Episódios
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with Paul Harrington & Erwin Kirsh
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Irwin S. Kirsch is the Director of the Center for Global Assessment at Educational Testing Service. He earned his Ph.D. in Educational Measurement, Reading/Literacy from the University of Delaware in 1982. Since joining ETS in 1984, he has directed a number of large-scale assessments in the area of literacy including the National Adult Literacy Survey, and the NAEP Young Adult Literacy Survey. He was also a key person in establishing the International Adult Literacy Surveys and has directed them for ETS since 1993. In 1987, he received the ETS Research Scientist Award for his work in the area of literacy and was named as an ETS Distinguished Presidential Appointee in 1999. Kirsch currently manages several large-scale surveys including the Adult Education Program Study with the U.S. Department of Education and the Literacy Assessment and Monitoring Program with the UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Kirsch also chairs the Reading Expert Group for the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) and has been involved with several efforts aimed at defining and measuring information and communication technology (ICT) skills. In this area, he has directed an international panel for ETS that defined ICT literacy, has designed and conducted a feasibility study on ICT literacy for the OECD, and participates on an OECD advisory panel aimed at establishing a new survey of adult skills for the 21st century.
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Pamela Stone is Professor of Sociology at Hunter College and The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Stone is the author of Opting Out? Why Women Really Quit Careers and Head Home.
Meg Lovejoy, Ph.D., is a sociologist and Research Program Director for the Workplace and Well-being Initiative at the Harvard Center for Population and Development. She was a lead researcher for Opting Out? Why Women Really Quit Careers and Head Home.
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Originally aired 2/28/19
Debbie Bolla has been covering the latest in human capital management trends for the last nine years. As Editorial Director and Editor-in-Chief of HRO Today magazine, she is responsible for the voice, design, and development of editorial and event content. Debbie joined HRO Today in 2009 as Associate Editor, then re-envisioned the magazine’s digital presence as Online Editor, and now is at the helm of all editorial products. She frequently speaks and leads panel discussions at industry events.
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Emily Guendelsberger has worked at Philadelphia City Paper, the Onion's A.V. Club, Philadelphia Weekly, and the Philadelphia Daily News, and has contributed to the Philadelphia Inquirer, The Washington Post, Politico magazine, and Vice.
Learn more about / purchase her book, On The Clock, here.
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Debbie Bolla has been covering the latest in human capital management trends for the last nine years. As Editorial Director and Editor-in-Chief of HRO Today magazine, she is responsible for the voice, design, and development of editorial and event content. Debbie joined HRO Today in 2009 as Associate Editor, then re-envisioned the magazine’s digital presence as Online Editor, and now is at the helm of all editorial products. She frequently speaks and leads panel discussions at industry events.
Read more from HRO Today here.
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Rae Vann is Senior Vice President, General Counsel, and Corporate Secretary of the Center for Workplace Compliance (CWC) (formerly the Equal Employment Advisory Council (EEAC)). As General Counsel, Rae manages six substantive program teams, which are responsible for delivering practical guidance and content to member companies in the areas of Contract Compliance, Fair Employment Practices, Wage and Hour, State Standards, Immigration, and Labor Relations. She also oversees the preparation and filing of friend-of-the-court briefs with the U.S. Supreme Court and federal courts of appeals in significant employment law cases, and personally has authored dozens of briefs on behalf of CWC.
Rae has more than 20 years of experience in assisting employers with their workplace compliance needs, and was one of 16 national experts selected to serve on the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Select Task Force on the Study of Harassment in the Workplace.
Rae serves as managing partner of NT Lakis, LLP, the Washington, D.C.–based law firm whose lawyers and non-lawyer professionals staff CWC, and as Director of Investigative Services for Employment Advisory Services, Inc. (EASI), the firm’s affiliated consulting practice.
Rae received her B.S. in Public Policy and Management from Carnegie Mellon University and her law degree from the University of Connecticut School of Law. She is admitted to practice law in the District of Columbia and the State of Connecticut, as well as before the U.S. Supreme Court and numerous federal courts of appeals.
Learn More about the Center for Workplace Compliance here.
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Rob Csernyik is a Canadian journalist, writer and former retail entrepreneur. He has written for Corporate Knights, the Financial Post, Maclean's and The New Republic. His personal essays, mostly drawing on experience from past jobs, have been published by The Globe and Mail and Vice.
Read "Why is 'Courage' Suddenly Such a Popular Job Requirement"
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Liz Washko is a Shareholder in the Nashville office and the co-chair of Ogletree Deakins’ Pay Equity Practice Group. Ms. Washko represents management in a wide variety of employment matters, at the agency level and in litigation. Ms. Washko has particular experience defending employers in FLSA collective actions, in pay discrimination cases (individual plaintiff and class/collective actions) and conducting proactive pay audits and pay equity analyses. Ms. Washko has served as lead counsel in jury trials in state and federal courts. In addition to her litigation practice, Ms. Washko conducts training on employment issues, drafts and reviews employment policies and agreements, and conducts harassment and other types of investigations for employers. Ms.
Washko is a frequent speaker and writer on topics relating to all types of employment issues and works with clients on preventive strategies to avoid discrimination, retaliation and other employment claims. Ms. Washko has been practicing law since graduating from Rutgers School of Law in 1993. She joined Ogletree Deakins in 2000 and was elected to shareholder status in 2003. While Ms. Washko represents employers of all sizes and in all industries, she has particular expertise representing clients in the restaurant, retail, healthcare and manufacturing industries. Ms. Washko is a member of the American Health Lawyers’ Association and is the Chair of the Labor and Employment practice group of the AHLA. Ms. Washko also is a member of the Labor Standards Legislation Subcommittee of the ABA’s Labor and Employment Section. She is a regular contributing editor to the ABA’s FLSA Treatise and annual supplements and the FMLA annual supplements.
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Nathan Christensen is the CEO of Mammoth HR, the national leader in Collaborative HR. Nathan is a recognized industry leader, speaker, and writer in the fields of business, law, and education.
Learn More about Mammoth HR here.
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Debbie Bolla has been covering the latest in human capital management trends for the last nine years. As Editorial Director and Editor-in-Chief of HRO Today magazine, she is responsible for the voice, design, and development of editorial and event content. Debbie joined HRO Today in 2009 as Associate
Editor, then re-envisioned the magazine’s digital presence as Online Editor, and now is at the helm of all editorial products. She frequently speaks and leads panel discussions at industry events.
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Steven Greenhouse was a reporter for The New York Times for 31 years, spending his last 19 years there as the Times’ labor and workplace reporter, before retiring from the paper in December 2014. He covered myriad labor topics, including conditions for the nation’s farm workers, the Fight for $15, Walmart’s locking in workers at night, the New York City transit strike, and factory disasters in Bangladesh.
Greenhouse also served as the NYT’s Midwest business correspondent, based in Chicago, as its European economics correspondent, based in Paris, and as an economics and then diplomatic correspondent in Washington.
He has written a new book, Beaten Down, Worked Up: The Past, Present, and Future of American Labor, that Alfred A. Knopf published on August 6, 2019. The book looks at key historic episodes that built America’s labor unions and shows how unions and worker power helped build the world’s largest middle class as well as a fairer, more democratic America.
A native of Massapequa, N.Y., Greenhouse, he is also graduate of Wesleyan University (1973), the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism (1975), and NYU Law School (1982).
Greenhouse joined The Times in September 1983 as a business reporter, covering steel and other basic industries. He then spent two-and-a-half years as the newspaper’s Midwestern business correspondent based in Chicago. In 1987, he moved to Paris, where he served as The Times’ European economics correspondent, covering everything from Western Europe’s economy to the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe. After five years in Paris, he served as an NYT correspondent in Washington for four years, covering economics and the Federal Reserve and then the State Department and foreign affairs.
His first book, The Big Squeeze: Tough Times for the American Worker, was published in April 2008 by Alfred A. Knopf. It won the 2009 Sidney Hillman Book Prize. Greenhouse has also been honored with the Society of Professional Journalists Deadline Club award, a New York Press Club award, and a Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business and Financial Reporting.
He continues to freelance for, among others, the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los
Angeles Times, the Guardian, the Atlantic and the Columbia Journalism Review.
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For over 25 years, Kimya S.P. Johnson has been a champion for her clients in a career that spans law, politics, education, and diversity & inclusion management. Kimya serves as Co-Chair of the Diversity & Inclusion (D&I) Practice at Ogletree Deakins, one of the nation’s largest labor and employment law firms. Kimya supports a wide range of employers in their efforts to provide legally-compliant, effective, and organizationally-integrative diversity and inclusion plans. She represents clients by providing D&I-related compliance and risk-reduction services,
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with John Jerrim
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In this episode, hosts Peter Cappelli & Dan O'Meara ask Kieth Blanchard about the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Memphis.
Learn More about the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Memphis:
http://www.bgcm.org/
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In this episode, guest Steven Shepherd teaches hosts Peter Cappelli and Dan O'Meara how passionate employees are being taken advantage of at work.
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with Mary Gray
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In this episode, hosts Peter and Dan get advice from Katherine Suberlak on navigating the workplace while caregiving for an ill or aging loved one.
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Jeff Kreisler is just a typical Princeton educated lawyer turned author, speaker, pundit, comedian and advocate for behavioral science. He uses humor & research to understand, explain and change the world.
Winner of the Bill Hicks Spirit Award for Thought Provoking Comedy, he runs PeopleScience.com, writes for TV, politicians & CEOs, shares witty insight on CNN, FoxNews, MSNBC & SiriusXM and tours most of this planet.
Jeff specializes in politics, money and other human encounters.
Learn more about Jeff Kreisler
http://jeffkreisler.com/
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Debbie Bolla has been covering the latest in human capital management trends for the last nine years. As Editorial Director and Editor-in-Chief of HRO Today magazine, she is responsible for the voice, design, and development of editorial and event content. Debbie joined HRO Today in 2009 as Associate Editor, then re-envisioned the magazine’s digital presence as Online Editor, and now is at the helm of all editorial products. She frequently speaks and leads panel discussions at industry events.
Learn More about Debbie Bolla and HRO Today:
http://www.hrotoday.com/
Learn More about DXC Technology:
http://www.dxc.technology/
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