Episodes

  • Cicada: unfounded fears for the innocence of childhood
    Nov 15 2024

    Cicada (Tan, 2018) tells the story of a hardworking cicada trapped in a human world. Teachers at one of the participating schools were uncomfortable with some of the implicit themes. In this conversation, we discuss why that should be, and what it says about our fears for the innocence of children.

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    24 mins
  • Don't Lick This Book: Small Things make a Big Difference
    Oct 21 2024

    Professor Jayne, Doctor Quack, and Muttley discuss microbes in general, and Corona virus in particular, have impacted the minds and educational conditions of 4-year-olds.

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    26 mins
  • Superworm: from disinterest and distrust to adulation and respect.
    Oct 3 2024

    Reconsidering tiny critters away from anthropomorphic frameworks, and taking seriously their vital contributions to world-making. We discuss the importance of making visible the imperative for adults to unlearn and relearn, taking their lead from children and attuning to the generative potentials that surface when hierarchies (human and non-human) are dismantled.

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    26 mins
  • When the Bees Buzzed Off: fragile foraging and careful composting
    29 mins
  • You are Stardust: reconfiguring early childhood environmental education
    28 mins
  • Starting from the Middle: telling the story of Making Odd Kin
    Aug 23 2024

    Thinking with the way women saved and collected leftover bits and pieces and scraps, Schapiro and Myer’s 1977 term “femmage” encompassed decoupage, collage, photomontage and assemblage. Defenders of “slow” early childhood pedagogies (eg. Clark’s “Mosaic” approach 2017, and Tishman’s “Slow Looking”, 2018) have employed collage as visual, participatory research frameworks for listening to young children’s views and experiences, and as a means of enquiry and representation.

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    28 mins