’ll hear why video isn’t just about content creation—it’s about belonging, emotional safety, and helping students (and teachers) rediscover the fun in learning. Whether you teach kindergarten or calculus, this conversation will change the way you think about video in education.Erika’s video course: https://erika-sandstrom-s-school.teachable.com/p/3-2-1-action-become-a-green-screen-rock-star Connect with Erika:Website:  GreenScreenGal.comTwitter:  @GreenScreenGal   Instagram:  @GreenScreenGal44     Facebook:  Facebook.com/greenscreengalTikTok:  https://www.tiktok.com/@greenscreengal44LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/erikleeasandstromYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/erikasandstromResearch: Lights, Camera, Learning: What the Research Says About Teacher Created VideosVideo tools:Canva: https://www.canva.com/education/ Adobe ExpressScreenPal: https://screenpal.com/ WeVideo: https://www.adobe.com/express/   Capcut: https://www.capcut.com/ 
In the first episode of Make EdTech 100, Lindy tackles the growing challenge of “AI slop” in student work and why AI detection tools are not the solution. She introduces the Assessment Puzzle Framework, a practical approach to redesigning assessments so learning is visible, authentic, and harder to outsource to AI. Through concrete classroom examples across subjects, Lindy shows how adding visuals, annotations, and voice reflection can shift assessment from recall to real thinking.Get the Assessment Puzzle Toolkit: https://www.lindyhoc.com/assessment-puzzle Research on AI content detectors: https://www.lindyhoc.com/post/beyond-the-band-aid-rethinking-ai-detectors-in-educationCheck out Snorkl here: https://snorkl.app/
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