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Plant the Seed of Learning

Plant the Seed of Learning

By: Dr. Crystal Loose and Dr. Aimee Ketchum
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About this listen

Plant the Seed of Learning is a research-based podcast that merges the education and medical models to help parents, teachers, and early childhood professionals support young children’s development. Hosted by a pediatric occupational therapist and an education expert, each episode breaks down developmental milestones, early learning, play-based strategies, social-emotional development, early intervention, and kindergarten readiness in clear, practical ways. Designed for parents, educators, pediatric occupational therapists, therapists, and anyone working with young children, this podcast connDr. Crystal Loose and Dr. Aimee Ketchum Parenting & Families Relationships
Episodes
  • Episode Six: From Birth to Books: Early Literacy Explained with Dr. Daris McInnis
    Feb 11 2026

    In this episode, Dr. Daris McInnis pulls back the curtain on how literacy actually develops. He clearly breaks down early literacy into its core components—oral language, print awareness, alphabet knowledge, and phonological awareness—and explains why reading is not instinctual like speaking, but must be explicitly taught. Listeners walk away with a practical, empowering understanding of what’s broken in how we think about literacy, and how parents and caregivers can build strong foundations for reading starting at birth.

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    36 mins
  • Episode 5: Potty Training Is Not One Size Fits All: Supporting Every Child’s Readiness, Conversation with Allison Jandu, Potty Training Consultant
    Feb 4 2026

    In this episode of Plant the Seed of Learning, we welcome Allison Jandu, potty training consultant and author of The Adaptive Toolkit for Potty Training Children with Disabilities. Together, we take a developmentally informed look at potty training and why readiness, not timelines or pressure, is the key to success.

    Allison shares why she wrote her book and addresses common misconceptions that often create stress for families. We talk about how to recognize true readiness, what to do when a child is not ready but external pressure exists, and how readiness may look different for children with disabilities or developmental differences. The conversation also explores accidents and regressions, what they tell us about a child’s nervous system, and how parents can respond in supportive ways.

    We dive into sensory factors that often interfere with potty training, including barriers parents may not realize are at play, and discuss the role of retained reflexes and how they can impact staying dry. Allison offers practical strategies for adapting the potty training process, including small changes families can make right away and tips for managing potty use outside the home.

    This episode is designed to help parents feel informed, confident, and less alone, reminding listeners that potty training is not about doing it perfectly but about supporting each child’s individual developmental path.

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    42 mins
  • Episode 4 Freedom, Nature, and Play: A New Way to Support Children’s Mental Health with Kate Beckwith
    Jan 29 2026

    In this episode of Plant the Seed of Learning, we explore a powerful and unconventional approach to child therapy with Kate Beckwith, a psychodynamic psychotherapist and arts education specialist whose work challenges traditional therapy models. Kate shares how her practice, Kate’s Garden, integrates nature, animals, movement, art, and play to support children’s emotional well being and development.

    We discuss why therapy does not need to be confined to an office, how freedom of choice supports regulation and emotional processing, and why movement and time outdoors play a critical role in mental health. Kate explains how being in nature can trigger dopamine release, support emotional regulation, and offer children new ways to communicate feelings that may be difficult to express with words alone.

    This conversation also addresses the rise in diagnoses such as ADHD and autism, how nontraditional therapeutic environments can better meet children’s needs, and how parents and caregivers can be supported alongside their children. Drawing from her TED Talk and clinical experience, Kate offers practical insights into adapting to a world where play and access to nature are increasingly limited.

    This episode invites listeners to rethink what effective therapy for children can look like and consider how curiosity, movement, and connection to the natural world can support healing and growth.

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    30 mins
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