Cover image of show Early Childhood Chats

Early Childhood Chats

Podcast by Institute for Childhood Preparedness

English

Technology & science

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About Early Childhood Chats

Welcome to "Early Childhood Chats," the podcast dedicated to all things related to early childhood education. Join us as we delve into the fascinating world of early childhood development, parenting tips, teaching strategies, and the latest research in the field. Hosted by passionate educators and experts in early childhood education, each episode brings you insightful discussions, practical advice, and inspiring stories aimed at supporting parents, caregivers, and educators in nurturing the young minds of tomorrow.

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44 episodes

episode Should Child Care Programs Have Cameras? Childcare Experts Discuss artwork

Should Child Care Programs Have Cameras? Childcare Experts Discuss

In this episode of Early Childhood Chats, host Andy Roszak talks with Kevin Wright from Watch Me Grow about a topic that generates a lot of opinions and not enough informed conversation: cameras in childcare settings. Watch Me Grow is a video platform built exclusively for the early childhood education industry, offering commercial-grade camera integration, secure parent viewing, long-term footage retention for compliance, and a growing suite of AI-powered features designed to support proactive program management rather than reactive crisis response.Kevin walks through his own path into early childhood technology, including his time at a childcare management platform before joining Watch Me Grow during the merger with PB&J TV. The conversation covers how parent viewing actually works in practice, including the data showing that average parent viewing time is less than a minute per day or week, how centers are using cameras as coaching and professional development tools rather than surveillance, the legal and insurance value of reliable footage retention, and how programs are offsetting costs by offering camera access as a value-added service to families. Kevin also previews Watch Me Grow’s active supervision AI feature, which detects when an adult is not present in a classroom and flags the event for director review. Andy and Kevin discuss the shift in perception from cameras as punitive “big brother” tools to proactive instruments for quality improvement, staff support, and family trust.Learn more about Watch Me Grow:https://watchmegrow.com/Episode Timestamps0:00 Introduction: cameras at the intersection of early childhood and technology1:00 Kevin Wright’s background and how he ended up at Watch Me Grow2:30 The PB&J TV and Watch Me Grow merger3:30 Why Watch Me Grow is built exclusively for early childhood education4:30 What Watch Me Grow actually is: the platform explained6:30 Parent viewing: how it works and how centers customize access8:30 The data on parent viewing: enrollment boosts, retention, and average viewing time under one minute10:30 Cameras as a professional development and coaching tool13:00 The hockey film analogy: watching to build best practices, not to catch mistakes14:30 Myths and misconceptions about cameras in childcare16:30 The story of a director who could not produce footage when it mattered18:00 Camera placement: classrooms, hallways, playgrounds, parking lots, and exteriors20:00 Offsetting costs: charging a technology fee for parent viewing access22:00 The legal value of reliable footage: discovery, insurance claims, and the jury argument24:00 The shift from reactive to proactive: using video to identify trends before incidents escalate26:00 The iPad story: how video revealed a staffing need, not a teacher failure28:00 Active supervision AI: detecting when an adult is not present in a classroom31:00 What’s next: ratio tracking, smart observations, and emotional learning features33:00 Security benefits: after-hours surveillance, vandalism, vehicle incidents35:00 The vehicle-into-building story from Canada and why footage matters for insurance37:00 How to reach Watch Me Grow and the discovery conversation process39:00 Closing thoughts on transparency and the future of video in early childhood----------------------------// Visit: https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/ to find out more // Schedule your training today https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/trainingFOLLOW UShttps://www.instagram.com/childhoodpreparedness/ https://www.facebook.com/ChildPreparedhttps://twitter.com/ChildPreparedhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/institute-for-childhood-preparedness

22 May 2026 - 42 min
episode Why Preschool Behavior Is Getting Worse (Real Solutions Inside) artwork

Why Preschool Behavior Is Getting Worse (Real Solutions Inside)

In this episode of Early Childhood Chats, we tackle one of the most urgent challenges in early education today: the growing gap in mental health support for young children.Host Andy Rozak sits down with Dr. Neal Horen and Shai Idelson from the Thrive Center at Georgetown University to discuss rising behavioral challenges in classrooms, increasing preschool expulsion rates, and why early childhood educators are facing unprecedented stress and burnout.We dive into:* Why infant and early childhood mental health matters more than ever* The reality of challenging behaviors in today’s classrooms* The shortage of mental health consultants and why programs struggle to access support* Innovative solutions to build internal capacity and expand the workforce* Practical strategies for educators and directors to manage stress and support childrenIf you work in early childhood education, Head Start, childcare, or behavioral health, this conversation is a must-watch.Learn more about the Thrive Center: 👉 https://thrivecenter.georgetown.edu/👉 https://www.facebook.com/GUUCEDD👉 https://www.linkedin.com/company/thrive-center-at-georgetown-university/👉 https://www.instagram.com/guthrivecenter/👉 https://www.iecmhc.org/👉 Georgetown Thrive Center: thrivecenter.georgetown.edu👉 Practical Certificate in IECMH Consultation: thrivecenter.georgetown.edu/training-and-education/certificates/practical-certificate-in-infant-early-childhood-mental-health-consultation/👉 Head Start East Partner Events: headstarteast.org/event#EarlyChildhoodEducation #MentalHealthSupport #Childcare #HeadStart #TeacherBurnout----------------------------Early Childhood Chats is hosted by Andrew Roszak - JD, MPA, EMT-PExecutive Director at the Institute for Childhood Preparedness. The Institute for Childhood Preparedness is proud to use its decades of experience to offer comprehensive and expert disaster and emergency preparedness trainings live in-person, via webinar, and on-demand online. // Visit: https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/ to find out more // Schedule your training today https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/trainingFOLLOW UShttps://www.instagram.com/childhoodpreparedness/ https://www.facebook.com/ChildPreparedhttps://twitter.com/ChildPreparedhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/institute-for-childhood-preparedness© Institute for Childhood Preparedness 2025 all rights reserved

6 May 2026 - 49 min
episode Brain Architects and Bold Investments: New Mexico's Universal Child Care Story artwork

Brain Architects and Bold Investments: New Mexico's Universal Child Care Story

Every state in the country is watching New Mexico right now. In November 2025, New Mexico lifted its income eligibility cap for child care assistance, making quality child care available to any family with a child from birth through age twelve whose parents are working or in school. In a matter of months, the number of children served grew from 32,000 to 48,000 — and the state is already exceeding its own projections.But the story is not really about what happened in November. It is about what happened in 2019, and in the years of advocacy and organizing that came before it. Kendal Chavez, Deputy Secretary of the New Mexico Early Childhood Education and Care Department, joins Andy Roszak to pull back the curtain on how the state got here: the creation of a unified early childhood department, a trust fund now worth eleven billion dollars seeded from oil and gas revenues, a wage scale and career ladder for the early childhood workforce, a zoning reform bill that removed local barriers to building new child care facilities, and an evidence base that is already showing children in the state's most under-resourced communities outperforming national cohorts.This is a conversation about governance, political will, and what is actually possible when a state decides that early childhood is not a nice-to-have — it is the strategy.GUESTKendal Chavez, Deputy Secretary, New Mexico Early Childhood Education and Care Department (ECECD)Appointed by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham in August 2025. Brings more than fifteen years of public-sector experience at the intersection of education, public health, food systems, and child and family well-being. Holds a Master of Public Administration from the University of New Mexico and previously served as a Policy Advisor to the Governor.ABOUT THE NEW MEXICO ECECDThe New Mexico Early Childhood Education and Care Department was created in 2019 as one of the first unified early childhood agencies in the country. Its mission is to bring all programs and services for children prenatal through age five under one roof, giving families a single point of access and giving the state a coordinated system for investing in young children. The department oversees child care assistance, universal pre-K for four-year-olds, home visiting, and early intervention programs — all connected and funded in part through New Mexico's Early Childhood Trust Fund. Website: nmeced.orgTOPIC OVERVIEWNew Mexico's universal child care initiative is not a single policy announcement — it is the culmination of more than six years of deliberate system-building under Governor Lujan Grisham, supported by decades of advocacy before her. When the state lifted its income eligibility cap in November 2025, it did so with an eleven-billion-dollar trust fund already in place, a unified department managing all early childhood programs, a workforce wage scale codified in law, a cost-based reimbursement model that incentivizes quality, and a zoning reform bill removing local barriers to expanding supply. In this conversation, Kendal Chavez walks through every piece of that infrastructure and explains what it means for families, educators, and policymakers who are watching from other states.---------------------------Early Childhood Chats is hosted by Andrew Roszak - JD, MPA, EMT-PFounder of the Institute for Childhood Preparedness and Head Start East. // Visit: https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/ to find out more // Schedule your training today https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/trainingFOLLOW UShttps://www.instagram.com/childhoodpreparedness/ https://www.facebook.com/ChildPreparedhttps://twitter.com/ChildPreparedhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/institute-for-childhood-preparedness© Institute for Childhood Preparedness 2026 all rights reserved

29 Apr 2026 - 34 min
episode The Lost Skill: Why Handwriting Is Disappearing and What It Costs Our Kids artwork

The Lost Skill: Why Handwriting Is Disappearing and What It Costs Our Kids

Most early childhood educators know handwriting matters. Fewer realize how much is lost when it disappears from the classroom. Research from Indiana University and the University of Washington has consistently shown that children who practice handwriting show stronger neurological activation in regions tied to reading and language development than children who rely on keyboards. Yet across the country, the skill is fading quietly — replaced by screen-based instruction, academic pressure pushed down into preschool, and a system that asks children to produce letters before they have the developmental readiness to form them.Holly Britton spent more than 25 years in classrooms watching this happen firsthand. After pivoting during COVID to build what she had been conceptualizing for years, she founded Squiggle Squad, a research-based, developmentally appropriate program built on a stroke-by-stroke approach that separates motor skill from letter learning. The results have been striking.In this conversation, Holly and Andy discuss the developmental window for handwriting instruction, how play-based classrooms can incorporate handwriting without abandoning their philosophy, and what the rise of AI and screens means for how young children learn to think. Holly also shares practical, no-cost starting points any teacher or parent can use right now."Handwriting, as innocuous as it seems, is deeply human. For us not to teach that human skill is, to me, as awful as not teaching them how to read."🔗 Learn more about Squiggle Squad: https://squigglesquad.com👉 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SquiggleSquad/👉 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/squigglesquadhandwriting/👉 Email Holly: holly@squigglesquad.comSubstack: https://hollyonhandwriting.substack.com/about📌 Subscribe for more early childhood education insights#handwriting #earlychildhoodeducation #braindevelopment #literacy #teachingtips #educationpodcast #learning----------------------------Early Childhood Chats is hosted by Andrew Roszak - JD, MPA, EMT-PExecutive Director at the Institute for Childhood Preparedness. The Institute for Childhood Preparedness is proud to use its decades of experience to offer comprehensive and expert disaster and emergency preparedness trainings live in-person, via webinar, and on-demand online. // Visit: https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/ to find out more // Schedule your training today https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/trainingFOLLOW UShttps://www.instagram.com/childhoodpreparedness/ https://www.facebook.com/ChildPreparedhttps://twitter.com/ChildPreparedhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/institute-for-childhood-preparedness© Institute for Childhood Preparedness 2026 all rights reserved

9 Apr 2026 - 43 min
episode The Biggest Challenges in Childcare (And How to Fix Them) artwork

The Biggest Challenges in Childcare (And How to Fix Them)

Running a childcare center isn’t easy. From staffing shortages to parent communication, burnout is real. In this episode of Early Childhood Chats, we dive into the biggest challenges facing early childhood leaders in 2026 and how technology can help simplify operations, improve communication, and support your team.➡️ Get a 14-day free trial to Famly here: https://bit.ly/AndyRoszakJoin host Andy Roszak with guests Meghan Cornwell and Harrison Brazier from Famly as they break down:✔️ How to reduce childcare director burnout✔️ Strategies for improving staff retention and engagement✔️ The role of childcare management software in daily operations✔️ How to strengthen parent communication and trust✔️ Why many childcare leaders feel isolated — and what to do about it✔️ How AI and automation are shaping the future of early childhood educationWhether you’re a childcare director, preschool owner, teacher, or early education leader, this episode is packed with practical insights to help you run a stronger, more sustainable program.🔔 Subscribe for more early childhood leadership tips, childcare business strategies, and ECE insights!➡️ Get a 14-day free trial to Famly here: https://bit.ly/AndyRoszak#childcare #earlychildhoodeducation #preschoolleadership #daycaremanagement #eceleadership----------------------------Early Childhood Chats is hosted by Andrew Roszak - JD, MPA, EMT-PExecutive Director at the Institute for Childhood Preparedness. The Institute for Childhood Preparedness is proud to use its decades of experience to offer comprehensive and expert disaster and emergency preparedness trainings live in-person, via webinar, and on-demand online. // Visit: https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/ to find out more // Schedule your training today https://www.childhoodpreparedness.org/trainingFOLLOW UShttps://www.instagram.com/childhoodpreparedness/ https://www.facebook.com/ChildPreparedhttps://twitter.com/ChildPreparedhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/institute-for-childhood-preparedness© Institute for Childhood Preparedness 2025 all rights reserved

26 Mar 2026 - 58 min
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