4.6 • 623 Ratings
🗓️ 3 January 2025
⏱️ 57 minutes
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Enjoy a short preview of our latest full-length Book Club episode. Want to hear the whole thing and get 2.5 CEs for FREE? Subscribe to our Patreon today at the premium $10+ levels for that plus other bonuses!
As a follow-up from our episode on storytelling, we our Winter 2024 Book Club explored Dr. Susan Schneider’s 2012 opus, The Science of Consequences, as an example of taking the hugely important concept of learning through consequences and making it understandable to the wider public. But hey, while she was at it, why not explain how consequences impact evolution, or gene expression, or social improvement strategies. And add multiple examples of how consequences work in labs and the natural environment across a wide range of human and non-human species. And make it fun to read!
But before our crack Book Club squad dives into the nitty gritty of the content, we had the opportunity to sit down with Dr. Schneider herself to ask how she managed to take millions of years of the effects of consequences and pack it into a 300+ page book as well as how her study of consequences informs her current work as a climate change policy advocate.
This full version of this episode is available for 2.5 LEARNING CEUs.
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0:00.0 | Hey, everybody. Welcome to ABA Inside Track Book Club Edition. This is a special preview of our full-length Winter 2025 |
0:23.3 | Book Club episode on The Science of Consequences by Dr. Susan Schneider. |
0:28.9 | So the full-length episode is only available to our patrons at the $10 and up level on |
0:33.7 | Patreon.com slash ABA Inside Track. But for everybody, we wanted to make sure that you had a chance |
0:39.4 | to listen to the beginning of the episode, which surprise is an interview with the author, |
0:45.7 | Dr. Susan Schneider. So we're going to be talking with Dr. Schneider all about the creation of |
0:51.1 | the book, where it came from, her ideas, some of the favorite parts that I had, that we had as a group, and also some of her work that she's currently doing on climate change. |
1:01.0 | So you're going to get to hear all of that. And that's going to come in right now. |
1:06.0 | All right. So I am here very, very excited to be talking with Dr. Susan Schneider about her book, The Science of Consequences, which we did our whole book club episode about. |
1:17.7 | We had a nice long discussion about it. |
1:19.8 | But it's nice that we thought whatever we thought. |
1:22.0 | But why don't we check in with Susan about the book as the person who created it, or at the very least summed up her research, |
1:29.3 | other people's research into a nice coherent whole. And speaking of that, Susan, would you mind |
1:34.6 | just kind of introducing yourself to the audience and saying a little bit more about you than |
1:38.4 | I think my bio I did probably won't have done it justice? Okay, and I haven't seen the bio, at least I don't remember. |
1:46.5 | But, right, how far back do you want me to go? |
1:50.7 | Oh, as much as you feel like sharing, leading up to the book, you know, this is your time. |
1:56.0 | So you go into whatever detail you think is helpful. |
2:00.4 | Okay, and I'd love to hear more about the discussion that the book club had, too. |
2:04.3 | Jov, yeah. |
2:05.2 | If you can bring any of that up, that would be great. |
2:07.9 | I will, I will. |
... |
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