Épisodes

  • The Missing Piece in Reading Instruction: Motivation (with Behind the Book’s Anmarie Paul)
    Jan 28 2026

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    What if the biggest gap in reading instruction isn’t phonics or fluency — but motivation?

    Dr. Diane Jackson Schnoor sits down with Anmarie Paul, Executive Director of Behind the Book, to explore how intrinsic motivation, belonging, student choice, and joyful literacy experiences help children become lifelong readers.

    Together, they unpack how Science of Reading practices and reading engagement strategies must work together because children don’t just need to learn how to read, they need to want to read.

    From expressive read-alouds to author visits, STEM-literacy integration, and identity-centered storytelling, this conversation offers practical insights for educators, librarians, parents, school leaders, and literacy advocates.

    Episode Chapters

    • 00:00 Motivation and Reading Instruction
    • 04:14 Read Alouds That Build Engagement and Fluency
    • 08:34 How Behind the Book Builds Reading Motivation
    • 15:30 Literacy, STEM, and Creative Learning
    • 18:40 Author Visits and Student Belonging
    • 24:55 Leadership in Literacy and Youth Development
    • 29:28 The Future of Reading: Engagement Meets Science of Reading

    What You’ll Learn in This Episode

    • Why intrinsic motivation is critical to reading success
    • How read alouds improve fluency, comprehension, and connection
    • What makes literacy programs truly engaging for students
    • How belonging and representation impact reading identity
    • Ways to combine Science of Reading + engagement-based practices
    • How literacy, STEM, creativity, and storytelling intersect
    • Strategies for building sustainable reading ecosystems

    🔗 Learn More & Get Involved

    • Behind the Book: https://www.behindthebook.org
    • Follow Behind the Book on Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
    • Download the Adventures in Learning 365 Day Picture Book Read Aloud Calendar

    Support the show

    Share this episode

    If this conversation sparked wonder, gave you a helpful strategy, or offered a needed reminder of hope, please share it with a friend or colleague.

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    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    32 min
  • Indoor Days + Big Feelings: Play, Empathy, and Teachable Moments with Francine Prince
    Jan 21 2026

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    When cold weather keeps kids inside, big feelings can spike—for children and the adults supporting them. In this uplifting conversation, early childhood expert Francine Prince shares practical, realistic strategies for indoor days, and reminds us that the best early learning happens when we stay intentional, flexible, and deeply connected.

    In this episode, we'll discuss:

    • How to plan indoor days so you’re not “teaching on the fly”
    • What child-led really means (and what it doesn’t)
    • Why teachable moments matter more than rigid timing
    • Simple ways to communicate learning to families—without writing an essay
    • The power of leading with the positive to build trust and partnership
    • What early childhood can teach adults about conflict, adaptability, and routines
    • Why burnout is rising—and what support teachers actually need

    Timestamps

    • 01:41 Indoor-day advice: movement breaks, intentional planning, and being “ready for anything”
    • 03:27 Defining child-led for families (and how teachers still facilitate learning)
    • 05:08 Teachable moments: what great teachers notice—and why it matters
    • 07:10 Creating a climate where teachers feel safe to follow children’s learning
    • 08:41 Making learning visible to families
    • 12:18 “Everything we need as adults, we should’ve learned in preschool” (3 big takeaways)
    • 15:23 Teaching empathy + conflict resolution through environment and facilitation
    • 17:03 What empathy means—and how to meet families where they are
    • 20:04 Coaching adults: empathy, communication styles, and partnering with parents
    • 24:05 Francine’s story: Head Start roots, coaching, leadership, disability advocacy, and statewide work
    • 29:28 Biggest challenges today: burnout, behavior, low pay, and support gaps
    • 33:16 What effective professional learning should look like (practical, real, implemented)
    • 37:24 Hope: why early childhood still matters—and why people in the field bring hope

    Links & Resources

    • Dr. Diane’s free 365-day Picture Book Read-Aloud Calendar
    • Connect with Dr. Diane and book her to speak or lead professional development workshops at your next event
    • Connect with Francine Prince on LinkedIn.

    Support the show

    Share this episode

    If this conversation sparked wonder, gave you a helpful strategy, or offered a needed reminder of hope, please share it with a friend or colleague.

    Subscribe • Download • Review • Tell a friend

    Stay updated with our latest episodes and follow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and the Adventures in Learning website. Don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!

    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    40 min
  • Let Them Play: Rae Pica on Joyful Learning and Reclaiming Early Childhood
    Jan 14 2026

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    What if the most powerful thing we could give young children is time to play?

    Early childhood expert Rae Pica joins Dr. Diane for a candid conversation about why play, movement, and joy are essentials, not extras -- and how rushing children into academics is doing real harm.

    🎧 Episode Summary

    In this episode of the Adventures in Learning podcast, Dr. Diane Jackson Schnoor welcomes author, keynote speaker, and longtime advocate for developmentally appropriate early childhood education Rae Pica.

    Together, they explore what’s gone wrong in early childhood education—from scripted teaching and excessive seat time to the loss of play—and what the research actually tells us about how young children learn. Rae explains why play builds problem-solving, empathy, language, and executive function, how parents can become powerful allies, and why small acts of advocacy can help educators reclaim joy and reduce burnout.

    This is a hopeful, practical conversation for educators, families, and anyone who believes childhood should be honored, not hurried.

    ⏱️ Highlights & Chapters

    • 00:00 — Meet Rae Pica + why early childhood matters
    • 02:22 — What’s gone wrong: rushed academics & ignored research
    • 07:01 — Why play is “everything” to young children
    • 10:32 — What block play teaches (SEL, STEM, critical thinking)
    • 16:14 — Why movement fuels the brain
    • 19:07 — Rae’s vision of a joyful early childhood classroom
    • 25:16 — Research on play, joy, and how the brain learns
    • 38:07 — Rae’s magic wand: follow child development
    • 39:38 — Advocacy, burnout, and teacher empowerment
    • 43:37 — Hope: signs the tide is turning

    🔗 Links & Resources

    • Rae Pica's free resources
    • Rae Pica's online courses
    • Rae Pica's books
    • Dr Diane's 365 Day Picture Book Read Aloud Calendar

    Support the show

    Subscribe & Follow: Stay updated with our latest episodes and follow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and the Adventures in Learning website. Don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!

    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    45 min
  • From AfroBets to Spirituals: A Lifetime of Making Books That Matter Cheryl Willis Hudson on Just Us Books, Representation, and Freedom to Read
    Jan 7 2026

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    From AfroBets to We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices to a brand-new picture book that sings with history, legendary author and publisher Cheryl Willis Hudson has helped shape what children can see (and become) through books. If you care about diverse children’s books, freedom to read, and the cultural power of music, this episode is for you.

    Dr. Diane Jackson Schnoor welcomes Cheryl Willis Hudson, co-founder of the groundbreaking children’s publishing house Just Us Books. Cheryl shares why she and husband Wade Hudson created Just Us Books, and what it’s meant to write and publish stories that serve as windows, mirrors, and sliding glass doors for children.

    Cheryl reflects on growing up in the Jim Crow South and how the lack of accurate representation in children’s literature shaped her mission to publish books that affirm Black childhood, celebrate multicultural experiences, and expand the canon of children’s books. The conversation also addresses book bans and censorship, including how books are challenged by small groups who often haven’t read the full text -- and why that’s an urgent threat to freedom of expression and access to stories.

    In a moving highlight, Cheryl introduces her “dream book,” When I Hear Spirituals, and shares how spirituals carry history, resilience, and joy while shaping American music itself. She even sings a portion of “Over My Head,” offering listeners a moment that feels like story, song, and legacy braided together.

    Chapters:

    01:00 Cheryl Willis Hudson + Just Us Books origin story

    08:08 Growing up in Jim Crow South + why representation matters

    13:49 Book challenges, lists, and censorship ripple effects

    20:01 Reading from We Rise, We Resist…

    30:13 When I Hear Spirituals + history of spirituals

    🔗 Links & Resources

    • Dr. Diane's 365 Day Picture Book Read Aloud Calendar
    • Follow Cheryl Willis Hudson on her website, Instagram, LinkedIn
    • Rudine Sims Bishop: “Windows, Mirrors, Sliding Glass Doors”
    • Freedom to Read / Anti-censorship resources: EveryLibrary, PenAmerica, We Need Diverse Books, Committee for the First Amendment

    Support the show

    Subscribe & Follow: Stay updated with our latest episodes and follow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and the Adventures in Learning website. Don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!

    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    43 min
  • Thanks to a Banned Book — Freedom to Read, Empathy, and Storytelling with Dynahlee Star Padilla-Vasquez
    Dec 30 2025

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    A book some adults tried to keep off shelves helped a seventh grader make sense of grief, addiction, and forgiveness and shaped the storyteller she became. This episode is a powerful reminder that books can be lifelines and freedom to read matters.

    In Episode 169 of Adventures in Learning, Dr. Diane Jackson Schnoor welcomes Dynahlee Star Padilla-Vasquez for a timely conversation about banned books, empathy, and the transformative power of reading.

    Dynahlee shares an excerpt from her essay, “Thanks to a Banned Book, I Forgave My Drug Addicted Grandpa and Escaped His Path,” and reflects on how Ellen Hopkins’ Crank, a frequently challenged book, helped her understand addiction, humanize a family story, and ultimately choose a path in journalism and storytelling.

    Together, Dr Diane and Dynahlee unpack why adults fear difficult topics in books, how communication (not censorship) supports kids, and how book challenges often come from organized efforts that pull lines out of context. They close with a hopeful look toward the new year, grounded in the belief that one book can change a life.

    ⏱️ Chapters

    02:06 Reading from “Thanks to a Banned Book…”

    07:41 Crank as a transformative tale

    12:10 What makes a powerful story

    14:10 Fear, censorship & book challenges

    19:44 Research, PEN America, EveryLibrary, data, and banning trends

    26:35 Books vs. the online “wild west”

    28:23 What brings hope into the new year

    🔗 Links

    • Dynahlee’s essay in Everyday Advocacy
    • Freedom to Read / anti-censorship resources: PEN America, EveryLibrary, Committee for the First Amendment
    • Check out Dr. Diane's 2026 Daily Picture Book Read Aloud Calendar

    Support the show

    Subscribe & Follow: Stay updated with our latest episodes and follow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and the Adventures in Learning website. Don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!

    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    30 min
  • Learning from the Wild — Writing, Conservation, and Hope with Brenda Scott Royce
    Dec 22 2025

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    What if hope isn’t a feeling—but something you do?

    From caring for orphaned rhinos to writing books that spark curiosity, this episode explores how learning, conservation, and community come together in powerful ways.

    In Episode 167 of Adventures in Learning, Dr. Diane Jackson Schnoor is joined by Brenda Scott Royce, author, former primate caregiver, and conservation advocate, for a heartfelt conversation about learning from the natural world.

    Brenda shares her journey from publishing and primate care to writing books that connect children with animals and conservation. Together, Diane and Brenda reflect on their recent trip to South Africa with Children’s Book Creators for Conservation (CBCC)—from reading aloud to preschoolers to hands-on conservation work at a rhino orphanage.

    This episode is a reminder that learning happens through curiosity, connection, and action—and that, as Brenda reminds us, hope is a verb with its sleeves rolled up.

    🕒 Episode Chapters & Timestamps

    01:00 — Writing, Primates, and Purpose

    Following curiosity instead of a straight career path

    06:30 — Writing Books That Connect Kids to Animals

    Stories, nonfiction, and nurturing curiosity

    08:20 — Helping Children Fall in Love with Nature

    Access, observation, and letting kids lead

    10:05 — Why CBCC and South Africa

    Traveling with like-minded creators for conservation

    15:20 — Meeting Lazula: A Rhino Full-Circle Moment

    From fundraiser photo to bottle-feeding a rhino

    18:40 — Conservation, Community, and Responsibility

    What real change looks like on the ground

    24:00 — Seeing the Whole Ecosystem

    Why animals—and learning—aren’t isolated

    33:30 — Continuing the Work: Chimps in Zambia

    Solo conservation work after South Africa

    38:00 — Hope Is a Verb

    What brings hope right now

    🔗 Links & Resources

    • Children’s Book Creators for Conservation (CBCC)
    • Wild Tomorrow and blog about the trip
    • Publishers Weekly article about the trip
    • Brenda Scott Royce — books & writing
    • Connect with Brenda on LinkedIn, Instagram, and Bluesky

    Support the show

    Subscribe & Follow: Stay updated with our latest episodes and follow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and the Adventures in Learning website. Don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!

    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    42 min
  • Books, Belonging, and Conservation — Lessons from South Africa with Ann Dye
    Dec 17 2025

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    In Episode 167 of Adventures in Learning, Dr. Diane Jackson Schnoor welcomes Ann Dye, Vice President of Sales Operations at HarperCollins, for a powerful conversation about books, belonging, and conservation.

    Ann shares her journey into publishing, how books help children (and adults) slow down in a noisy, screen-filled world, and why matching the right book to the right reader still matters. Diane and Ann also reflect on their life-changing trip to South Africa with the Children’s Book Creators for Conservation, including volunteering at a rhino orphanage, learning from local conservation leaders, and witnessing the power of community-driven change.

    This episode explores how reading, empathy, creativity, and service connect us—to each other, to nature, and to hope.

    Topics include:

    children’s books • literacy • publishing • conservation • empathy • community • play-based learning • hope

    📚 Key Takeaways

    • Why matching the right book to the right reader can change everything
    • How books offer a powerful counterbalance to screens and constant noise
    • What conservation really looks like on the ground — and why community matters
    • How creativity, play, and service build connection across cultures
    • Finding hope through everyday acts of care, kindness, and commitment

    🕒 Chapter Titles & Timestamps

    Meet Anne Dye: A Life in Publishing

    01:01 – Anne’s path into children’s publishing and sales operations

    Matching Books to Readers

    04:04 – Helping kids (and adults) fall in love with reading

    Books vs. the Noise of Modern Life

    06:06 – Why reading still matters in a screen-saturated world

    Holiday Books & Finding “Just Right” Stories

    09:09 – Gift ideas, animals, and beloved children’s books

    South Africa: Why This Trip Mattered

    12:11 – What drew Anne to conservation work abroad

    Volunteering at the Rhino Orphanage

    18:17 – Trust, vulnerability, and unforgettable moments with rhinos

    Dehorning, Ethics, and Human Responsibility

    22:21 – Conservation choices and protecting endangered animals

    The Power of Community & the Green Mambas

    26:25 – Local leadership, women in conservation, and sustainable change

    Art, Play, and Creative Connection

    31:30 – What illustrators, murals, and playfulness teach us

    Being Present in Extraordinary Moments

    34:33 – Wildlife encounters, awe, and putting the camera down

    Biodiversity, Humility, and Lifelong Learning

    37:36 – Rethinking what we know about the natural world

    What Brings Hope

    40:39 – Acts of service, everyday goodness, and closing reflections

    Support the show

    Subscribe & Follow: Stay updated with our latest episodes and follow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and the Adventures in Learning website. Don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!

    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    42 min
  • How Illustrator Reggie Brown Brings Big Feelings to Life in The Snowman Code
    Dec 10 2025

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    What happens when an illustrator channels courage, mental health, and a 600-year-old sarcastic snowman into a single powerful story? In this inspiring conversation, The Snowman Code illustrator Reggie Brown reveals how he transformed a charming seasonal narrative into a visually rich, emotionally resonant world—and how his own life experiences shaped every brushstroke.

    If you’re an educator, caregiver, librarian, picture-book lover, or emerging illustrator, this episode offers a masterclass in storytelling through art, navigating big feelings with creativity, and following unexpected paths into meaningful work.

    Episode Summary

    In Episode 166, Dr. Diane sits down with illustrator Reggie Brown, whose artwork elevates The Snowman Code—a winter story that tackles seasonal depression, parentification, courage, and connection. Reggie shares how he intuitively designs characters like Blessing and Albert and how he transitioned from biotech to bestselling illustrator after a life-changing moment during the pandemic.

    Listeners also get a sneak peek at Reggie’s upcoming 2026 projects, including Walk the Walk and Do You See Me?, plus a heartwarming story of hope, family, and the Star Wars–themed Christmas surprise that changed his life forever.

    Chapters

    00:27 – Designing a Story Beyond Snowflakes

    03:41 – Illustrating Mental Health with Care

    04:39 – From Biotech to Books: Reggie’s Unconventional Path

    07:00 – Comics, Storytelling, and Illustration Craft

    07:54 – A Lifelong Sci-Fi Fan

    09:06 – Books You Should Know

    11:15 – What’s Coming in 2026?

    13:10 – What Makes a Manuscript Irresistible

    13:47 – A New Source of Hope

    Links

    Connect with Reggie Brown on Website, Instagram and LinkedIn

    Check out Reggie's Books: The Snowman Code, Magnificent Makers, Santa and the City, Bros, Little Big Man, Who Are Your People?, Walk the Walk , Do You See Me?

    Subscribe to the Daily Picture Book Read-Aloud Calendar

    Support the show

    Subscribe & Follow: Stay updated with our latest episodes and follow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and the Adventures in Learning website. Don't forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!

    *Disclosure: I am a Bookshop.org. affiliate.

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    16 min