
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Before Atwan was a chemist, an educator, a researcher, a business owner, or a community advocate, he was a kid on his grandmother's porch, making Sunday tea — unknowingly learning about solubility, heat transfer, and acid-base chemistry without a textbook in sight. That origin story shapes everything about the way he teaches today.
In this episode, Dr. Antwan Daniels — community college chemistry professor, K-12 instructional coach, and author of Pathways to Allied Health — makes a compelling case that chemistry isn't just for "smart people" or "math people." It's for all people. He shares how constructivist learning theory, built-in social-emotional support, and culturally affirming curriculum are changing outcomes for students who never saw themselves in a science classroom.
Antwan has spent his career dismantling one of education's most stubborn myths: that science is for a certain kind of person. Chemistry, he argues, is the central science. It's not a gate. It's a pathway. And there's a difference.
By Great River LearningBefore Atwan was a chemist, an educator, a researcher, a business owner, or a community advocate, he was a kid on his grandmother's porch, making Sunday tea — unknowingly learning about solubility, heat transfer, and acid-base chemistry without a textbook in sight. That origin story shapes everything about the way he teaches today.
In this episode, Dr. Antwan Daniels — community college chemistry professor, K-12 instructional coach, and author of Pathways to Allied Health — makes a compelling case that chemistry isn't just for "smart people" or "math people." It's for all people. He shares how constructivist learning theory, built-in social-emotional support, and culturally affirming curriculum are changing outcomes for students who never saw themselves in a science classroom.
Antwan has spent his career dismantling one of education's most stubborn myths: that science is for a certain kind of person. Chemistry, he argues, is the central science. It's not a gate. It's a pathway. And there's a difference.