A Short Story Podcast Series
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Open Educational Use
Interesting Things with JC is made available for anyone to use in the service of education. Teachers, students, parents, homeschool families, librarians, tutors, and lifelong learners are free to download, copy, share, print, adapt, and reuse the episodes and curriculum materials in any way that helps people learn.
If it supports teaching, learning, or helping others understand the world better, it is allowed.
One exception applies: Episode #509, “Harry Chapin and Jim Connors,” is not included under this open educational permission.
Curriculum Availability
Full curriculum support begins with Episode #1235: “Three Turns to Freedom.” Earlier episodes without curriculum may be prioritized by request. Educators may contact JimConnors LLC, and a matching curriculum module will be created and added.
What You Are Free to Do
You may:
Download and store the audio, transcripts, and curriculum
Copy and share materials with students, families, or learning groups
Print, remix, edit, and adapt lessons for your own educational use
Upload content to learning management systems (LMS), class websites, or internal school platforms
Integrate the material into lessons, assignments, tutoring, homeschool programs, libraries, and community education
No permission is required. Credit to Interesting Things with JC is appreciated when possible, but the priority is helping people learn.
What Is Not Allowed
This openness is for education, not commercial use. The content may not be:
Sold, licensed, or packaged as a product or subscription
Rebranded or presented as original third-party work
Used as part of a paid course, monetized program, or commercial platform
Redistributed as a standalone product for profit
Any commercial, branded, or revenue-generating use requires prior written permission from JimConnors LLC. Episode #509 remains excluded from open educational use.
Rights and Intent
All content remains the intellectual property of JimConnors LLC. The intent is simple:
Use it freely to educate, teach, explain, and help people.
Just do not sell it, repackage it for profit, or claim it as your own.
Summary:
Use it.
Download it.
Copy it.
Share it.
Teach with it.
Adapt it for students, kids, classrooms, homeschools, libraries, and lifelong learning.
Click on the curriculum frame, copy the full merged curriculum standards, use them in your own GPT, iterate and improve them, and share back!
Just don’t sell it, rebrand it, or turn it into a product. Episode #509 is excluded. All rights reserved © JimConnors LLC.
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Interesting Things with JC has previously been included in curated podcast programming on Podcast Radio formats in both the United Kingdom and the United States. Podcast Radio was launched as a 24-hour broadcast concept designed to showcase podcasts on digital radio and online streaming platforms.
In the United States, the Podcast Radio US brand continues to maintain an online presence and app availability, and has been associated with radio simulcasts on licensed AM and FM signals in selected markets, though live broadcast availability may vary.
Streaming Access
Podcast Radio US and related branded streams provide online listening through their websites and mobile applications, allowing audiences worldwide to hear selected podcast programming.On-Demand Platforms
Interesting Things with JC is available across major podcast directories, including Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, Audacy, Audible, Castbox, Deezer, fyyd, GoodPods, iHeartRadio, JioSaavn, Listen Notes, Pandora, PlayerFM, PocketCasts, Podcast Republic, Podchaser, Podverse, Spotify, Stitcher, and YouTube.The series is also accessible through podcast apps that index the Apple Podcasts catalog and the open podcast directory ecosystem, including TuneIn, Podcast Addict, Overcast, Castro, Podcast Index–based apps, Podbean, iVoox, Podtail, Podyssey, Podcloud, Bullhorn, AudioBoom directories, and Breaker (legacy).
Social & Video Platforms
Listeners can also follow and view content on Facebook, Instagram, X (Twitter), TikTok, and YouTube. -
Classroom Use
Start class with a short, clear story students can follow from the first sentence. Play an episode of Interesting Things with JC and use the accompanying free curriculum to guide a complete lesson with questions, activities, applied reasoning, and independent analysis.
Every episode from #1235 forward contains a modular micro-lesson engineered for 30 to 90 minute instructional blocks, adaptable to secondary classrooms, international schools, homeschools, tutoring programs, and lifelong learning environments.
At the bottom of each episode page, expandable sections organize all instructional assets in a structured format for educators, parents, and independent learners.
Instructional Architecture of Each Episode
Each episode is designed as a self-contained instructional unit, integrating narrative, academic standards, assessment models, and accessibility requirements into a single deliverable.
Core Instructional Components
Lesson overview with instructional title, grade band, subject classification, and learning objectives
Vocabulary architecture with phonetic spelling, discipline-specific terminology, and plain-language definitions
Primary narrative content constructed through the Precise Storytelling Framework for coherence, sequencing, and conceptual layering
Full verbatim transcript for reading analysis, accessibility, and text-based instruction
Student learning activities including comprehension tasks, analytical writing, synthesis prompts, and evidence-based reasoning exercises
Teacher implementation guide with pacing models, instructional strategies, differentiation guidance, and discussion structures
Assessment instruments including quizzes, performance tasks, formative checks, and rubric-aligned evaluation tools
Standards crosswalks mapping content and skills across U.S., UK, and international academic frameworks
ADA-compliant instructional media with alt text, accessibility tagging, and inclusive design
Primary-source documentation linking directly to verified historical, scientific, legal, and academic references
Homeschool and modular scheduling guidance for flexible implementation
All materials are developed through the Narrative Intelligence System, ensuring factual integrity, instructional coherence, accessibility, and age-appropriate presentation. Lessons are non-ideological and restricted to academic content.
Unified Curriculum Integration Model
Every episode is constructed using a multi-framework integration model, in which:
Narrative structure
Disciplinary content
Cognitive skill development
Assessment design
Accessibility standards
Cross-curricular competencies
are deliberately merged into a single instructional object, rather than appended as afterthoughts. This means each episode simultaneously functions as:
A structured story
A content lesson
A literacy and reasoning exercise
A research and source-evaluation activity
An assessment artifact
A standards-aligned instructional unit
United States Curriculum Architecture (Full Integration)
National Frameworks Embedded
Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)
Scientific practices, data analysis, modeling, systems thinking, evidence evaluation
Common Core State Standards (CCSS) – ELA & Mathematics
Close reading, argumentative writing, research synthesis, quantitative reasoning
College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework
Disciplinary inquiry, historical sourcing, civic knowledge, geographic reasoning
International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
Digital citizenship, computational thinking, information fluency
National Core Arts Standards (NCAS)
Interpretation, critique, interdisciplinary expression, creative analysis
Career and Technical Education (CTE) Career Clusters
Applied technical knowledge, workplace reasoning, real-world problem solving
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Research literacy, source evaluation, information ethics, academic inquiry
Bloom’s Taxonomy
Cognitive progression from comprehension to analysis, synthesis, and evaluation
Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
Multiple means of representation, engagement, and expression for inclusive instruction
Cross-Disciplinary U.S. Competencies Embedded in Every Episode
Academic literacy (reading, writing, argumentation)
Quantitative literacy and data reasoning
Media and information literacy
Digital and computational literacy
Civic knowledge and constitutional literacy (knowledge-based, non-ideological)
Research methodology and evidence verification
Critical thinking, analytical writing, and structured problem solving
Additional U.S. Integration Layers
State-level academic standards where applicable
Financial literacy and employability skills
Social-emotional competencies as academic behaviors (persistence, self-regulation, metacognition)
English language development and world-language vocabulary support
United Kingdom Curriculum Architecture (Full Integration)
National Curriculum Structure
Key Stage 3 (ages 11–14)
Key Stage 4 (GCSE)
Key Stage 5 (A-Level / Sixth Form)
Disciplinary domains mapped across episodes:
English language and literature (analysis, argument, rhetorical structure)
Mathematics (numeracy, quantitative interpretation)
Science (evidence, explanation, evaluation)
History and Geography (source criticism, contextual reasoning)
Citizenship (knowledge-based civic education)
Computing and digital literacy
Arts and humanities integration
Examination Frameworks
AQA
OCR
Pearson Edexcel
Assessment alignment includes:
Command terms and performance descriptors
Extended analytical writing
Evidence-based responses
Cross-disciplinary synthesis
International Academic Programmes Integrated
International Baccalaureate (IB)
Primary Years Programme (PYP)
Middle Years Programme (MYP)
Diploma Programme (DP)
Cambridge Assessment International Education
Cambridge IGCSE
Cambridge AS & A Level
Shared instructional architecture:
Inquiry-based learning
Conceptual understanding
Global context framing
Criterion-referenced assessment
Research projects and analytical writing
Cross-Curricular Frameworks Embedded by Design
Oracy across the curriculum
Literacy across disciplines
Numeracy across subjects
Digital and computational literacy
Citizenship and civic knowledge (non-ideological)
Research methodology and information literacy
Interdisciplinary synthesis
Global Academic Equivalency Structures
European Qualifications Framework (EQF) alignment for secondary and pre-university levels
OECD competency domains (literacy, numeracy, analytical reasoning, problem solving)
International standards-referenced assessment models used across secondary education systems
Pedagogical & Assessment Architecture
Knowledge-to-application curriculum sequencing
Evidence-based reasoning and academic writing
Primary-source analysis and citation practices
Formative, summative, and performance-based assessment models
Rubric-aligned evaluation and feedback structures
Universal accessibility and inclusive instructional design
Access, Use, and OER Licensing
All instructional materials are released as Open Educational Resources (OER) and may be used, printed, adapted, or shared for teaching in classrooms, homeschools, tutoring programs, and independent study environments. Materials are provided for educational use under fair use and may not be resold or redistributed commercially.
Episodes from #1235 forward include complete curriculum packages. Older episodes without micro-lessons can be prioritized for conversion. Beginning with Episode #1307, each MP3 page in the RSS feed includes open instructional text for direct access to transcripts and curriculum materials.
Educator and homeschool feedback is actively incorporated to refine instructional clarity, alignment, and usability. Please do not hesitate to reach out - or iterate upon these instructions to improve the framework. Please share open iterations back for continual improvement.
216: “Black Parrot of Seychelles”
Interesting Things with JC #216: “Black Parrot of Seychelles” - The black parrot or the Praslin parrot is a bird found only in the Praslin island of Seychelles. Although it is the national bird of Seychelles and a protected species, the black parrot is threatened outside its native habitat.
215: “Giant Tortoise of Seychelles”
Interesting Things with JC #215: “Giant Tortoise of Seychelles” - Historically, giant tortoises were found on many of the western Indian Ocean islands, as well as Madagascar, and the fossil record indicates giant tortoises once occurred on every continent and many islands with the exception of Australia and Antarctica.
213 - Interesting Things: 4 Leaf Clovers
The four leaf clover is one of the most common good luck symbols of the Western world. An independent study carried out by Swiss researchers looked at 5.7 million clovers and found that the likelihood of finding one four-leaf clover was one in 5,076.
209 - Interesting Things: Daylight Savings & William Willet
Countries to the north and south of the tropics, see sunrise much earlier and sunsets much later in summer, than these regions do in winter. On most farms, this isn't a problem. People and animals just shift their habits as the hours of daylight shift. In most cities, the amount of energy used to make artificial light and heat becomes costly, if they don't shift their routines. This is where William Willett, the godfather of Daylight Savings comes in.
201 - Interesting Things: Lead Glass
Lead glass, commonly called crystal, is a variety of glass in which lead replaces the calcium content of a typical glass. In past decades, it was a popular material used to create decorative vases and bowls as well as crystal glasses and decanters. Lead glass is also known as X-ray glass or radiation shielding glass as one of its major applications is in the absorbance of high energy radiation while maintaining optical transparency. Also, lead glass has a lower thermal conductivity than lead-free glass. Interestingly, even though stained glass windows are a type of leaded glass, industry experts often use them separately to create distinction between the two.
200 - Interesting Things: Camels Have 3 Eyelids
Camels have three eyelids. Two of the eyelids have eye lashes which help protect their eyes from sand. The third is a very thin lid which works as a sort of "windshield wiper" to clean off their eyes. It closes/ opens from side to side rather than up and down.
196 - Interesting Things: Tom Thumb - Steam Power on the Railroad
On February 28th 1827 The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad became the first steam-operated railway in the United States to be chartered as a common carrier of freight and passengers. All thanks to Peter Cooper as well as the B&O railroad.
195 - Interesting Things: Ketchup was a Medicine
Ketchup was sold in the 1830s as medicine, it was later commercialized as a condiment. Did you know ketchup also has alleged values beyond condiment status today?
192 - Interesting Things: Color Perception
It's the surface of an object that reflects some colors and absorbs all the others. We perceive only the reflected colors. Perceived color depends on how an object absorbs and reflects wavelengths. Human beings can only see a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, from about 400 nm to 700 nm, but it’s enough to allow us to see millions of colors!
191 - Interesting Things: Neocortex - The Robot Brain of Strawberry Farming
It's a sophisticated platform "brain", providing robots with real-time, agile, reactive control. When combined with robotics, the system provides 3D plant recognition and grasping, enabling robots to properly pick and pack sorted strawberry plants.
184: “Whale Heartbeat”
Interesting Things with JC #184: "Blue Whale Heartbeat" - A 2019 study unveiled surprising facts about the heartbeat of the blue whale, Earth's largest animal.
183 - Interesting Things: Nicolaus Copernicus
Nicolaus Copernicus was a 16th century Renaissance-era world famous Polish astronomer, who proposed that the Sun is the center of the solar system and that the planets circle the Sun. Copernicus also noted that Earth turns once daily on its own axis and that very slow long-term changes in the direction of this axis account for the precession of the equinoxes.
180 Interesting Things - 100,000 Beats
Depending on your beats per minute, your heart beats about 100,000 to 115,000 times a day. There are 60,000 miles of blood vessels in your body. That's enough to go around the world twice! A normal heart pumps about 4 tablespoons of blood with each beat.
176 Interesting Things - PEANUTS...are not Nuts?!
The peanut is a member of the bean or legume family and not a nut, studies suggest that people who eat peanuts or tree nuts frequently have lower rates of heart disease compared with people who don't eat them. While almonds grow on trees, they're actually not a nut either... They're a seed found inside the almond fruit!... But that's an interesting story for another time.
Please visit peanut-institute.com for more information on this amazing bean!!!
175 Interesting Things - Lobster Blood Is Blue
Lobsters have blue blood. Due to the presence of copper in the Hymocyanins, they give the color of the lobster blood bluish color. Invertebrates, like snails and spiders, also have blue blood due to hemocyanin. Did you know lobster blood is critical in emerging medical research?
170 Interesting Things - Groundhogs
Groundhogs are the largest species in the squirrel family. Other names for groundhogs include woodchucks, whistle-pigs and land-beavers. On average groundhogs are 20" long with 6-7" tail, and weigh about 6-12 lbs. Their average lifespan in the Wild is 3-6 years.
Let's learn more!
168 Interesting Things - STS-107 Space Shuttle Columbia
STS-107 was the disastrous 113th flight of the Space Shuttle program, and the 28th and final flight of Space Shuttle Columbia. The mission launched from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on 16 January 2003 and during its 15 days, 22 hours, 20 minutes, 32 seconds in orbit.
On February 1st, Columbia began re-entry as planned, but the heat shield was compromised due to damage sustained during the initial ascent. The heat of re-entry was free to spread into the damaged portion of the orbiter, ultimately causing its disintegration and the loss of all on board.
Columbia was delivered to the Kennedy Space Center in March 1979. Two years later, April 12, 1981, it lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center to become the first shuttle to fly in orbit.
The crew of its final voyage were 3 Mission Specialists; David Brown, Kalpana Chawla, Laurel Clark, a Payload Specialist and Commander; Ilan Ramon and Michael Anderson, Shuttle Commander; Rick Husband, and Shuttle Pilot; William McCool.
Arlington National Cemetery is the home of a Columbia memorial which is dated and has an outline of a Shuttle.
165 Interesting Things - Falling Iguanas of South Florida
When temperatures dip into the 40s and 30s green iguanas in south Florida fall from the trees.. It's become such a concern that there are falling iguana warnings on the news! Iguanas can grow up to 6ft and 26lbs, so this isn't a small concern!! (3min audio)
163 Interesting Things - Pine Cones
Pine cones can stay on tree for more than 10 years before dropping to the ground. We can eat approximately 20 types of pine nuts. They are said to have a buttery taste. They are soft, white seeds found inside pine cones. Pine nuts aren’t usually eaten raw. They are toasted to make them crunchy. Only 20 varieties of pine tree worldwide produce cones with large enough pine nuts for harvesting.
162 Interesting Things - Cat Toes
Cats have fewer toes on their back paws. They have five toes on the front, their foreleg. One of these toes is the dewclaw which sits higher up on the foot and does not actually come into contact with the ground. Some cats can have more toes than you can count!