Ep. 25 – The Talk, The Timeout, and The Truth About Education (Part 1) cover art

Ep. 25 – The Talk, The Timeout, and The Truth About Education (Part 1)

Ep. 25 – The Talk, The Timeout, and The Truth About Education (Part 1)

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How do you raise and teach children to be kind and accountable in a world that often rewards neither? This week on Three for the Founders, hosts Reynaldo Antonio, Lybroan, and Jon get real about “gentle parenting,” classroom culture, and what education is actually for—with two powerhouse guests who’ve seen it all from both public and private school perspectives.

Julie Clark—veteran Santa Monica public school educator and New York Times bestselling author—joins Luivette Resto, award-winning poet, mother of three, and middle school English teacher, to unpack the myths and realities behind “gentle parenting.” Together, they ask what happens when empathy gets confused with permissiveness, how anxiety gets inherited, and why “The Talk” for Black and Brown families is still a life-and-death conversation.

From classroom discipline to language politics, from banned books to the economics of words, this episode pulls no punches. The conversation moves from the dinner table to the desk—exploring what happens when care, culture, and control collide.

You’ll hear the hosts and guests break down:

  • The difference between consequences and punishments, and why anger doesn’t belong in either.
  • How race and class shape what kind of “gentle” a parent or teacher can afford to be.
  • Why critical thinking and creativity are often the first casualties of censorship.
  • And what it really means to “be the adult” when the kids are watching everything.

Whether you’re a parent, teacher, or just someone rethinking what “raising good humans” means, Episode 25 will make you laugh, flinch, and maybe rethink that next parent–teacher email.

📚 Takeaways & Actions:

  1. Read banned books—and talk about them with the next generation.
  2. Support independent bookstores and classroom teachers bringing critical stories to life.
  3. Teach failure as growth, not shame.
  4. Model boundaries and respect—gently, but firmly.
  5. Keep classrooms and conversations open to complexity, discomfort, and truth.

🎧 Three for the Founders: Where the book club meets the block, and every lesson plan has politics.

Thanks for joining us. Still got questions? Other things to say? Hit us up at Three for the Founders on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, or TikTok and let us know. Til the next time...left on founders...we out!

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