
Best Of: Doug Lemov on Cellphones in Schools
10/18/23 • 60 min
Note: This episode originally aired in September 2022.
On this episode of The Report Card, Nat speaks with Doug Lemov about how cellphones and social media harm the academic and social development of students and make schools less inclusive.
Nat and Doug also discuss online learning, school choice, the difficulty of creating schools with a coherent operating philosophy, the state of public schooling, The Scarlet Letter, the pandemic's effects on students, teacher professional development, the relationship between parenting and schooling, the idea that schooling sometimes has to be hard for students, and the role that schools play in shaping students' habits of attention.
Doug Lemov is the author of Reconnect: Building School Culture for Meaning, Purpose, and Belonging and Teach Like a Champion.
Show Notes:
Reconnect: Building School Culture for Meaning, Purpose, and Belonging
It Was a Mistake to Let Kids Onto Social Media Sites. Here’s What to Do Now.
Note: This episode originally aired in September 2022.
On this episode of The Report Card, Nat speaks with Doug Lemov about how cellphones and social media harm the academic and social development of students and make schools less inclusive.
Nat and Doug also discuss online learning, school choice, the difficulty of creating schools with a coherent operating philosophy, the state of public schooling, The Scarlet Letter, the pandemic's effects on students, teacher professional development, the relationship between parenting and schooling, the idea that schooling sometimes has to be hard for students, and the role that schools play in shaping students' habits of attention.
Doug Lemov is the author of Reconnect: Building School Culture for Meaning, Purpose, and Belonging and Teach Like a Champion.
Show Notes:
Reconnect: Building School Culture for Meaning, Purpose, and Belonging
It Was a Mistake to Let Kids Onto Social Media Sites. Here’s What to Do Now.
Previous Episode

Roland Fryer on Incentives and Opportunity
On this episode of The Report Card, Nat speaks with Roland Fryer about incentives and opportunity. Nat and Roland discuss paying students, parents, and teachers; the importance of properly structuring incentives; affirmative action; loss aversion; why certain ideas in education get treated as out of bounds; using machine learning to increase diversity in college admissions; COVID learning loss; whether the Ivy League should create feeder schools for disadvantaged students; using data in the classroom; and more.
Roland Fryer is a Professor of Economics at Harvard University. He was a MacArthur Fellow and is a winner of the John Bates Clark Medal.
Show Notes:
How to Make Up the COVID Learning Loss
Affirmative Action in College Admissions Doesn’t Work—But It Could
Build Feeder Schools (And Make Yale and Harvard Fund Them)
Enhancing the Efficacy of Teacher Incentives through Framing: A Field Experiment
Parental Incentives and Early Childhood Achievement: A Field Experiment in Chicago Heights
Next Episode

Melissa Kearney on the Two-Parent Privilege
On this episode of The Report Card, Nat Malkus speaks with Melissa Kearney about her new book, The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind. Nat and Melissa discuss the decline in marriage among non-college-educated parents, why having two parents in the home matters for student outcomes, the stock of marriageable men, whether studying family structure is taboo, what the fracking boom can teach us about the decline in marriage, how marriage became decoupled from raising children, universal basic income for parents, why Asian Americans seem immune from the broader decline in marriage, intergenerational households, the difficulty of parenting, the importance of culture, and more.
Melissa Kearney is the Neil Moskowitz Professor of Economics at the University of Maryland and the Director of the Aspen Economic Strategy Group.
Show Notes:
The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind
A Driver of Inequality That Not Enough People Are Talking About
The Puzzle of Falling US Birth Rates since the Great Recession
Male Earnings, Marriageable Men, and Non-Marital Fertility: Evidence from the Fracking Boom
The Economics of Non-Marital Childbearing and The “Marriage Premium for Children”
Investigating Recent Trends in the U.S. Teen Birth Rate
Media Influences on Social Outcomes: The Impact of MTV's 16 and Pregnant on Teen Childbearing
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