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Lewis and Gemma are back from the summer break and diving straight into ☕ caffeine, kombucha — and books. After a light-hearted catch-up about their latest ferments (matcha for now, homemade kombucha soon), they turn to the main event: a deep review of The Whole-Brain Child by Dr. Daniel J. Siegel and Dr. Tina Payne Bryson.
The duo explore the book’s core idea of brain “integration,” breaking down Siegel’s left-/right-brain and upstairs-/downstairs-brain models. They discuss why the river-of-well-being metaphor resonates with Forest School practice, how “connect and redirect” conversations mirror non-violent communication, and why storytelling helps children file traumatic events into explicit memory.
Gemma appreciates the book’s parent-friendly mnemonics and age-by-stage cheat-sheets, while Lewis questions one cartoon scenario that seems to push children to talk before they’re ready. Together they weigh the value of practical strategies (like letting kids “convince” you) against the risk of oversimplifying neuroscience.
Throughout, they link the text to Forest School principles: child-led reflection, emotional regulation outdoors, and the power of narrative in nature. They finish by inviting listeners to share their own takeaways or alternative reading suggestions — especially if a title challenges their views. 📚
Whether you’re a parent, educator or Forest School leader, this episode delivers actionable brain-based tips, a candid critique of pop-neuroscience, and plenty of laughter around the campfire.
Key Topics & Timestamps
00:31 – 01:58 Caffeine overload & the lure of home-brewed kombucha
01:58 – 03:33 Summer reading list confession & why The Whole-Brain Child made the cut
03:33 – 08:45 Left-/right-brain, upstairs-/downstairs-brain models explained
08:45 – 13:30 “Connect & redirect” vs. quick-fix discipline (non-violent communication parallels)
13:30 – 18:25 River-of-well-being metaphor and its Forest School fit
18:25 – 23:00 Storytelling to shift trauma from implicit to explicit memory
23:00 – 28:00 When a child says “I don’t want to talk” — helpful or harmful?
28:00 – 32:25 Using emotional cartoons, eyebrows(!) and humor for recall
32:25 – 35:24 Applying integration strategies in class, at home and outdoors
35:24 – 36:09 Wrap-up, listener call-out & a teaser on controversial TV “dog training” parenting
Questions or book tips? Email [email protected] or drop a comment at https://theforestschoolpodcast.com. Join our patrons for extra content: https://patreon.com/theforestschoolpodcast.
4.6
1111 ratings
Lewis and Gemma are back from the summer break and diving straight into ☕ caffeine, kombucha — and books. After a light-hearted catch-up about their latest ferments (matcha for now, homemade kombucha soon), they turn to the main event: a deep review of The Whole-Brain Child by Dr. Daniel J. Siegel and Dr. Tina Payne Bryson.
The duo explore the book’s core idea of brain “integration,” breaking down Siegel’s left-/right-brain and upstairs-/downstairs-brain models. They discuss why the river-of-well-being metaphor resonates with Forest School practice, how “connect and redirect” conversations mirror non-violent communication, and why storytelling helps children file traumatic events into explicit memory.
Gemma appreciates the book’s parent-friendly mnemonics and age-by-stage cheat-sheets, while Lewis questions one cartoon scenario that seems to push children to talk before they’re ready. Together they weigh the value of practical strategies (like letting kids “convince” you) against the risk of oversimplifying neuroscience.
Throughout, they link the text to Forest School principles: child-led reflection, emotional regulation outdoors, and the power of narrative in nature. They finish by inviting listeners to share their own takeaways or alternative reading suggestions — especially if a title challenges their views. 📚
Whether you’re a parent, educator or Forest School leader, this episode delivers actionable brain-based tips, a candid critique of pop-neuroscience, and plenty of laughter around the campfire.
Key Topics & Timestamps
00:31 – 01:58 Caffeine overload & the lure of home-brewed kombucha
01:58 – 03:33 Summer reading list confession & why The Whole-Brain Child made the cut
03:33 – 08:45 Left-/right-brain, upstairs-/downstairs-brain models explained
08:45 – 13:30 “Connect & redirect” vs. quick-fix discipline (non-violent communication parallels)
13:30 – 18:25 River-of-well-being metaphor and its Forest School fit
18:25 – 23:00 Storytelling to shift trauma from implicit to explicit memory
23:00 – 28:00 When a child says “I don’t want to talk” — helpful or harmful?
28:00 – 32:25 Using emotional cartoons, eyebrows(!) and humor for recall
32:25 – 35:24 Applying integration strategies in class, at home and outdoors
35:24 – 36:09 Wrap-up, listener call-out & a teaser on controversial TV “dog training” parenting
Questions or book tips? Email [email protected] or drop a comment at https://theforestschoolpodcast.com. Join our patrons for extra content: https://patreon.com/theforestschoolpodcast.
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