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Blooming Curious

Podcast de Edwina Cottino

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Blooming Curious is for K-2 teachers and homeschool parents who want children to genuinely love learning. Hosted by early childhood educator Edwina Cottino, each episode shares practical, ready-to-use strategies built around curiosity, hands-on activities, nature-based learning, and the magic of picture books — because that's what actually works with young children. You'll find ideas for curiosity-driven lessons, early literacy, oral language development, and simple ways to bring inquiry and play into everyday learning — at school or at home. If you believe the early years matter, and that learning should be joyful and meaningful, you're in the right place. Subscribe for weekly ideas that keep children curious, focused, and excited to learn. Let's be blooming curious.Visit www.bloomingcurious.com for stress-free resources and strategies that put the love into learning.Subscribe to Get Curious for a weekly dose of inspiration and strategies to keep you and the children you teach curious!

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110 episodios

episode Why Is My Child Bored? The Screen Paradox & the Power of Real-World Curiosity artwork

Why Is My Child Bored? The Screen Paradox & the Power of Real-World Curiosity

They have screens. They have toys. They have activities. And yet — they trail you around the house saying 'I'm bored.' In this episode I unpack: ● Why having access to everything is making children less able to entertain themselves — not more ● The neuroscience of genuine curiosity and why screens can't replicate it ● What boredom is actually communicating (it's not what you think) ● The gift of the unoccupied afternoon — and how to make it work ● How your own curiosity is the most powerful teaching tool you have References: Gruber, M. J., Gelman, B. D., & Ranganath, C. (2014). States of curiosity modulate hippocampus-dependent learning via the dopaminergic circuit. Neuron, 84(2), 486–496. Kashdan, T. B., & Silvia, P. J. (2009). Curiosity and interest: The benefits of thriving on novelty and challenge. In S. J. Lopez & C. R. Snyder (Eds.), Oxford Handbook of Positive Psychology (pp. 367–374). Dent, M. (2003). Saving Our Children from Our Chaotic World. Pennington Publications. Episode #87 [https://rss.com/podcasts/blooming-curious/2294364] — Why Your Child Needs Boredom and How to Use It as a Teaching Tool 🆓 Download the 24 Screen Free Activities HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/24-screen-free-ways-to-stimulate-curiosity] 🆓 Download the FREE e-guide How to Nurture Natural Curiosity HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/natural-curiosity-bundle] 🆓 Download the FREE lesson plan for I Went Walking HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/i-went-walking-integrated-lesson-plan] ✨ If you value curiosity, deep learning, and hands-on teaching, don’t forget to subscribe and follow for weekly inspiration. ✍️ Sign up to Get Curious, the inspirational weekly newsletter for curious parents and educators HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/getcurious] 💌Connect with Edwina: Email: contact@bloomingcurious.com [contact@bloomingcurious.com] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/ [https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/] Website: https://www.bloomingcurious.com [https://www.bloomingcurious.com] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious [https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious [https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious] ☕️ If you like my work and want to encourage me to keep going you can do so by Buying me a Coffee [https://buymeacoffee.com/bloomingcurious]. Any contribution will be gratefully received and will certainly give me the kick I need to keep going.☕️ 00:00 Why Kids Say Bored 01:19 Digital Native Paradox 02:56 Curiosity vs Dopamine 04:50 Rethinking Boredom 06:42 Unstructured Afternoons 08:08 Nature School Story 09:36 Be the Curiosity Spark 10:19 Practical Next Steps 11:09 Free Activity Download 11:43 Closing Thoughts

14 de abr de 2026 - 12 min
episode What Classical Education and Charlotte Mason Got Right That We've Forgotten artwork

What Classical Education and Charlotte Mason Got Right That We've Forgotten

In this episode, I'm looking at two of the oldest — and most overlooked — educational philosophies out there: Classical education and the Charlotte Mason method. I work in a Classical school, and the more I learn about it, the more I realise that the oldest approach to education and the most progressive share exactly the same starting point: wonder. We're talking about who Charlotte Mason actually was, why homeschoolers love her, why mainstream education almost never mentions her, and what her ideas about living books, narration, and nature-based learning can do for your child right now — whether you homeschool, teach in a classroom, or just want to raise a child who genuinely loves to learn. If you've been feeling like something is missing from your child's education, this episode is for you. In this episode you'll learn: * Who Charlotte Mason was and why her 19th-century ideas are more relevant than ever * The core principles of Classical education for early learners (K–2) * Why Classical education and Charlotte Mason are far more aligned than most people realise * What "living books" are — and why they work where textbooks don't * How narration builds deeper understanding than any test ever could * Why mainstream education never talks about Charlotte Mason (and why that's a real loss) * How a single high-quality picture book can teach English, maths and science * How going on a nature walk with a child is one of the most powerful classrooms in the world 🆓 Download the FREE e-guide HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/natural-curiosity-bundle] 🆓 Download the FREE lesson plan for I Went Walking HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/i-went-walking-integrated-lesson-plan] ✨ If you value curiosity, deep learning, and hands-on teaching, don’t forget to subscribe and follow for weekly inspiration. ✍️ Sign up to Get Curious, the inspirational weekly newsletter for curious parents and educators HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/getcurious] 💌Connect with Edwina: Email: contact@bloomingcurious.com [contact@bloomingcurious.com] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/ [https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/] Website: https://www.bloomingcurious.com [https://www.bloomingcurious.com] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious [https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious [https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious] ☕️ If you like my work and want to encourage me to keep going you can do so by Buying me a Coffee [https://buymeacoffee.com/bloomingcurious]. Any contribution will be gratefully received and will certainly give me the kick I need to keep going.☕️ 00:00 Wonder Over Worksheets 00:51 Who Was Charlotte Mason 01:52 Why Schools Ignore Her 02:55 Classical Education Explained 04:06 Inquiry Is Ancient 05:37 Living Books In Action 06:58 Narration And Retrieval 08:23 Bring It Home Today 08:57 Free Lesson Plan Offer 10:10 Go For A Wonder Walk 10:42 Final Encouragement

9 de abr de 2026 - 11 min
episode I'm Worried About Losing Control — Can Inquiry Learning Really Work in a Real Classroom? artwork

I'm Worried About Losing Control — Can Inquiry Learning Really Work in a Real Classroom?

The number one concern teachers have about inquiry learning isn't time, or curriculum pressure — it's control. In this episode, we talk honestly about why that fear makes complete sense, what "losing control" actually looks like in practice (versus what we imagine), and the four simple structures that make inquiry learning manageable in any early years setting. Whether you're brand new to this or you've tried it and it didn't quite land, this episode will help you understand why — and what to do differently. In This Episode: · Why the fear of chaos is completely valid — and what's really behind it · The crucial difference between productive noise and actual chaos · A real classroom example: floating and sinking, two ways · The four structures that keep inquiry learning contained and purposeful · Why starting with just five minutes is enough · How to use Wonder Time, Think-Pair-Share, and simple thinking frameworks in K–2 🔗 Teaching tools and graphic organisers HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/collection/teaching-tools-and-graphic-organisers] 🔗 Complete picture book lesson plans with inquiry component seamlessly included HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/collection/integrated-picture-book-lesson-plans] 🔗 Inquiry Learning resources HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/collection/inquiry-learning-resources] 🎧 Listen to this episode [https://rss.com/podcasts/blooming-curious/2294348] https://rss.com/podcasts/blooming-curious/2294359on how to transform wonder questions 🆓 Download the FREE e-guide How to Nurture Natural Curiosity with 10 plug and play curiosity starters HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/natural-curiosity-bundle] ✨ If you value curiosity, deep learning, and hands-on teaching, don’t forget to subscribe and follow for weekly inspiration. ✍️ Sign up to Get Curious, the inspirational weekly newsletter for curious parents and educators HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/getcurious] 💌Connect with Edwina: Email: contact@bloomingcurious.com [contact@bloomingcurious.com] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/ [https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/] Website: https://www.bloomingcurious.com [https://www.bloomingcurious.com] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious [https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious [https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious] ☕️ If you like my work and want to encourage me to keep going you can do so by Buying me a Coffee [https://buymeacoffee.com/bloomingcurious]. Any contribution will be gratefully received and will certainly give me the kick I need to keep going.☕️ 00:00 Fear of Losing Control 01:21 Chaos vs Structure 02:52 Productive Inquiry Example 03:57 Four Structures Overview 04:22 Clear Entry Point 04:56 Roles and Norms 05:42 Thinking Frameworks 06:33 Strong Lesson Close 07:21 Start Small With Inquiry 08:48 Resources and Wrap Up

30 de mar de 2026 - 11 min
episode What Learning Looks Like When Curiosity Leads artwork

What Learning Looks Like When Curiosity Leads

What does learning actually look like when children are genuinely curious? In this episode, I share real classroom stories — from gifted learners who'd switched off, to children who'd come to see school as a place of failure — and explore what changed when curiosity was given space to lead. We also look at what the research says about interest development in the early years, and why the brain is uniquely receptive to curiosity-driven learning right now. In This Episode: * The classroom moment that shows what curiosity-led learning really looks like in practice * What a 2023 study on interest development in early childhood tells us about authentic engagement * The story of a gifted learner who rediscovered his love of school through self-directed projects * How a child who struggled found confidence and took risks when given something she truly cared about * What changes for literacy, numeracy, and wellbeing when children are genuinely interested * Simple starting points — for teachers and parents alike Research Mentioned: Van Aswegen, E.C. et al. (2023). The impact of interest: an emergent model of interest development in the early years. Early Child Development and Care. https://doi.org/10.1080/03004430.2023.2245575 [https://doi.org/10.1080/03004430.2023.2245575] Mentioned in This Episode / Related Blog post: https://bloomingcurious.com/blog/post/step-by-step-integrated-inquiry-teaching-guide [https://bloomingcurious.com/blog/post/step-by-step-integrated-inquiry-teaching-guide] 🆓 Download the FREE e-guide How to Nurture Natural Curiosity with 10 plug and play curiosity starters HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/natural-curiosity-bundle] ✨ If you value curiosity, deep learning, and hands-on teaching, don’t forget to subscribe and follow for weekly inspiration. ✍️ Sign up to Get Curious, the inspirational weekly newsletter for curious parents and educators HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/getcurious] 💌Connect with Edwina: Email: contact@bloomingcurious.com [contact@bloomingcurious.com] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/ [https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/] Website: https://www.bloomingcurious.com [https://www.bloomingcurious.com] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious [https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious [https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious] ☕️ If you like my work and want to encourage me to keep going you can do so by Buying me a Coffee [https://buymeacoffee.com/bloomingcurious]. Any contribution will be gratefully received and will certainly give me the kick I need to keep going.☕️ 00:00 Curiosity Led Classroom 00:58 Morning Learning Snapshot 01:54 Research Behind Curiosity 04:01 Why Curiosity Fades 04:48 Project Time For Gifted 06:52 Project Time Builds Confidence 08:42 How To Start Inquiry 09:07 What Changes In Learning 11:25 Try It At School And Home 11:59 Free Guide And Farewell

27 de mar de 2026 - 13 min
episode Why children stop asking questions — and what we're doing that causes it. artwork

Why children stop asking questions — and what we're doing that causes it.

Children’s curiosity and fascination with the world is declining. Children are asking fewer questions. This loss of curiosity can be due to depleted dopamine, as referenced in NIH-where they identified contributors such as excessive screen time, sleep deprivation, poor high-fat/high-sugar diet, low sunlight exposure, and rare genetic disorders. Research suggests low dopamine manifests as impulsivity, inattention, fatigue, poor mood regulation, and stimulation-seeking. Edwina argues solutions include removing screens in early childhood, increasing outdoor free play and boredom, raising curricular challenge and expectations (with praise for device-free classical education), and moving away from compliance-based worksheets toward narration and recitation to check for understanding and build mastery. References: Children's Health in the Digital Age [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7246471/] How Curiosity Enhances Hippocampus-Dependent Memory: The Prediction, Appraisal, Curiosity, and Exploration (PACE) Framework [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364661319302384#:~:text=Curiosity%2520plays%2520a%2520fundamental%2520role,underlying%2520curiosity%252Drelated%2520memory%2520enhancements] Get the free e-guide with 10 plug-and-play curiosity starters. 🆓 Download the FREE e-guide How to Nurture Natural Curiosity HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/b/natural-curiosity-bundle] ✨ If you value curiosity, deep learning, and hands-on teaching, don’t forget to subscribe and follow for weekly inspiration. ✍️ Sign up to Get Curious, the inspirational weekly newsletter for curious parents and educators HERE [https://bloomingcurious.com/getcurious] 💌Connect with Edwina: Email: contact@bloomingcurious.com [contact@bloomingcurious.com] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/ [https://www.instagram.com/blooming_curious/] Website: https://www.bloomingcurious.com [https://www.bloomingcurious.com] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious [https://www.facebook.com/bloomingcurious] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious [https://www.youtube.com/@edsbloomingcurious] ☕️ If you like my work and want to encourage me to keep going you can do so by Buying me a Coffee [https://buymeacoffee.com/bloomingcurious]. Any contribution will be gratefully received and will certainly give me the kick I need to keep going.☕️ 00:00 Curiosity Is Declining 00:40 Dopamine And Curiosity 02:24 Symptoms We See Today 03:35 Curiosity Needs Effort 05:17 Cut Screens Early 06:47 Get Kids Outside 07:21 Bring Back Challenge 10:07 Beyond Worksheets 10:45 Recitation And Narration 12:10 Free Guide And Farewell

16 de mar de 2026 - 13 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
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