The Ripple Effect Podcast #203 (Kerry McDonald | Unschooled: Raising Curious, Well-Educated Children Outside the Conventional Classroom)

Nov 6, 2019

Kerry McDonald is a Senior Education Fellow at FEE and author of Unschooled: Raising Curious, Well-Educated Children Outside the Conventional Classroom (Chicago Review Press, 2019). She is also an adjunct scholar at The Cato Institute and a regular Forbes contributor.

Kerry’s research interests include homeschooling and alternatives to school, self-directed learning, education entrepreneurship, parent empowerment, school choice, and family and child policy. Her articles have appeared at The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, NPR, Education Next, Reason Magazine, City Journal, and Entrepreneur, among others. She has a master’s degree in education policy from Harvard University and a bachelor’s degree in economics from Bowdoin College.

Kerry lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts with her husband and four children.

More Like This

The Ripple Effect Podcast #437 (Kevin Sorbo & Dr. Susan Downs | Something Ain’t Right)
The Ripple Effect Podcast #437 (Kevin Sorbo & Dr. Susan Downs | Something Ain’t Right)

Kevin Sorbo is an actor, director, producer, author and has also been a part of many great documentaries, like ShadowRing by our mutual friends, Free Mind Films. Dr. Susan R. Downs is award winning filmmaker, host of the Occupy Health show and is an integrative physician. Dr. Downs has been on before to discuss her amazing documentary ‘The Big Secret’ and returns to discuss her new film Something Ain’t Right.

Latest Episodes

War On Whistleblowers: The High Cost of Speaking Truth To Power | Ex-CIA John Kiriakou | Ripple Effect #571
War On Whistleblowers: The High Cost of Speaking Truth To Power | Ex-CIA John Kiriakou | Ripple Effect #571

John Kiriakou, from a decorated high-ranking CIA counter-terrorism chief who led the 2002 capture of al-Qaeda’s Abu Zubaydah, to a federal inmate, John Kiriakou’s life is a masterclass in the high cost of speaking truth to power. In 2007, he became the first CIA official to publicly confirm the agency’s use of waterboarding, explicitly calling it torture—an act of whistleblowing that eventually led to him being the only person imprisoned in connection with the torture program. After serving 23 months, he reinvented himself as a sharp-witted author and commentator, hosting the Deep Focus podcast and penning books like The Reluctant Spy, and the gritty survival manual Doing Time Like a Spy, effectively using his intelligence background to critique the very systems he once served.