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Peter Gray: Transforming education, play, self-directed learning, parenting | Podcast

November 1, 2024 Ben Yeoh

Peter Gray is a psychologist and author of Free to Learn. For many years, he has been studying play. He keeps a substack here. 

Gray discusses his perspective on the ideal education system, which he believes should be a bottom-up movement rather than a top-down imposition. He emphasizes the importance of self-directed education where children have the freedom to follow their curiosity and interests. Gray explains how traditional schooling stifles curiosity and playfulness, and traces the historical roots of the current education system. He also highlights the sociopolitical factors that have contributed to the decline of children's mental health, arguing against the popular notion that social media is the primary cause. Additionally, the conversation touches on the impact of economic inequality on parenting styles and child freedom. Gray shares his current projects, including initiatives aimed at encouraging more free play in schools and educating pediatricians on the importance of play, while offering practical advice for parents to support their children's independence and curiosity.

"If offered the opportunity to redesign the entire educational system as a top-down thing, me being the czar of education and telling everybody else what they should do, I would decline the offer...it really has to emerge from the bottom up."


"Education works best when the people being educated are in charge of it... Children are biologically designed to learn through exploration, through play."

"Our school system suppresses curiosity and playfulness...the two primary biological educative drives in children."


"Ask your child: 'What would you like to do that you haven’t done before that might be a little bit frightening but that you’d really like to try?' It’s how children build courage and how parents build trust."

Watch above or on YouTube, or listen on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to pods.

Transcript and contents below.


Contents

  • 00:19 Redesigning the Education System

  • 01:41 The Role of Curiosity and Play in Learning

  • 05:55 Historical Context of Traditional Schooling

  • 08:26 Children's Rights and Freedom Over Time

  • 12:11 Cultural Shifts and Parental Concerns

  • 15:28 Impact of Economic Inequality on Parenting

  • 18:53 Rise of Stranger Danger and Overprotectiveness

  • 28:14 Common Core and the Mental Health Crisis

  • 38:28 The Evolution of Reading and Technology

  • 41:17 Balancing Screen Time and Real Life

  • 43:12 Reflections on 'Free to Learn'

  • 45:07 Evolutionary Psychology and Its Impact

  • 50:28 Advice for a Fulfilling Retirement

  • 01:00:04 Creative Processes and Inspirations

  • 01:05:45 Current Projects and Parenting Advice

Transcript (This has been AI assisted so mistakes are possible)

Ben: Hey everyone. I'm super excited to be speaking to the psychologist Peter Gray. He is the author of Free to Learn and an inspiration to those interested in self directed education. Peter, welcome. 

Peter: I'm very happy to be here. 

Ben: If you could redesign the entire education system, what would it look like to you?

Peter: First of all, let me say that I would if offered the opportunity to redesign the entire educational system as a top down thing, me being the czar of education and telling everybody else what they should do, I would decline the offer. I think that, I think it has to be a bottom up movement.

No educational system is going to work. unless the families believe in it and want it. So I think that the way that the educational, I'll get to your question, to the intent of your question in a moment, but I think that the educational system, it really has to emerge from the bottom up.

My ideal would not be a single educational system. It would be the many opportunities for learning many different ways of learning, many different and where families would have options of what to do. Some families would homeschool, some families would get together with other families and create little parent co ops.

Some families would would opt for something different. But my own beliefs, of course, are that education works best. When the people being educated are in charge of it, that when the children, if we're talking about children, when children are making their own choices about what it is that they're doing and learning children are really biologically designed to learn through through exploration through play.

They're born highly curious. That curiosity leads them to want to understand the world around them. And they're born with this strong drive to play and play in many different ways and play is how children develop skills so that it's, if instead of the question, how would I design it for everybody?

What I would try to encourage everybody would be to create for their children or for the children that they would like to. draw into it opportunities for self directed education. This is what I've been involved in for a long time, where the children have many learning opportunities. There is all sorts of tools for learning available to them, where there are adults who can help them if they want help and whatever it is they're interested in, but where children are really free to follow to develop and follow their own interests.

That's really the education That I that I believe. I think that the first, that the years of life that we call sort of the school years, especially the early school years, up onto maybe the mid, up as far as maybe the mid teenage years, are really times for exploration, for discovery, figuring out who you are, what you like to do.

And what kind of life you would like to have once you're an adult we're not giving children an opportunity to do that now because we keep them busy all the time. We keep them busy with school work, which is mostly irrelevant to them and with with extracurricular activities outside of school. We don't give them much chance to really, I even asked the question, who am I and what do I like to do?

Though that's what children really need much more opportunity for. 

Ben: And why do you think traditional schooling, let's call it that, stifles curiosity and motivation so much? Is it simply because we've set them this curriculum and we fill it with all You know, our ideas, which might not be their ideas, or is there some particularly strong lines of evidence that you think that why traditional schooling seems to stifle so many children in terms of this curiosity, motivation, and those kind of things?

Peter: Yes both of those are correct. The, first of all, why does it stifle? Of course it does. You can't curiosity. is disruptive in the typical school. You can't have, the child who wants to explore things is disruptive in the classroom. You can't have, you can't have 30 kids in the classroom.

You can't even have 10 in the classroom. And expect them all to be interested in the same thing at the same time. They're all curious about the same thing. Curiosity doesn't work that way. You've got to, if you're going to have a, have an educational system in which you, in which children can explore based on their curiosity, you have to expect everybody to be doing different things.

You can't expect, you can't have order in the classroom, where everybody's sitting in seats and everybody's doing, and you also can't have certain, Expectations that everybody's going to learn the same things at the same time that just can't happen. And of course, curiosity is destroyed. So is playfulness.

Because if you're playful, that's that gets you into trouble in school. That's just so so our school system. So the two primary biological educative drives in children are curiosity and playfulness. This is nature's way of educating children and schools just have to shut them off. You can't run a school in our traditional way.

It has to be an entirely different concept of a school. But a somewhat, more historical answer to this is the original purpose of schools was precisely to shut off curiosity and play. The school, the schools that we have today, the western type schools that we have today, which are now all over the world, really started in the 17th century, even somewhat before in response to the Protestant Reformation, where the belief was that we need to educate children so they can read the Bible and so they will be obedient.

And so the schools were designed primarily in Prussia the German state of Prussia, to educate them. to suppress children's spontaneous ways of learning, deliberately to suppress that, that it was believed at that time that children were born sinful, and that things that they did themselves would be sinful and harmful, and that the primary thing that children needed to learn is to is to be obedient to authority.

And so schools develop deliberately to suppress children's own endeavors and get them to obey to authority, to the school master, as they were called at that time. And so a school system developed that for that purpose and we've still got that same school system. Nobody that I know who goes into teaching says, I'm going into teaching so I can suppress curiosity and so that I can inhibit playfulness and so I can indoctrinate children.

Nobody says that. But. Every teacher who goes into the traditional school system is going into a system that was designed for that purpose. And no matter what the teachers say they're doing or want to do, they are suppressing curiosity and they are indoctrinating. They may not be indoctrinating them in the Bible anymore, but they're indoctrinating them in whatever the curriculum is.

Because it the school system is not designed for questioning, for critical thought, for for people having really different ideas. It's designed for uniformity and it's designed for learning a particular curriculum, whatever that curriculum is. 

Ben: And do you think children have more rights today than or fewer rights, if you trace it back, historically children were allowed to work.

Then they were looking too long hours. We decided, Oh, that might not be such a great thing. But then rather than giving them more time to play we put them in an education system. And then there seems to be over history, talk about 50, a hundred years a kind of. tension between giving children more rights and more say in what they do and less rights or less ability to move around and go out and play or take their own transport and things.

How do you think that's evolved? What do you think we should be doing about it? And do you think children have more or less rights and should we be giving them more understanding of that? 

Peter: That's a really good question. So there's some ways. And there's some ways in which children right now have more rights than they have in at least in Western history, in modern Western history, they have more rights in the home to talk back to their parents to eat what they choose to eat rather than what their parents tell them they have to eat, to dress the way they want to dress.

We're even talking about the rights of children to change their gender if they want to do that, right? These are rights that were not present when I was a child as much as they are today. Certainly not present 150 years ago as much as they are today. On the other hand children in the past certainly when I was a child and before that weren't watched all the time.

We had certain kind of restrictions in the home, but we spent a lot of time outside of the home with other kids, playing, exploring, doing things that kids have always done. And there, children were free. And now we're not allowing that nearly as much as in the past. That's been largely cut off. Children are not free, at least in the United States, to just go out and play on their own and with other children, without adults there guarding them, protecting them, telling what to do, and so on and so forth.

So in that respect, children have far fewer rights. They have, as one author who's looked at the history of this put up, children have more personal rights in the home than they did before, but far less freedom outside of the home than they ever have had before. It's also the case that the school system over time, certainly since the years when I was in school many decades ago, has become far more time consuming.

And far more restrictive of what you can do within the school than it used to be. So school has become less free than it used to be. We used to have much more time for recess. We used to have a long lunch hour. We had shorter school days. And in elementary school, we didn't have homework. So when I was a kid, school was not as oppressive.

It was not as big a deal in children's lives as it is today. So that's the in the long run, in the very long run of human history. We were probably freest, children were probably freest when, back when we were hunter gatherers. The studies that have been done of hunter gatherer cultures that have survived into the 20th century at least, and studied in the 20th century children have amazing amount of freedom compared to children in any modern day society other than the hunter gatherer culture.

Ben: Yeah, I recall when I was 12, I took my first solo plane trip and now I think about it and speak to people are amazed that a 12 year old would take a solo plane trip and it wasn't a big deal. And I think there must be multiple causes of this decline of play or the the freedom or the agency that we give children.

What do you think are the major ones around it? Do you think it's just a cultural shift, the sort of media narrative and these institutions and structures? And if it is that, is it something which is going to be really difficult to reverse? 

Peter: Yeah, I think it is going to be difficult to reverse. First of all, regarding your solo plane trip, I, my son His first solo plane trip.

He, when he was 12 years old, he told his mother and me that he wanted to go to to, to England. He had been playing Dungeons and Dragons and he was really interested in castles and Neither his mother or I at that point had ever been overseas. He knew we were sticking the mud so we weren't going to go.

And so he planned, this was before the internet, this was in 1980 he planned his own trip he, and he announced to us that, and he said that he was going to go and he said, don't worry about the money. I'll earn the money, which he did. He was working, he worked in a restaurant first washing dishes, and then they put him on the line ticket.

At 12 years old and he earned his own money for this trip. He figured the whole trip out by himself at 12 years old. I believe he was 13 by the time he left. He claims he was 12. We've had a discussion about it, but I would have to look up the actual dates. But I think he had, I think he had barely turned 13 at the time.

I think he left after May 25th, which would have been his birthday. So that so that was, now that, at that time even then, that raised some eyebrows. But it wasn't, People wouldn't have regarded his mother and me as negligent. They wouldn't have put us in jail for allowing that to happen, right?

Today, they might. The airline probably wouldn't have allowed him on, unless there were guarantees he was going to be met. And on top of this, he was a child who's, Type 1 diabetes. So he, it needs to monitor his own insulin and all of this kind of stuff. No, I wouldn't do that today. Not because I wouldn't trust the child to do it, but because it would be so against the cultural grain.

So even since 1980, there has been a huge change in the way the culture looks at this kind of thing. So I think that the change in the culture has come from a variety of causes. It is interesting that In the United States, the biggest shift occurred in the 1980s. Some of this was building up gradually before, but the biggest shift in thinking about this occurred in the decade between 1980 and 1990.

And there are several things that happened in the United States that I think all contributed to this. One of them was was the election of Ronald Reagan as president and the and and a legislature that was with Reagan. And what happened beginning in the 1980s is that the economy changed dramatically in the United States.

Such that the gap between the rich and poor increased and has been increasing ever since. There's a lot of research that shows that when the gap between rich and poor is great, when you lose the kind of of safety net that occurs when government provides supports for people who are poor.

When you lose the safety of labor unions, which were more or less destroyed during the Reagan era, and when you begin to greatly decrease the taxes on the wealthy, and therefore have to cut back on safety measures for the poor. Suddenly now, parents become far more concerned about whether their children are going to make it financially or not.

Back when I was a kid, parents weren't that worried about that. I grew up in a working class family, and neither of my parents at that time had gone to college. My uncles, with one exception, were not college educated. They all had. decent jobs. They all could support a family. They could own a home.

They could even own a little cottage out in the country, and without, and it, and the ed, that this educational achievement was far less of a big deal. Then with these changes, people began to worry. And we also began, there were also other changes that occurred that, For a variety of reasons, some of those working class jobs went away.

People began to think that the way that I can make sure. that my child, or at least increase the chances that my child will succeed as an adult, is to make sure that my child is well educated, that they do all the right things in order to prepare themselves in what suddenly now is seen as a very competitive world.

We didn't see it as so competitive, and so there's actually research that shows cross culturally That in countries where the gap between rich and poor is great, parents are far more controlling of their children, far more concerned that they do the quote right thing educationally, far less likely to simply let them have leisure time and explore and all of these kinds of things.

than in countries where the gap between rich and poor is less. So for example, in the Scandinavian countries, Finland, for example, the, there the gap between rich and poor is far less than in the United States. And children are afforded much more individual freedom there than they are in the United States.

There's actually graphs showing that if you plot on one axis, the degree of economic inequality. And on another axis, parents attitudes about parenting and put it on a kind of controlling versus permissive spectrum, as you go out towards more and more economic inequality, you go towards more and more controlling, less and less permissiveness.

So I think that was part of it. In addition to that. In 1979 and then again in 1981, there were very much publicized cases of a young boy being kidnapped, in one case murdered, in the other case lost, never recovered. In both cases, if I remember correctly, there were six year old boys apparently snatched away by a stranger.

And suddenly we now had warnings about stranger danger. People were, you would hear in the United States in the 1980s, public service announcements, do you know where your child is now? And so the concern about watching your child all the time, because they might be snatched away. Now this is, was then an extraordinarily rare crime.

That's why it was so newsworthy. It's still extraordinarily rare. It almost never happens. But people began to become afraid of that. And that became a reason not to let your child out of sight. And that reason has even grown over time even for this irrational reason that, there's this tiny little probability, little chance that your child might be snatched away by a stranger.

It almost never occurs. But people think it occurs frequently because of the way it's publicized. So that, that, that played a role. And then there's one other thing that happened in the 1980s, also at the direction of Ronald Reagan, which was the a book that a federal analysis of our school system, which concluded, in fact, this was a foregone conclusion based on who was chosen to work on this study and write this book, that our school system has become too lax we are not keeping up with other countries, particularly not keeping up with the Southeast Asian countries educationally, and we're going to fall behind.

And so this book was published and that became then that initiated a new way of thinking what then was regarded as a reformation in schools, which was the opposite of the kind of reformation I would be wanting. More and more classes, more and more testing, less and less freedom of teachers to do what they wanted.

And then that ultimately became incorporated into the No Child Left Behind Act and then Common Core. Which greatly restricted what teachers could do in the classroom. So school became ever more rigid, ever more controlled by top down by a curriculum. So all of those kinds of changes, I think, are, have led to the system that is leading children to suffer so much today.


Ben: I hadn't put together the politics of it or the emphasis that Reagan had on, the individual and the ability or opportunity for jobs and that type of thing, as well as say, the stranger danger and articles on school. It's interesting because for instance, in Finland, you don't go to school until five or seven, even it would be, you could easily just go and no one would blink and in some cultures like in japan They make a big deal of the first time you could go to the shops yourself, which you might do at three four Three or four or something like that and have this you know that from the cross cultural and in the uk we had a big splash again with a missing child Maddie, I believe a daughter, which again became very salient, but to your point, the statistics of it are extremely rare, much more likely for all sorts of other incidents than that.

But I guess that brings us to the point today that parents fear that they will be bad parents, or, even there might be some legal act against them if they take their children out of school, if they feel that the school's not working for them and that type of Atmosphere or even within school just to try and give children perhaps more agency Around how they would live their lives even within the school system What would you say to parents who feel that they might be bad parents or what we can do?

Around letting children have a bit more agency in play 

Peter: Yes yeah, you make a good point that, so it has now become a moral imperative that you and in some degree legal imperative, not actually written in law, but treated as if it were written in law, about always minding your child, always watching your child the One of the things that's happened is that social child protective services in most states have a requirement that if somebody calls the police or calls the hotline and says there's a child out there not being watched by an adult, that they have to investigate.

And so a lot of parents who allow their child out in the way that. All parents would have and, decades ago have had this experience of social services showing, social protected, child protective services showing up at their home. If you're white and middle class or above, you will fight it in court and almost die.

essentially always win or win even before it have to go to court. But if you are black and poor, the statistics are there's a pretty good chance that they would take your child away. So people have become vigilant for that reason, even over their children, even if they know that it would be good for their child to go out and do these things on their own.

It would be developmentally appropriate. It would be valuable. The child would enjoy the child would grow from it. So people are afraid for that reason. And then in addition to that, it has really become it has become such a norm and it's been present for so long that people begin to feel that if you're not watching your child all the time, and if you're not there to teach your child and direct your child, that you're not a good parent, you're a bad parent.

And of course nobody wants to be a bad parent and even people who intellectually understand this, it would be perfectly safe for my eight year old, nine year old child to go play in the park by themselves without me. And they're perfectly responsible, they could do that. Even they, And even if they're not so concerned that some neighbor is going to call, but most people are concerned about that.

But even despite that, they might not do it because there's something in their head that says everybody around me says this would make me a bad parent. Maybe it would make me a bad parent. You don't necessarily think it through that way. But we automatically believe if we're not doing what other people do, Is there something wrong with us?

Is there something, we're all creatures of norms. That's part of being a human being. And if we're not behaving like other people are behaving, we begin, not only are we worried that other people are going to question us and criticize us, but we begin to question ourselves and criticize ourselves about that.

So absolutely. What can we do? I try to whenever I speak to parents and when I write articles and books to him towards parents, I really try to talk about all the what are the myths here and what are the things you can do? And given the constraints, what can you do in our society today?

Without that would give your child more freedom, more opportunity to play more control over their own lives, more more possibility that they can grow up with a growing sense of independence and responsibility and therefore become competent, mentally healthy adults. So the and there are things parents can do.

Ben: So you touched on mental health. And there's a lot of concern, in the media about mental health in children, although some of that might be due to more awareness and diagnosis and the like, and some of it might be a trend. I think you've argued for this connection between the decline in free play and the rise in things like anxiety and depression amongst young people.

We've had others more recently, hate who's made a lot of a kind of social media hypothesis, although there's been some pushback from that and some articles in nature. And I think you've been a little bit skeptical about whether the evidence is around that. I guess there's also a complication as maybe if you're if you have too much screen time, you're not out playing in the park, then again screen time might be one of the times when you are able now to get together with your like minded peers and hang out because you're not allowed to hang out elsewhere.

So you might as well hang out digitally. I've seen great adventures in things like Minecraft worlds or chat groups and things like that. So I'd be interested in your view as to whether there is, how strong the phenomena are. of concern about mental health in children is and perhaps the weighting that you would put on a decline in play arguments for it versus say social media hypothesis and the like.

Peter: I think it is primarily the decline in play, the increased toxicity of school, the way we do school and and and the decline generally of opportunities for children to do things independently. It's not just play. Play, I define as an independent activity. If it's controlled by adults, it's not play.

But other independent things, like just traveling around the neighborhood by yourself, getting places by yourself, doing what you did at age 12 and what my son did at age 12 or 13. Those kinds of things. Yeah. We don't even allow kids to go, downtown by themselves at age 12 anymore, in this country.

So that's, so all of that is, of course, that is going to make kids, that's going to stunt children's mental development. Now, in terms of the, in my mind, the best measure of the decline of the, of the decline of mental health is probably suicide rate, even though that's just the tip of the iceberg of suffering.

because it's a solid number that the way that you measure anxiety and depression, you're right, could possibly be changed in terms of people's willingness to report it, to admit it and so on and so forth. But the suicide rate is by 1990 was already about five times what it was in the 1950s for teenagers.

and it peaked in the 1990s. There's actually, let me spend a couple minutes on this because it, this also gets to the difference between what Jonathan Haidt believes and what I believe about this. Between 1950 and 1990, you had an upward slope of suicide rates. To the degree that we can, we have data on Based on assessments of anxiety and depression, those also were upper sloping.

Reached a peak, interestingly, in 1990. That was the peak. That peak was as high as it is today. We're not higher today than we were in 1990 on any measure of mental problems among young people. Fight ignores that totally. So that was all before the internet. That was all before most families had computers in their homes.

We had all, we had already been changing the nature of schooling. We had already been depriving children of free play and a lot of the freedoms that they had before by 1990. Then. What's interesting, and I only began talking about this recently, I tended to ignore it as everybody else did, things got better for a while.

Between 1990 and 2000, suicide rate went down. So did depression and anxiety, to the degree that we have reasonable measures of those things, went down. Not to 1950s levels, but went down by about a third of the way down. Then leveled off between 2000 and 2010. Now, why did they go down? The only answer I can come up with is they went down because of the internet.

It went down because we had by 1990, we had pretty much prevented kids from interacting with one another, playing, exploring, but now they had a new way to do it. They had a new way of doing it. They had they figured out how to use these computers before most adults did. Once that but by the time by the mid 1950s, by the mid 1990s, most families with teenagers had computers with an Internet connection.

They were playing games with one another. They were playing multiplayer video games. They were communicating with one another. They had also some kind of expertise that many adults didn't have. You would go into department stores in the mid 1990s to the computer section, and there would be a teenager there explaining how these machines worked.

So suddenly, kids found a new way to communicate. They gained a new kind of status in a sense, because they had figured this stuff out and I think that's why it went down. It didn't go back because this didn't, this was not as good as what kids had before back in the 1950s, when you could just go out and play and explore and do all these interesting things outdoors as well.

But this was better than what you had in the 1990s. Then So then the question is, why did it start going back up again? Beginning around 2010, it started going back up again, and we're now back at 1990s levels on all of this. We're not above it, but we're back at 1990s levels. We've still got the internet.

We've still got video games. What happened to bring it back up? And it's not that suddenly we're allowing children more freedom. I, my explanation for it, and I've written some blog posts about this. I'm currently writing a book that deals with this. But the, my explanation, Is common core.

This is when this increase, by the way, despite what height says in the book, did not occur worldwide , this increase in it did not occur throughout Europe. It just did not occur. I've looked at the data, it didn't occur there, . The suicide rate has been flat there. It was flat in Canada, it was flat in the whole EU suicide rates.

And as. probably the most reliable measure, did not increase among teens between 2010 And and 2020, which is usually the decade that Haidt is looking at so why did it increase in the United States and not those other places? Those other places, they have the internet, they have social media, they're not deprived of these things.

They're on it as much as our kids are, but they're not suffering in the same rate. Why not? It's because the suffering is not because of being on the internet. It's because the suffering is because we've done too much. What we've done with our schools, their schools changed dramatically with the onset of Common Core in the United States.

There's no question about that. Every study that's been done in which teenagers themselves are asked about what is it is the source of your anxiety and depression. Every study shows that the answer they give you far and away more than any other answer is school. And beginning after 2010, beginning with Common Core, really beginning around 2013 when most states had Common Core, that answer became even more common than it was before.

So just to give you an example of the American Psychological Association did a study in 2013 called Stress in America. They do this study every year with adults, but every once in a while they include teenagers. 2013, they included teenagers. They found that teenagers, by their measure, were the most stressed out people in the country.

And when they asked what the source of stress was, 83 percent cited school. Nothing else came close. You could list more than one thing, but nothing else came close. The same study that was done four years earlier, when they asked teens that question, it was something like 50 percent said it was school. So it jumps from 50 percent to 83 percent saying school is what's stressing me out.

I think that, and that, that was the time, and there were also by, at that time, by 2013, there were many more kids who said they were feeling stressed, they were feeling anxious, and so on, that was true. So Hyatt and some others show this curve, they don't show the fact that things were going down before that, or that we were just as high before, they show this curve and they say what else could it be?

This is when cell phones came into being. And my answer is something else happened at that same time. And that's this dramatic change in school. 

Ben: That's fascinating. I haven't heard that as well articulated and I look forward to reading your book on it. I wonder if there's any data then on depression rates or suicide rates in those who are at self directed places or homeschool, unschooled.

Because there's probably a large enough sample in the U. S. now. Of that, maybe even in the UK, because there's a reasonable home education part, and maybe that would provide some evidence for you. It also leads me to think that means that you're probably less worried than, say, the media would suggest on how children are using screen time.

And would you basically say that, that you could just let them be? And is that from any age, or is maybe nine or ten a little bit too young to have unrestricted screen time? Again, just let children be let them have agency. They can maybe suffer the consequences of a sleepless night. Maybe they'll learn from that.

Are you generally less worried about screen time or is there still an opportunity cost for these other kinds of play, which would be maybe similar to what hunter gatherers or others do have more outdoor play and or does it matter less as long as it's an independent child chosen activity, 

Peter: So I think one thing, if we want kids to be on screens more, we have to let them be outdoors more.

We have to allow them other options. And what that means is not putting them into adult directed sports. That's not play, that's just more like school. That means really allowing them to be kids, allowing them. So in self directed learning centers, kids are allowed to be on screens as much as they want.

And they are on screens a fair amount. Why wouldn't they be? It's the biggest tool we have today. It's a bit, it's a major educational tool but they're also outdoors a lot. They're also playing outdoors. They're doing a lot of things because they can. They've got a big menu and most of them are taking use of it.

Now, there's always been some kids, even when I was a kid in the 1950s, there's some kids, we call them nerds, right? They're indoor people. Back in my day, they spent all their time reading. Why would they read? Why would they want to read instead of go out fishing with me? I couldn't figure that out.

There's still some people given a choice. They want to be on the computer all the time, so that's the but so there's their individual differences. And we've now had this round long enough to know that those who are on the computer all the time, they can learn all. They go on to find lives, they go on to a whole variety of lives.

Many of them become computer technicians or computer specialists of one sort or video game designers, but they don't all do. Some of them go on to become anything they want to be. They develop skills, they build competence. The computer, these computer games are extraordinarily complex and difficult.

They're, they build your intelligence in ways that you can apply in all sorts of ways. So I'm not that worried about it. I do think, here's what I do think, especially for young children. So back when I was a kid in the 1950s, concerning going outdoors, doing things outdoors, parents understood that there are dangers.

And they taught us about the dangers. They taught us safety rules look both ways before you cross the street. If if somebody stops in a car and offers you candy to get into the car, go away. If they try to pull you in, scream at the top of your voice. We were all, Spirits weren't naive, they were, they knew there were some dangers out there.

The risks were pretty small about the stranger thing, but the risk was there and they taught us what to do. There was also general advice, generally speaking, especially if you're going to be out late at night, be with a friend, don't go by yourself, there's safety in numbers. There were these kinds of things taught to us.

I think. We also need to teach young people about safety on the internet. There are dangers on the internet, including the danger of just getting sucked into it and spending too much time, wasting your time more than even you would really want to do. So instructions in time management, how to control your time.

I also think it's appropriate to have certain rules about, I wouldn't take, I think it would be terrible idea to take away the cell phone. It's the most powerful tool we've got, educational tool. It's also a safety tool. If you, if something happens to you, you've got that in your pocket, you can call your parents or you can call 911.

Why take that away? But, There are safety things about it, don't, just like you don't, if somebody offers you candy to get into the car, if somebody meets you on the internet and wants to meet you and you don't know them, don't do it. These are common sensing. Most kids beyond the age of about 13 understand this or about the age of 15 understand more so today than in the past.

They're pretty savvy about this kind of stuff, but there may be some who aren't. Yeah. There are also times in places where none of us adults as well as children should Should allow ourselves to get on our screens like at the dinner table. Let's all put our computers away So let's all put our cell phones away so we can be with one another at dinner don't I think it's good advice to anybody who's tempted to keep their phone on at night to just not take it into the bedroom, keep it outside of the bedroom because it might keep you awake.

You might not, you might hear it pop. You might hear a little ding and be an irresistibly wanna answer it. It's going to keep you up at night. Don't do that. So keep it out of the bedroom. Yeah. If you are involved, if you're going to a place where you're having a meeting with other people, like you or I would be very rude right now if we picked up our cell phone and started checking our email or our social media contacts.

What a rude thing to do. So don't take it to meetings where you're talking, where you're supposed to be there talking to other people. I think it's perfectly appropriate in school settings where you're going to have a discussion about something and you're all supposed to be present to say, park your I also think summer camps would be quite legitimate to say this is a camping experience where we are learning about being present in physically with one another and being outdoors.

And the smartphone is a distraction from that. So no smartphones during camping period. I think those are all legitimate things to do. To do but taking a smartphone away from a child of any age is taking away the most valuable Tool we have in our modern society. 

Ben: Yeah, that makes a lot of sense give them rules and principles you know the advice that you'd want to give anyone including ourselves but don't take away don't take away the actual tool.

Your book free to learn I think it's over a decade old. I was wondering in those years or even from looking all the way back. Do you still feel the core ideas are as important now as ever? I get this feeling as yes. And has anything changed over that time when you would put more emphasis on something now than you would have done previously?

Have you changed your mind about anything? 

Peter: I haven't changed my mind about any of it. The, As I've explained, if anything, the school system has become worse than what I was describing there, and I might have, if I were to do a revision of the book, I might put more emphasis on the harm of of schooling as we do it now, and especially of, especially since Common Core.

Common Core was just beginning to come into effect at that time, and so I didn't really have that data. But on all the other things things have gotten worse. I would have also, however, which I didn't do in that book, talked about the, I did in that book say that, people who are worried about about the internet and online activity, I did say this has been, if anything, the saving grace rather than the cause of the problem.

I would even emphasize that now more than I did that now that I have really looked at the data showing. That things improved, meant improved for kids during this, that decade between the time that we had, we began that most kids now had online access and the time when common core took effect, we had actually improvement in children's mental health.

I didn't talk about that at all in free to learn. That'll be a big topic in my next book. One of a number of big topics in my next book. 

Ben: Yeah, I think we're all very quick to jump on risks, but not so much on the opportunities, which are more slow moving. I guess in terms of your writing as well, you wrote one of the first psychology textbooks.

I looked up, I think the first edition was maybe around 1991 and you introduced concepts of, evolutionary or evolutionary psychology of the time. And I was just thinking about the influence that had on also your work on hunter gatherer societies and learning. And I think you're still updating or maybe that textbook is being updated, but I was wondering over that period of time, what do you think has changed in core psychology ideas?

And I don't know, why were we so late to thinking about evolutionary psychology? And do you think it's still influential in our thinking today? 

Peter: That's a good question. So at the time, so when I was, it would have really been in the 1980s that I was writing the first edition of the textbook.

And you're right, I think it probably came out in 1991. I subsequently revised it for six more editions over many years. And then the book was taken over by somebody else to revise who did two more editions of it. So it's currently in its eighth edition. It's been around for a long time. But at the time that I was writing it the idea of bringing an evolutionary approach to psychology, there was a lot of stigma about that idea.

There were a lot of negativity about it. I think that Nazi Germany put in everybody's minds a bad taste. about thinking about human beings from a genetic biological perspective, because in some sense that was the essential rationale of Nazism. And it was also an argument. It was an argument. There were arguments at that time based on kind of pseudo evolutionary thinking, pseudo biological thinking about racial superiority of whites over blacks, about the superiority of males over females.

There was a kind of There was a kind of general and some of the books from an evolutionary perspective at that time fed into that belief. So the kind of belief that distinctions between men and women, for example, are biologically ingrained and men are going to be dominant and women are meant to be mothers and domestic.

These kinds of. Things graded quite understandably on people. And so it gave the whole idea of looking at human behavior, talking about it in terms of evolved tendencies, gave it a bad name. And feminism was coming into its core, and the feminists at that time were adamantly opposed to biological theories about human beings, at least some of them were.

I had the advantage, and I think this was very clever on the part of the publishing company, of assigning an editor to me, who was not only a very experienced editor, but also was an ardent feminist. And I had to, in order to, in order I made it a goal. Anything that go, went into the book I had the right.

They were very clear. I could put whatever I wanted in the book. The editor was there really for, to help me. And I took that quite literally. I said to myself, if I can't, convince Phyllis, my editor, that this is real science, that this is legitimate, that this is, and that this is not something that's harming women then it's okay to go in.

And I think the book came out far better because I took that on. I didn't want to make the mistake of presenting Things that were biases that were came from a particular way of thinking. So this was also a time when really the evolutionary approach was just beginning. And so my textbook, my introductory psychology textbook was the first introductory psychology book really to bring an evolutionary perspective to bear in a real way.

Into the book and run it all the way through the book. I think it helped change psychology I think a lot of people who then became professors of psychology had learned about psychology as freshmen in with my book And I think it played a role not necessarily the major role, but it played a role in the evolution of psychology as a science to be more accepting of an evolutionary perspective about human behavior 

Ben: That's brilliant.

And it helped you retire or semi retire in your in your fifties. I say semi retire because you went on to do tons of other stuff as as well. I'd be interested perhaps a couple of things is for those who might be thinking about retirement, you seem to really enjoyed it and you've been doing lots of things.

What advice do you or thoughts do you have about retirement? People using their leisure time. I think you put a survey out also on your sub stack. I very much recommend listeners to check out the sub stack. But yeah what do you think people should be doing with their leisure time? And should we be looking to retire earlier?

Perhaps not all of us have got royalties from a textbook to rely on. But this thinking about how you've enjoyed retirement and what to do with our time. 

Peter: Yes. For me, it was a very wise decision. I, I did it for several reasons. I was far from typical retirement age. Professors tend to stay on forever.

Sometimes the administration wants to get rid of them and it's hard to get rid of them when you've got tenure, but some I was far from retirement age from typical retirement age, but I had already been teaching for 30 years. I had been chair of the department for a small portion of that time.

I was often involved in administrative responsibilities and I was And as much as I enjoyed some aspects of teaching, there were, as you might guess from my book, Free to Learn, there were other aspects of teaching and grading and so on that I was beginning to not enjoy and not really believe in any longer.

And I, and I certainly wasn't interested in becoming a dean or working on more administrative ways at the university. And I did, because the book made enough money I was set enough for retirement. I didn't have to worry about giving, maintaining that salary. And also, frankly, the university changed a little bit.

The the, I think people, I think that the spirit of kind of collegialism changed and this was not just at Boston College. This was everywhere. The, it became more driven by, universities wanted everybody to get grants and to get grants, you needed to publish a certain amount of research and people began to publish research just for the sake of publishing research to get grants.

And no longer were people spending, one of the great, leisure things about being a professor is just, like having long lunches with your colleagues and talking about ideas and people weren't doing that anymore. Here's the downside of the computer. They were eating their lunch in front of their computer, right?

Catching up on their email, maybe communicating with their colleagues on the other side of the world, whether rather than their colleagues down the hall. And so there was less of a kind of collegial environment that I had always enjoyed at Boston College. So that was another reason. And then finally, this is a personal thing, but my first wife died around that time.

And I began to realize life doesn't go on forever. And I really want to be sure that I'm spending every day doing what I most want to do and not wasting time doing things that I think are not. near the top of my list of what I want to do. And among other things I wanted to start writing for the general public I wanted to do.

And the research I had in mind doing didn't require that I be in an institutional setting. Although I could have continued to do it at Boston college if I needed to do it in an institutional setting. So all of that played into it. And And it was a great decision for me. What I can say, and I've told people repeatedly every day I wake up and say, whatever I do today, it's because I want to do it.

There's nothing that I have to do except like maybe wash yesterday's dishes. But the but in terms of the great bulk of my time, it's, it is in a certain definition play because it's my choice to do it. Or not to do it. I have, as a consequence, been able to do much more research much more writing than I could when I was when I was a full time, full professor at Boston College.

And I also have time for creating a great garden, for bicycling. I'm big into bicycling, kayaking, cross country skiing. I'm 80 years old and I think that the fact that I retired when I was in my 50s, which gave me time to, For leisure time and X and doing things outdoors that I enjoy doing. And I think it's been great for my health.

So it was a great decision for me. Now. I can't tell other people that it would be a great decision for them. But I can say if you're thinking of it and if you, if there are things you would like to do that, you don't have time to do it. And if you can afford to retire. Retiring early, I think, is a great idea.

That sounds excellent. There are some people who retire and they don't know what to do. 

Ben: You picked up on your own thing in your life. I I followed someone called Bernie DeKoven, who was someone who was all into, I guess we call it adult play, but it isn't. Like that, it's what, what you allude to, it's about independence, it's about agency, it's about fun, it's not about competitiveness, play, which you might think about, but all this playfulness and that comes into a lot of, I think, creativity and artwork.

I was thinking then if you had anything you would have said to perhaps your younger self, I don't know, your 16 year old self or your 21 year old self, or maybe speaking to a 16 year old today with all of this life experience that you have is there anything you would have particularly Advised your younger self.

It sounds like you know retire as early as you can sounds like a good piece of advice Or make sure like you say make sure every day you're trying to do things that you really want to do is there anything you would have thought 

Peter: you know, that's a really good question. I think that it's hard when somebody is fairly happy with their life which I am, it's hard to say that I would have changed something when I was younger, because if I had changed something when I was younger, I might not be who I am now.

So it's a little hard to say that. It's a little hard to say that for sure. I do think that, I do think that I do think that, like many people, throughout my younger years, I was too concerned about other people's judgments. And I think I restrained myself in a lot of ways. I think I'm not the only person who does that by any means.

We're all that way. I tend to be a little bit more that way than many other people. And I think that It was maybe too important to me that people like me all the time. And I think that was constraining on my life. I think I've gradually somewhat overcome that with time. But I think that, I think what I would say to young people today, but it's a different world today than the one I grew up in, is that is don't worry so much.

About school . Don't worry so much about that, because now I've been studying the, I've been studying now people who don't go to school who are self involved in self-directed education, either as homeschoolers following the following, the method of unschooling where they're pursuing their own interests or going to a school.

Like the school, my son went to Bury Valley. where you can follow your, and I see they're doing very well in life and they're discovering their passions. They're going into things that they enjoy. I think if I had opportunities like that, it might have, I might've gotten into what I ultimately got into quicker.

I went through a conventional school. I went to graduate school not really knowing what I wanted to do. I went to graduate school primarily as an alternative to going to Vietnam. I, and at that time you could still get a student deferment. And then by the time that was no longer case, I was married and had a child and had a deferment for that reason.

I didn't go into, I didn't go on to graduate school because I had a particular intellectual passion. I hadn't really developed an intellectual passion at that point. I was interested in a lot of things, but I wasn't passionate about them. And I ended up being a brain researcher, studying the brains of rats and mice and bindings of hormones.

And I did competent work. And I found it somewhat interesting but it wasn't passionate for me and I never was fully into it. I never felt it was really all that important. It wasn't until much later after I was already a professor at Boston College doing that kind of work that I then got interested in child development and that really was interesting to me.

Now the roots of that interest came were really present long before, but I never followed those roots of that interest. I followed what seemed to be a more conventional, safe path of brain research. I I got into a very, happened to who knows why into a fair, very selective university working with Top people who are doing brain research, and I felt boy, I really achieved that, and it was more like, because I could do it, I had to do it, with as opposed to, this is really what I want to do.

And so I think that, this is almost sounds trite because people say it at graduation speeches all the time, follow your passion. But to follow your passions, you have to discover what they are, which means you've got to have time to play and explore. And I, and although I had much more time than most kids have today, I wish I had even more time.

For that and had the opportunity To then by the time I was of college age to really know what it was I wanted in life and would have pursued it in a more direct fashion got into it earlier on 

Ben: That sounds like excellent advice. Don't worry too much about school and don't worry about too much about what other people think as long as you get on with it, that's great.

Okay coming to our last. Couple of questions then You what I had is around your own creative process, you write quite prolifically on your sub stack. You used to keep a blog kind of blog posts before you've also done research. Are you a sort of have to write two or three hours?

a day? Do you write more morning or night? Does it just come to you? You obviously spend a lot of time outdoors as well so you have all of these activities I guess does your walking activity outdoors spark the thoughts that you're having and where do your ideas come from? I just, everyone seems to have different creative processes, so I'd be very interested in how yours come about and how your writing in active day is.

Peter: Yeah, I think that so because my it would be different if I were writing fiction. Sometimes I wish I were writing fiction I could just make stuff up But since I am writing I'm trying to write I'm trying to present to people What we know about? or at least what we have good reasons to believe because of research evidence.

So I spend a lot, I spend more time reading research and doing library research than I do in actual writing, sitting down and writing. So I spend a lot of time in front of my computer. I used to spend a lot of time in the library. Now, fortunately, I can sit in front of my computer and get all the information that way, download articles from the library or from the internet.

So I spend a lot of time doing library research. I spend a certain amount of time doing still empirical research, but it's empirical research that doesn't require being in a laboratory survey research and so on. And but I also do spend writing. Interestingly has never been easy for me and maybe that's why I'm attracted to it.

Who knows when I was in school, I always got A's in math. Math was simple for me, but I never really was that interested in math. Writing was more of a challenge. Reading was more of a challenge. I was a late reader, and here I am, a life of mostly reading and writing. The and it's still a challenge.

I'm writing is and I have to go over and over. I try to make it look in my blog posts and and substack posts. I try to make it look as if it's coming easy and spontaneous, but that's the result of a lot of going over and over for the most part. So the other thing that I think helps in terms of the creative aspect is taking time off from it.

So when I'm out bicycling, which I spend at least three hours on average every day outside, is that an exaggeration? I don't think so. If I were really to average it out at least two hours every day outdoors. I have a habit of going for a 15 mile bicycle ride every morning as part of my routine. When I'm on my bicycle or when I'm kayaking or doing cross country skiing whenever we have snow on the ground in the winter, these kind of rhythmic activities in my mind is very free.

I very often come up with with ideas that hadn't come to me before. I, it's like the back of my mind, even though I'm not consciously thinking about it, is working on this and suddenly this new insight. sprouts into my mind. This is not unique for me. There's actually research showing that people have these kinds of insights when they have been working on some problem to be solved, some general area, and now they take a break from it.

And then suddenly some insight comes to them about what they had been working on before. I think the brain, I think there is a sense in which the unconscious mind continues to work on the things that your conscious mind had been working on before. And it's often in those instances that you come up with what we call insights, come up with a novel way of looking at what you have just been struggling with consciously before.

And so I think that's Part of it I really I really think that it, I believe this is part of the way the human mind works, that everybody who's involved, whether you're in, whether you're a writer, whether it's a fiction writer, whether you're a scientist, if you're involved in things that involve You know, a mental process that involves some sense of creativity combined with knowledge that breaks from what you're doing are really important and the kind of break that's best, at least for me, and I would guess for other people, is the kind of break where You're taking a break.

You're doing something that's refreshing and your body is involved in it, but your mind is not focused on that new thing. Your mind is running free. You're enjoying the scenery. You're enjoying the snow. You're enjoying the physical activity, but your mind is not. consciously occupied in a focused way on some new issue so that, so for example, playing chess would not be a good break for me to come up with insights about my writing, whereas bicycle riding would be a good place for that to happen.

Ben: Yeah, that sounds excellent. I recall reading, there's a Japanese author Murakami talked about it, running and thoughts, and I remember the, probably apocryphal, but the little anecdote, I think, is it Archimedes about his eureka, eureka moment in a bath, or it does stretch back. Yes 

Okay, great.

So final kind of double question, maybe for you one was, did you want to highlight any current projects that you're working on? So we have the Substack blog and your, you, seems to be some ideas writing in your book. And then maybe you want to give us any parting advice particularly I guess to parents and family about what your kind of work says for them.

So it maybe touches on your current projects, but current projects and any final parenting advice. 

Peter: So one, one current project I'm working on is what I'm, what I've been calling the Pediatrics Initiative. I'm, I've I've come to the belief that if the world is going to change on the things that I think they should change on, if parents are going to come to realize that their children need more free play and.

and and freedom in general outdoor freedom, independent activities. They have to hear it from their pediatricians. Pediatric, parents listen to their kids pediatricians and they visit them, at least once a year, all the way sometimes into the teenage years. And my wife initially convinced me of this.

She's an OBGYN and and so I've been working with the, with people at the National Institute for Play, which I've become involved with on developing information for pediatricians about the value of play, which they can then, in their well child visits with, clients, they can then talk about this value of play and even prescribe play to the kids with the parents permission standing there.

And so that's something I'm working on. We've developed a nice brochure to give out. If there are any pediatricians in your, and you're listening to the podcast get in touch with the National Institute for Play and you can get some of this material. We're also sharing this with psychologists who, psychiatrists and psychologists who work with.

Parents were sharing it with schools. I've been working with for some time with the non profit organization, Let Grow, which I was one of the founders with a lot along with Lenore Skenazy and Jonathan Haidt years ago bringing more play into schools. And we're involved with that. I designed a research study looking at the effects of these interventions, where children have an hour of absolute free play at school, age mixed play, and what consequences does this have for the kids and for the school climate, and so on.

I've been, that's some, so those are a couple research projects I'm involved in. And as I mentioned, I'm working on a new book. My working title for the book is Restoring Childhood. I believe that over time we've been gradually taking what is natural childhood away from children. And we need, if we're going to have healthy children, we need to bring childhood back to them.

And so that's what the book is about primarily.


Ben: Last question would be on any parenting advice or advice for families it sounds like that's the whole theme of our podcast is essentially bringing play back to children not being not being so worried, giving them more agency but any final advice maybe as to the principles there and how we can actually put that into action.

Peter: Let me, I could go on for two hours talking about that, but let me say that if I were to make one suggestion that, that isn't exactly what I've already said, as we've talked so far, is that, If you're a parent, it would be a good idea to ask your child this. So what is it that you might like to do that you haven't done before that might be might even be a little bit frightening to you, but you would really like to do it?

And then to have a talk, discussion with that child, with your child about that. And then think about whether you would let your child do that. So maybe your child, so this is a way of counteracting our tendency to restrict our children's activities. This is a way of saying, not imposing, not telling the child to do this or that, but finding out what the child would like to do.

that the child currently isn't doing, maybe because you haven't allowed a child to do it, maybe because the child just assumes you wouldn't allow them to do it, maybe because the child has been over, so overprotected that they haven't even thought about what they really might want to do. But you're raising that question, and Maybe even make a list of things he would like to do.

Part of the and so this is actually something that we are also doing through schools, where teachers are Asking that question. And then they tell the, then they tell the child you have to negotiate with your parents about doing what it is you want to do. And then you can report back to the school class.

We call this the let grow intervention is one of our interventions in schools and it works brilliantly, but it also could work at the. parent level, doesn't have to be a teacher, the parent who says my child really maybe needs more adventures that they're not getting. Let me talk to my child about this, what they would like to do, and then let me think about whether I feel comfortable with them doing it or not.

And maybe it could be even a whole list of things. There's a lot of evidence that this is how children build courage by doing things that they might be a little afraid of and realizing they can do it. And it's also how parents build trust in their kids by realizing, seeing that their parents, that the kids do these things.

And that it makes them happier and makes them stronger to do these things. Why not? One of the things that reinforces this, we did another little research project that I was involved in during the period of lockdown during COVID was a survey of many families about how they were adapting to this lockdown period when they weren't going to school, they were shut at home, all these extracurricular activities that kids were involved in were no longer being held.

And how were, what were kids doing? And we asked both the kids and parents several thousand over the course of two months that we surveyed. And what we learned is that at first the kids were quite bored, they didn't know what to do. But they mostly learned, they mostly figured out interesting things to do.

And parents were surprised that many of the kids wanted to do things that the parent never would have believed. Cook a meal, learn how to cook because here they were at home and they, and the parents were delighted in some cases to with what the kids came up with on their own. And in, in this let grow project that I've just described, sometimes kids say, sometimes they say, I really want to be able to ride my bicycle by myself to my friend's house, those kinds of things, which I would expect they would say, but sometimes they say things like, I would like to.

Cook a meal. I would like to know how to bake a pie. I would like to, and to then be able to do it by myself. Some of these things that we almost used to take for granted, of course kids would learn to do that. We'd want them to learn to do that. Some of these are things that parents are actually not providing their kids the opportunity to do, and they may not even realize the kids want to do it.

So that question of what, At talking with your kids about what they would really like to do that is and what they would like to, maybe they would need some help at the beginning, but ultimately to be able to do it independently. 

Ben: That sounds excellent advice. And what would you like to do? And it sounds to me like it should extend definitely to children, but maybe to all of us, that should be a question we should.

Peter: That's a really good point. 

Ben: And maybe and that's the thing it's like actually what's relevant for children is actually normally relevant for everyone or vice versa and maybe more people will end up wanting to do solo travel perhaps as young as 12, but maybe for all of us, but that sounds excellent advice to question.

What is it? We would really like to do so. With that Peter Gray. Thank you very much. 

Peter: Thank you very much. It's been fun.


In Podcast, Life, Science, Arts Tags Peter Gray, Education, parenting, play, psychology

Jade O'Brien: from stockbroker to teacher, being a woman in finance, schools and teaching | Podcast

February 2, 2023 Ben Yeoh

Jade O’Brien was a stock broker (equity sales)  for over 7 years. She then retrained as a teacher and has taught in both the state sector and the private sector in the UK.

Jade used to pitch me stock ideas and speak about the investment world. I was very curious on why she decided to change careers to become a teacher.

We chat about what drove Jade to the world of finance. What she viewed as the pros and cons, and what it is like as a woman in a male dominated world and advice she has.

Jade outlines her experience of finance which has many positives as well as challenges, and what might have changed over the decade. 

(Ben) So what would you say to women wanting to make it in the city or in financial services? 

Do it. Give it a go. I mean, I'm speaking for myself here and I have read that the imposter syndrome feeling is very common within women in finance. But then again, I think, well maybe that imposter syndrome is for everyone in finance but men can hide it better. So I would say do it. Everybody feels insecure and doesn't really know what's going on at times. To have the confidence to go for it and also to not necessarily feel like you need to follow my path of giving up finance and becoming a teacher. I don't think that's something you need to do if you are genuinely interested in finance and you want to get to the top. I think it's definitely possible.

We discuss the factors that made Jade change her jobs. How we might think about death and how she found teacher training.

We chat on how we might “value” teaching and why it’s hard to rate teachers. Why some people ask for more homework, and others ask for less homework and how both views can have merit. 

We address: 

  • The importance of mentors 

  • the funding situation in UK state supported schools

  • A glimpse of teacher training

  • Differences between state and private schools in the UK 

  • Why she thinks teacher quality in both state and private settings are similar

  • Why teaching class can feel private

  • Views on SEN (special education) policy

  • Streaming (where it might work, where it might fail and why she changed her mind) 

  • What Jade’s perfect class size is, and why

  • Her views on uniforms

  • School start times 

  • School food

  • Exercise 

  • The importance of gratitude

This was an amazing long form conversation addressing many of the debates within education today.

Listen below (or wherever you listen to pods) or on video (above or on YouTube) and the transcript is below.

PODCAST INFO

  • Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3gJTSuo

  • Spotify: https://sptfy.com/benyeoh

  • Anchor: https://anchor.fm/benjamin-yeoh


Transcript, Ben Yeoh and Jade O’Brien in conversation

(Note only lightly edited)

Ben

Hey everyone. I'm super excited to be speaking to Jade O'Brien. Jade was in Asian equity sales or stockbroking for many years before retraining as a teacher. Jade, welcome.

Jade Thank you.

Ben (00:17):

So you worked for over seven years in equity sales for investment banks where you pitched and discussed investment ideas for Asian companies to asset managers like myself. You then retrained as a teacher and have been teaching at London Primary Schools. I'd love to know what influenced your decision, perhaps first of all, to go into financial services and then the pivot into retraining as a teacher.

Jade (00:44):

Yeah, sure. I think originally to go into financial services, essentially it was money driven. It wasn't any particular interest in finance or the financial markets. I'm sure that is an interest for a lot of people but it did not drive me. It was more, “What job can I get that I can get paid very well for as quick as I can for?” which I don't mind putting in a lot of effort. I didn't mind back then putting in a lot of hours. I had been at Oxford where I think everyone was hugely driven and I felt like I needed to prove myself and I was judging myself on how much I was able to earn as quickly as I could. So I think that was the main reason why I went into it. Also, I really liked the structure. I was I am still quite institutionalized that I'd been at school and you kind of got those A grades at school and you were doing the tests, and then you went up a year and then you went to university, and then it suddenly felt like there was just this. The whole world was open to you which a lot of people embrace and love. For me, that was terrifying. I wanted to stay on a path and I wanted to be on that path and go as quickly down that path as I could and to the best of my ability.

Ben (02:28):

So it wasn't so much a treadmill, or it was a sort of a treadmill but one which felt very comfortable?

Jade (02:33):

Yeah. So even though it seemed like it was a hard route being an analyst in an investment bank, to me, it was actually an easy route because I had all the credentials to get there. There was this really well-trodden path of you're an analyst, then you become an associate, then you become a vice president, then you become an MD. I felt like it was a set structure for me to follow which made me feel quite comfortable and I didn't mind working hard for that. I knew it would be hard work, but that wasn't something I was scared of. What I was scared of was actually not having structure, not having a path, and not feeling like every day was moving me forward.

Ben (03:27):

So that's 12 to 14 hour days and I guess it was an easy decision for you to make then and you didn't feel any qualms about it. It was like, "Oh, this is a next comfortable step. Can work really hard, then I work really hard and I should get rewarded."

Jade (03:41):

Yeah. I felt like I was monetarily rewarded for working hard. I'd be waking up at about 5:00 AM every morning and I would leave the office around 6:00 PM, but then after that I would frequently have client dinners and various other things I'd have to be doing afterwards on the client side. Or if I was on a business trip as I frequently would, I'd be traveling in the evenings or flying, so...

Ben (04:18):

And traveling on weekends and all of that. I always say that they think traveling for an investment bank seems really glamorous, but it really isn't. You either see a conference room, hotels-- I was in Barcelona recently. I saw nothing of Barcelona except the conference. So it feels doubly bad. But what then changed in your thinking around financial services for seven/ eight years and then wanting to retrain? Did something change or what happened?

Jade (04:48):

I never really enjoyed the finance side of my job because ultimately as I mentioned before, I didn't have a deep interest in the markets. I always felt really jealous of my colleagues that were obsessed with the stock market. They really wanted to talk about the next big thing whereas for me, it was more around the sales side and the client acquisition side that actually interested me more. I realized I got to a point in my career-- got to vice president, and I realized that actually to progress further in my career and get to MD and then even further than that head of a region, I felt like it would take an exponential amount of effort to get there when I didn't have a fundamental drive and interest in financial markets because up until then, I was able to just do the background reading and put in so much effort around everything else that it didn't really matter as long as I knew what was going on. Whereas I needed to really have an interest and really put the extra hours in.

I wasn't really willing to do that. So it was a few things. I think that was a sort of slow burn for me over the course of seven years until the eventual realization. Another catalyst was also my mom died and the company I was working for was actually-- they were very good. They allowed me to work from the Hong Kong office so I could be closer to my mom in her last few weeks in Hong Kong. I really appreciated that. But it also made me realize-- She was always really proud of me and proud of how much she felt I'd achieved in my career and whatever. But I knew ultimately she really wanted me to be happy. I think I was to a certain extent, but I think I just realized I didn't want to wake up every day and not enjoy what I was doing and it got to a point where the job wasn't exciting to me anymore. All the points that I really enjoyed like meeting new clients, calling people up, going to new places no longer had the same appeal to me. I'd been there and I'd done that. I realized I wanted to wake up every morning and be really interested in what I was doing and feel like I was making a difference as well.

Ben (07:43):

So a combination of slow burn or not fully enjoying financial markets and a kind of pivot with the family death; having to reassess. I think that's one of the things that I do really interested in markets. I’m really fascinated by companies as well as so many other things like theater and all of that which keeps me in the job. I understand also the client relationship part is actually remarkably important that particularly on the investment banking side, servicing clients, giving them the research they want and things, even if you don't deeply understand markets or whatever. As long as you're giving clients what they need, they can take you so far. In fact, probably the first 10 years of a career can easily be built on really good client service. We met at an investment conference. I think it was a really busy one and you sat at a table where there was one spare seat and there were virtually no other spare seats. So it was one of those serendipitous moments.

I judged that conference like most others I go to was 70% male which seems typical to me. I was wondering, did you feel the world of finance was welcoming to you as a woman? Obviously you're not as much of an outsider as in a lot of Oxbridge elites things there and you understood the system and the process. I guess I hear stories on both sides. Some women don't feel that there's much of a difference. It's a kind of work hard, play hard type of thing where some women do find it as unfriendly and embarrassed aspects. I'd be interested which side of that fence you fall on?

Jade (09:24):

I would say it's a mix for me. You're definitely outnumbered working in finance and I would consider myself quite a girl’s girl; most of my friends are female. I think I would have a lot more in common with a lot of people there if there were more females which obviously makes your job and your daily life more enjoyable if you're surrounded by people you have things in common with. I would say as a junior, I was welcomed into finance. I think also predominantly because I worked in sales and to be a young female in sales that's willing to work hard, I don't think it was that difficult actually being a woman on the trading floor. Actually, specifically within stockbroking, if I looked around the trading floor there were lots of younger females or more junior females I should say. But I think as my time went, the ranks do thin very quickly. When women have families, I think the retention is very difficult within investment banks because of the hours and relative inflexibility within that role. So I think I felt less welcome as I became more senior because I felt there also the path ended for me. There were fewer role models for me within the financial world.

Ben (11:05):

Yeah. And I guess that's reflected in legal accounting, private equity. A lot of the structured-- I guess they're hierarchical, but it's really difficult for them to retain even though the messaging, I think from all of those industries is that they would like to. The structure doesn't make it easy. It always helps, I think, when you have mentors or people who've done it and the generation of women who've done it. The stories I hear often that they had to make some sort of sacrifices to do that. That's not necessarily the message you want to hear; that you will have to sacrifice X, Y, and Z which you might not want to, to reach those MD and above levels as opposed to men who I think in general, at least in those industries, don't seem to have had to sacrifice as much or at least in the same type of way.

Jade (11:55):

Yeah. I mean, I would also say that this was 10 years ago when I first joined finance. I do following the news and watching the Me Too movement unroll. Since then, we've had a global pandemic. I hope that females within finance feel differently. I get the impression that I think it is quite a different world now and I definitely felt while I was there that the world of finance was changing. There were so many parts of it that were changing. For example, the client relationships I had and how we were expected to be with our clients, how much we were allowed to spend on our clients, how much our clients were allowed to accept from us in terms of dinners and lunches. And that changes how you do sales. But also, I think the world in how women were viewed was also changing quite quickly while I was working there.

Ben (13:04):

Do you think hybrid or work from home is going to be more female friendly? At first, I thought it really was because you could balance family commitments and things. Then I noted that over pandemic a lot of domestic duties still seem to fall on women's shoulders more than men, even when both were at home for various reasons; structural or others. But it's only anecdotal and it does seem to have helped, but maybe not as much as perhaps people had wished for. Also, I don't think we've settled down into how that balance is going to be. A lot of companies are still trying to say, "Oh, are we back to the office? Are we remote? Are we hybrid?" for that. Do you have an impression it's going to help? Do you think it would?

Jade (13:52):

I'm not sure because I feel-- I mean, as you sort of touched on that actually the domestic expectation on women was still the same. So it just means that women are expected to do two jobs rather than one. Rather than actually try and juggle one job, they're expected to juggle two. I'm not sure because I haven't really been in that situation so I couldn't really comment. When I was working in finance I was largely living on my own.

Ben (14:32):

Fair enough. So what would you say to women wanting to make it in the city or in financial services? Any parting thoughts for them?

Jade (14:41):

Do it. Give it a go. I mean, I'm speaking for myself here and I have read that the imposter syndrome feeling is very common within women in finance. But then again, I think, well maybe that imposter syndrome is for everyone in finance but men can hide it better. So I would say do it. Everybody feels insecure and doesn't really know what's going on at times. To have the confidence to go for it and also to not necessarily feel like you need to follow my path of giving up finance and becoming a teacher. I don't think that's something you need to do if you are genuinely interested in finance and you want to get to the top. I think it's definitely possible.

Ben (15:39):

Yeah, for sure. It's funny, I don't feel any imposter syndrome around markets or investment. But as you know, I perform and do theater stuff and I often feel like-- For instance, I always say that I'm not a performer yet later on this month, if this is January, 2023, I'm going to be getting up and performing and that definitely doesn't feel right. So I think you are correct that everyone has insecurities around something. I guess you mentioned that if financial services are really for you, you should go for it. Do you think there's anything really underrated or people misunderstand around what stock breaking or equity sales might be like that you would sort of say, "Oh, this was really good or misunderstood?"

Jade (16:19):

It's nothing like The Wolf of Wall Street, I will say that, or in fact I read Liar's Poker before I became a stockbroker and it's nothing like Liar's Poker either. It's not the eighties anymore.

Ben (16:35):

Things have moved on.

Jade (16:36):

Things have definitely moved on since then. I think that is probably a huge misconception. As soon as I tell anyone I was a stockbroker, Wolf of Wall Street will always be the first question they ask me of, "Is it the same or is it similar or what was similar about it?"

Ben (16:56):

That's fair enough. I find it's the same. Actually in both my hats, I can't describe to non-theater people what really working on a play is or backstage or how it is. For my theater friends, they can never really understand the city or say, "Well, I help invest people's pensions." And people are like, "Well, what does that really mean? How does that work?" It is one of those mysterious things until you try it out.

Jade (17:19):

I think-- although going back to your original question of what I think is underrated within finance, I would say that it is a very diverse mix of people. It's very culturally diverse and I think having a job in finance-- specifically within the stock market is actually... Finance is sort of that common language that you could travel to the big financial centers and you could get a job there and you could work there and you can experience life. A lot of people that worked in finance have worked in lots of different large cities which is a huge perk of that job. I don't think you could say the same for many other roles. Even if you think about law, you are still quite specific to a region. Even teaching or medicine, I would still have to retrain to a certain point. I think that's quite underrated within finance; to be able to have that opportunity.

Ben (18:27):

Yeah. I never thought about that and I think that's really good observation. I think of myself whether on the asset management side or on the stockbroking side and in any of the major cities, even maybe Tokyo, although there'd be a language issue. But certainly Hong Kong, India, Paris, New York, San Francisco, Boston, London, you could do all of those. English is probably the lingua franca and then numbers, the stock market, and that type of thing. So it is very transferrable. That makes me think of another thing which is although I guess all industries have a level of social politics because we are human and social creatures, there is a reasonable correlation between working really hard and doing really well in the sense of that it is probably more meritocratic than some other industries I've looked at where obviously connections and network are always the thing and I think they're thing in all human walks in life. But I see people who haven't come into the city with connection who work really hard and do well. I think that's attractive to some people as well.

Jade (19:37):

Yeah, I think it's quite performance based which is nice. I mean, if I'm comparing it to my job in teaching, if I really wanted to excel as a teacher, I would be hard pressed to really find good performance indicators to show somebody that I was an excellent teacher versus a good teacher. Whereas I think working as a stockbroker, I could very easily find those KPIs to show to my boss or to show to anyone.

Ben (20:09):

Can you even tell the difference between a good teacher and an average teacher looking in on the outside? So your class could probably tell and maybe parents of your class might be able to tell. Excellent to good is also quite an interesting comparison, but good versus average; is that hard?

Jade (20:30):

Hard to tell for a teacher. It depends because it depends on what you class as a good teacher.

Ben (20:41):

Yeah, what do you value?

Jade (20:42):

Yeah, like what do you value in a teacher? Is it the connection they have with their class? Is it how much their class loves them? Is it the Maths results you're getting? Is it how creative their English work is? Is it how happy they are? Is it how well you cater for the diverse needs of the class? Maybe you are really good at supporting the students that need more support and maybe have dyslexia and that, but maybe you are not excelling the highest 2% or 10% of your class. Yeah, it really depends then, what about your relationship with the parents? How do the parents then see you? I don't think it necessarily correlates to how much the class likes you or the results you're getting as a teacher. That could just be your sales pitch to the parents and your outward interactions.

Ben (21:47):

There's lots of things there that you could do city speak almost optimized for. So grades, pupil happiness, those who need extra support, those who are in the top 2%. I got the impression though that you're saying that you can't quite optimize for everything; that there was a trade off with the resources that teachers have.

Jade (22:08):

Absolutely. I mean, even to the point where-- Also, I think sometimes I'm asked contradicting things. So for example, people have different parents and teachers in schools have different views on homework. So on one side a parent asking me for more homework for their child, and on the other end another parent saying, "You give them too much homework, I want them to be able to play." Both are really quite reasonable views. To be an excellent teacher I guess it would be managing that conversation with the parents. But ultimately, there's not one view or one thing that I could do that would make both parents a hundred percent happy

Ben (22:58):

They maybe end up both a hundred percent unhappy; probably in the middle. I flip-flop actually. So I used to think homework was okay or I never had a problem with it. I now think on average-- although there's a lot of exceptions that it's probably overrated for most people. Or at least homework how it's done in this country for things as opposed to long-term projects or something like that which would be a form of homework. But I would prefer something like rather than a little bit of rote something every night, I would say, “Well, over half term compose a long poem like Beowulf or something;” some ongoing project I would prefer but that's something more recent. 

So you retrained as a teacher-- so a year training, although this was over the pandemic so it was a little bit unusual and probably really tricky. But in general do you think teacher training is good? How is the provision? What's it like? Or I guess this is a special circumstance so you can only speak from your point of view. I guess this because there's a couple of schools that thought of this. You always hear like, "Oh, there isn't enough investment in teachers or the training isn't that adequate for that type of thing" which is probably the predominant story that I hear. But I hear some other things so I'd be interested. What was it like for you and then going into the state system after that?

Jade (24:28):

I would say-- because I did my PGC during Covid so I actually only got about half of it done before Covid hit. Then it was mainly online learning. But even then, I have to say the university that I was at didn't really give a proper provision for that book learning side. Essentially they gave us a reading list which is just not the same as being in class and watching teachers have to juggle the class and try and create their lesson plans and things like that. So the teacher training, a lot of it is of a practical element. I would say at least half of it is actually sitting in a classroom observing, and then over the course of-- You'll be assigned a school or you'll be assigned a few different schools over the course of your PGC. But I was actually only assigned two schools because we only managed to get through half of it. The structure is that you would observe your class teacher and then towards the end of your six week placement, by the final week, you are essentially teaching 90% of the lessons. The teacher is basically your mentor and would be giving you feedback and so you can sort of watch best practice. So it really depends on the class teacher that you get, that you are learning from because a huge amount of your time and your learning is coming from that one teacher.

Ben (26:08):

So it's like a mentor apprenticeship type of model?

Jade (26:11):

Yeah, correct. In my instance anyway, the teacher that I was with was really organized. She was great. I'm really appreciative of her allowing me to be in her class. It's a really personal experience to let somebody into your classroom actually because you give a lot of yourself as a teacher. Every day you need to deal with a lot of tricky circumstances and it is just very personal. You have a very personal relationship with your students and you are sometimes teaching on the fly, answering questions on the fly, and learning yourself as you're teaching new topics. That it is quite personal having someone in the classroom with you all the time. But I did only really see one teacher teaching so I would've loved to-- I think I would be a much more rounded teacher if I was able to observe more classes. I did try and make the effort when I became a class teacher after that to try and observe other teachers teaching, but it's really difficult to find that time.

Ben (27:24):

And I guess it's not the same. It's like being able to apprentice with other mentors or not even mentors; it's the same within now. I mean, I'm very experienced and done various things, but I still learn from other really experienced people different ways of doing things, different ways of handling things which just all add to it. But when you are full-time teaching, the opportunity to do that I guess is much more limited.

Jade (27:45):

Yeah. It's also quite a lot of pressure to ask a teacher to observe their lesson because they feel like they need to perform a perfect lesson and to have really prepped and made sure that everything has been organized beforehand rather than realizing halfway through the lesson, "Oh no, I forgot this. Can you go and get it from the resource room?" Or something like that. Just really little things like that I think they'd be a bit self-conscious that they'd forgotten which is really common as a teacher because you're teaching all day every day. Your prep time is not very long at all. A lot of the classes you suddenly realize actually, "Oh that would be a really good resource to use. Or actually, you know what? The class isn't really following this line of lesson. I'm going to change tact and try and teach in a slightly different way because the class is just not really gelling with this method." So you do change lesson plans quite a bit even on the fly. Not because you're disorganized, just because that is the nature of being a teacher. You need to respond to your class.

Ben (28:56):

Reminds me of the aphorism, "Expect the unexpected" or I guess there's something about going into battle or plans when they meet reality. So actually the so-called perfect lesson doesn't exist. The perfect lesson is the one where the unexpected happens and you can see how people deal and react to it because children haven't read the teaching textbooks at least about how to be taught. How did you feel about the resources within the state system? So I guess here in Britain or I guess particularly in England, the predominant narrative is that state systems are underfunded and teachers are somewhat overwhelmed. But when I look more broadly, there seem to be the case in quite a lot of educational systems that actually teachers are generally overwhelmed and underfunded although that might be the structural issue about education is costly and expensive and time resource and is broadly undervalued for various reasons. Perhaps one of the reasons being that people go into it for things other than money. So the system somewhat takes advantage of that which I think is true of nursing and actually other female led professions because it's the nurturing, caring element of it. But as you started in the state system and now have had a little bit in the private system, I'd be interested maybe on whether you feel the state system is under-resourced and your experience of it.

Jade (30:28):

Yeah. So I would caveat that I've only worked at one state school and I've observed another state school quite extensively as well. Again, I experienced the private system personally; that's how I was educated in the UK and I'm experiencing it also this one school. This is on what I have seen from quite a small number of schools. But I would say that the state system does seem quite underfunded and for everything I've read as well as what I've experienced, it does align. For example, just trying to get resources for lessons that I would consider more exciting to do that would really only be a few extra pounds to spend. The school's budget is so tight that...

We're learning about living things for example, and buying seeds and soil and plastic pots. I've done that and not been reimbursed by the school because it hadn't been okayed beforehand because the school didn't have resources and funding for that. So it really was only a few pounds and it was really, really difficult to get anything extra and above what we already had. But I would say that we did have quite a few resources within the school to use. You have to be quite creative on your lessons that you come up with and looking in the store cupboards seeing what you can use. There is a lot there, but I definitely would say the schools are underfunded. Also, in terms of cover. So teaching cover, if you are ill, your colleagues have to cover for you. They're very reticent to bring in extra support staff because it's so expensive. I would say those are probably the biggest issues around the funding in state schools.

Ben (32:46):

So the stories we hear of teachers having to buy pens and pencils or even notebooks for children in some schools is kind of unsurprising to you?

Jade (32:56):

That's not very surprising to me at all.

Ben (32:58):

Obviously you got seeds and soil; not quite the same, but of a similar sort of adjacent thing. I guess you can contrast that to financial services where if you don't okay something you might get a slap on the wrist and they'll okay and say, "Next time make sure you do." Or if you will go for something which isn't necessarily in budget or something which is not even outside the scope of thing, you just write a little investment case or an email to someone and they go, "Well that makes sense" and they'd authorize the money which obviously just does not seem possible within the state system. Do you think there's a deficit in-- Well, I guess the accountancy term is kind of human capital, human resources; so you say like people cover. But you mentioned it a little bit in the training. Do you think it would benefit from somehow more money spent on training or time for training or giving teachers more time, or is that just not practical because of the way it has to be taught and because of the whole-- I mean, I guess there's a huge supply deficit or over demand. I feel like if teachers had doubled the amount of time available, they would fill all of that time easily. Yet also you mentioned that more training, more apprenticeship and things would also help. So I don't know how much money solves that or whether you would have a thought.

Jade (34:22):

Money would certainly make everything easier. In terms of the training, I think actually recently-- So my cohort was the last cohort to do a one year PGC. When you do your one year PGC, you are then a NQT; so a newly qualified teacher for a year. Your school needs to sign up to that and agree to doing quite heavy observations of you and finding the time... Senior members of staff need to find the time to observe you and give you feedback on your teaching. That's for a year which has now been extended to two years which I'm sure also costs. I'm not sure who exactly is footing the bill, whether it's the school or the government. But that obviously does cost more because there's a lot more time needed from senior staff to be going in and doing that training and feedback and teaching.

I have to say after a year PGC-- I mean, bearing in mind I only got half of it because of Covid. But I didn't feel prepared to stand in front of a class of 30 kids and teach them everything from obviously English, Maths, Geography, History, Spanish-- I don't speak Spanish--, Music-- I hadn't played an instrument since I was about eight--, P.E, DT-- DT without resources which was interesting--, Science. I didn't feel prepared for that. And you have to come up with your own lesson plans. The UK system doesn't have-- It has a national curriculum but the national curriculum is so broad that you can essentially-- especially within the primary sector-- that you can really come up with your own lesson plans within... I mean, the national curriculum for science I think is only about a page long for each year group within primary school. So yeah, that was quite a daunting task when I first started and I was working until the school closed every day and then working at home to be researching and coming up with lesson plans and content and things.

Ben (36:55):

That feels more daunting and ongoing daunting than equity sales. It sounds like you're working similar hours, although hopefully, more contentedness. That strikes me as you could do research on, “Why one should invest in an Asian company?” to maybe even some experience fund managers easier than it was to teach everything that a seven year old or eight year old might want to know after a year. I'm very impressed.

Jade (37:27):

Well, at least most asset managers politely listen to you when you do your pitch. A class of 38 year olds do not listen politely if your pitch is not interesting.

Ben (37:38):

You know after three minutes or five minutes where the fund manager will just be like, "Nope, no votes this month." Well, I guess you get the direct feedback. I have an interest in special education needs or SEN although I really dislike the term actually now for various reasons. Those are the legal labels. It seems to me that schools particularly in the state system but actually overall or at least in the mainstream, seem pretty underfunded and that SEN in particular is underfunded. I now view looking at children or even the whole world that there's a spectrum or range so that you might be officially labeled SEN of some sort and that could be autism or some disability or dyslexia. Then there might be a whole other class of pupils who might not get a label, but a disadvantage in other ways like from a disrupted family or they've had a death in the family or they're just simply really poor.

So I know in the British system for instance, we look at whether you're on free school meals or not because it's known that if you're really poor you're going to come with all of these disadvantages and then there's other stuff in the middle and there could be all sorts of issues. I'd be interested-- I guess it riffs on what we were saying earlier. Do you think it's primarily or at least co primarily a money or funding issue? So money will definitely help, we can see that. But are there other ways that maybe we should be thinking around children who have disadvantage of needs or any sort or even because you can make the claim that if you're particularly in the top 1% or top 2% that their needs are not getting met sometimes depending on the teaching. I can see that in some children in this day. They just get really bored and they get disruptive, but it's because they're bored on the other side so these are kind of the tradeoff. I guess if there was a magic answer we would've heard it and it wouldn't have been such a debated question. But I'd be interested if you had a view or thought on that.

Jade (39:44):

Yeah. So there's quite a few things within that that I have opinions on. I think the whole SEN list and putting children on a list like that there's been a much greater move to make sure that list is dynamic because essentially SEN is Special Educational Needs. So children that have English as a second language would be on that list because it means they're not accessing the curriculum that the teacher can teach them in a class of... When I stand up and I teach 30 children, which children can access the curriculum of what I'm teaching and which children can't. Obviously if you can't speak English, it's difficult to access the curriculum. So they would have special education needs and things I would have to do for them to help them access those lessons.

So whether that be a vocab list or when I prepare all my presentations, I need to make sure that everything with writing has pictures of what those things are; having a visual timetable so that child knows what's going on. But on the other hand because it is quite a dynamic list, when that child then masters English, they're taken off that list. I think it's really important that that list is dynamic because it means you can't be lazy about these types of things. You need to make sure you're constantly assessing and making sure that those special needs are met. I think a child needs to be assessed properly for that. As a teacher, like I said, there are so many topics, so many subjects that I'm teaching and I have up to 30 children in a class. My training has not been around special education needs. There are so many special education needs. You could be an EAL; an English as a Second Language specialist, you could be an autism specialist, you could be a speech and language specialist. I know the waiting lists for children to be-- Children need to be assessed to then be able to give them specialized things and to teach them in specific ways that will specifically help them.

Trying to get my class assessed within a state system was quite difficult because the waiting lists were so long for them to see a specialist. The system is once they've seen a specialist, then the specialist will give the teacher and the parents’ specific advice. Then potentially after a few more rounds-- I'm sure you've gone through this as well-- the school can then request extra funding. A lot of the time if their needs are very specialists, that funding would cover an extra member of staff or some hours of an extra member of staff to be able to sit with that child or with a small group of children as a teaching assistant or to be a teaching assistant within the class to make sure that… For example, to break down. If I give a multi-step instruction to be sitting there with that child and give the instructions one at a time; one instruction at a time or to be doing speaking for writing. If they have real trouble with writing they can say what they think the answer is or their story and then the TA will be able to scribe for them and then they will have that written down so it is still their work. Then they will have some extra time to then copy what the teaching system has written down into their books. But that's obviously not possible for me to do as a teacher being at the front of the class and trying to teach 30 children.

Ben (44:09):

Sure. And reflections on, I guess the private system versus the state system obviously is much better funded and so money as we've already said, obviously really helps. I guess there's some arguments that people say, "Oh, we should just all be comprehensive and better funded” which is maybe ideal, but doesn't seem likely, at least in Britain. And then others say, "Well, there's choice and the private system is funding itself. There might be a profit motive that doesn't necessarily need to be bad." I don't know if any reflections. Both of us obviously went through a private system and I've been around them both and they sort of have pros and cons or at least differences in each. But I'd be interested if you had any reflections.

Jade (44:59):

Yeah. I had a misconception before I started teaching in state schools that I thought the quality of teaching in private schools was better. Having taught in a state school and been really interacting with the staff and observing lessons and then working in the private system, I think the quality of teaching is the same actually. The quality of staff you get I think is the same because essentially, I think there's a misconception on private school teacher’s salary. It's basically the same as a state school salary. So I think that also means that you get a similar quality of staff body. It's not that the best teachers decide they want to teach in the private system because they earn tons more money. That's just not true within the state system in London that I know of. I'm sure people could come up with examples that completely disapprove that. But from my experience, I definitely didn't get much of a pay rise; maybe that's my negotiation skills. But no, having spoken to other people within the private system as well the salary is pretty similar which surprised me.

Things like resources-- The types of lessons that I want to do. If I want to have a really exciting lesson, I can speak to the school bursar and within reason he will say yes. And being able to kind of go on trips and things-- I think in my previous state school we had a five pound limit per year per student that we could ask the parents for. Anything over that the school also wasn't going to pay for. So anything we did, it had to be a hundred percent free to do. We're so lucky being in London. I was so lucky being in London that I could do these amazing trips because the museums are all free here and getting on public transport was also free for children. I think children under 11 or under 12 get free transport or I think school trips.

Ben (47:21):

Yeah and bus rides are free under 18.

Jade (47:25):

Yeah. So TFL is very good about that so doing school trips was easy. Well, it wasn't easy, but I was able to fund them which was great. We had loads of opportunity to go to museums and to do really wonderful school trips which I don't think would be possible in a lot of other schools that maybe you'd need to rent buses or transport for or maybe there weren't museums that were free within that. So we were really lucky in terms of where we were. So yeah, the school trips are the same, teaching is the same. I think what you get in a private school is much better access to your class teacher because the class sizes are smaller. I went from teaching a class of 30 to teaching a class of 12.

I think also the private system allows parents to have that contact with teachers and would give out a teacher's school email address. Whereas to manage the teacher's time in a state school, I don't think you'd be given a teacher's email address. All the contact would have to go through the front office and then you'd have to book in a time slot with that teacher and that time slot might not be that soon. Or they could try and grab the teacher during pickup in the playground. But again, that's only about a 15 minute window when he or she is releasing 30 children back to their parents and probably is a bit distracted.

Ben (49:12):

Yeah. We did have at our state primary teacher's email but you were really expected not to abuse it if you did have it, and we had special education needs so we might have been exceptional for that. That's really interesting. So if I were to summarize, there's quite a lot of variety in teacher skill or teacher experience. So given all of that, you would say that the teaching is just as good within state schools as private schools and actually the money is roughly the same what you're saying. But private schools are much better resourced for things like trips. You probably wouldn't have problems with buying soils and seeds and things like that and the class sizes are smaller. Do you think also that-- Are there more teachers-- Well, I guess that's class size so there are more teachers per student even if the quality of the teaching is roughly the same. The number of teachers per student is more in the private sector. You might have more teaching assistants or something in the room.

Jade (50:19):

It depends on how you define quality of teaching. I mean, a teacher's time is finite. So the contact and personalization to each individual student would be higher in a private school than in a state school just because the class sizes are smaller. So during a lesson, a teacher can get around 12 students and give each student much more individualized time than they can in a class of 30 that might not have any individualized time at all. But if your class doesn't have very specialized needs-- if it's a very diverse class of needs, I think it's definitely better to have a smaller class. But if it doesn't have a very diverse set of needs and they're all attainment levels and learning speeds are around the same and they're quite a well behaved class-- which is a lot of ifs, I don't think there'd be much difference in if you compare their results at the end of the year, for example.

Ben (51:35):

Sure. Qualified what the metric we're looking at and all of that. But like you say, that might only happen one out of three years, one out of two, one out of five years to get all of those ifs together. And to clarify, probably didn't express it very well. Broadly, if you put a state school teacher into a private school system they're performing the same from skills and experience. But like you say, in the state school because of the funding and the money and the structure, they might only have X amount of hours to spend on all of the things they want to spend on. You actually have more of those same amount of hours or minutes per student and resources in the private system. So it's not teacher quality per se, but the structural and time things which is what the money is buying you as opposed to teaching quality is buying you those other things.

Jade (52:28):

Yeah. I would say you are also buying specialist teachers for topics like languages, music and PE. So generally, private schools will have a specialist PE teacher. They'll have a specialist music teacher and Spanish teacher or modern language teacher which wasn't the case at some state schools. I know some state schools have specialist music teachers but that is an extra cost as opposed to just getting the teacher to do it. And obviously having a specialist coming in and teaching is of a higher quality than a generalist. So I'd say my job is a lot easier in a private school because I don't have as many subjects that I need to be teaching.

Ben (53:24):

So quality adjusted pay has kind of increased since. Even if the money dollar amount isn't the same, your job is easier to do now.

Jade (53:31):

Yeah. The holidays are more as well for private school.

Ben (53:35):

Okay. That's also worth something. So maybe we can hit some topical things which are debated within schools and you can give a quick opinion or not. Kind of underrated, overrated or what it really means. We've touched on one but I think it might be worth going over again which is class size. My impression you are saying is that class size might not need to be different, say 30 versus 12 or 24, if speeds are the same, diversity is the same and there's no quirks. But in reality, often there will be quirks and then in which case teacher minutes per pupil does make a difference. So I guess underrated, overrated would depend, but generally maybe there is a reasonable amount of truth to saying that smaller class sizes are better.

Jade (54:29):

Yes, I think so within reason. I would say my perfect class size is between 12 to 15 students which is a really specific number. I think that because a lot of primary school teaching is about scaffolding, it's about Q&A. So you ask the class the questions and you lead them to the answer. You don't just present to them. You don't just stand up in front of a whiteboard and talk at them. You would have a very disruptive class if that was how you taught. So to have that Q&A, to have that sort of interactiveness you need to have enough students that are going to be bouncing ideas off of each other and enough students who are confident enough to put their hands up and put forward their ideas.

I would also say with very large classes you generally-- With the large number comes more diversity in terms of learning needs. The two ends of the spectrum of teaching I think take up the majority of my time. If everyone was in that middle of the bell curve as a teacher, that would probably-- I mean, that does make teaching the class a lot easier because you don't need to differentiate as heavily, come up with as many resources, you don't need to be teaching... Sometimes it feels like I'm teaching three lessons at the same time; the top, middle, and bottom. Sometimes to make sure that every child can access the curriculum, especially with Maths it is so diverse that it's essentially a different lesson especially when it comes to things like fractions.

Ben (56:33):

Okay. Interesting. It's funny you mentioned 12 to 15 because I've now seen classes below eight. Actually in some ways they're sometimes harder because of that Q&A although it can also work well. I'd probably prefer to be smaller than much larger. Strangely, there's two adjacent topics I think about which is good dinners or good dinner meetings and also other things. It's interesting if you have a dinner meeting over 15. They're harder because it's the one conversation. Obviously if you have a dinner for four, then it's just like chatting between your friends. You don't have that Q&A. So it's interesting you have that 12 to 15.

There's also something about innovation and team sizes. So the anecdote from Amazon is you want to all be able to sit around the pizza box. So they tend to have it as eight to twelve, but it's similar. It's that you have to be able to have one conversation, but that you can spark some other people. So it may be not so crazy to have a specific number in mind; 12 to 15. Actually, so that leads me to one other thing which I hadn't thought of, but you just said. So streaming-- I guess it tends to happen in secondary more than primary. My impression then is you think that might be useful, not so much for all of the other things that might be, but just so that you cannot have to teach three different ways. You can teach one lesson to one. It doesn't necessarily mean that the middle or the top go faster or at a more appropriate speed. It's that actually you can just have one lesson plan because you know everyone is roughly there or have I misinterpreted that? Is that what your view of streaming would be?

Jade (58:13):

No. That used to be my view actually before I became a teacher. I actually wrote my thesis on streaming and I changed my...

Ben (58:22):

PGC streaming?

Jade (58:23):

Yeah. Maybe thesis is the wrong-- I think they called it a thesis. It wasn't...

Ben (58:30):

Extended essay?

Jade (58:31):

My extended essay, yeah. I felt quite strongly about streaming for that reason; that I felt like teachers are very overworked especially for how much they get paid. There's a lot expected of them. They have a huge amount of responsibility and they're expected to do a lot just in terms of all the subjects they're teaching, all the parents that they're managing, all of the sort of pastoral side of things, and then all the paperwork that goes around it as well. One of the biggest things teachers have complained about is their hours and how hard they work. They're always going over their contracted hours. The contract hours you think, "Oh, okay, we're a teacher. You get so much holiday and your hours only are until sort of..." I don't know what your contract says, but it's generally eight until five. "Oh, that's not that long." But then you think, well actually for what you are paid and the hours that you do, you sort of expect to be working your contracted hours which is never ever the case as a teacher. So to be expecting to go over and above, I think is quite a big ask especially how much time you're expected to spend within full-time education to get to that qualification.

So streaming, I thought I would be really pro streaming because streaming reduces the amount of hours a teacher needs to spend on lesson planning which is a really big complaint that a lot of teachers have. It’s they spend so much time lesson planning and they need to tick so many of their school's internal boxes on their lesson plans and how their lesson plans are set out and all the different things that they cover off to show they've done differentiation, they've put vocabulary, they've done assessment for learning, they've done a conclusion at the end, that it's properly evidenced in the books, that there's the date written in the right way in their books, and all these things you need to jump through in a 30 minute lesson when a child might be throwing a chair in the corner and another child crying in the front. It is a lot of things to be getting through in 30 minutes. So I thought I was really pro streaming because it would just make everyone's life easier and every child would be able to get a much more personalized lesson because it would be better suited to them.

But actually in practice having been in classes, I believe that mixed classes are better for everyone to an extent assuming that all the children can access the curriculum. The higher attaining students add this spark of competition to the rest of the class as to what the other children want to get to or what the other children want to then understand. I found my highest students will be asking questions that all the class will sit up and think, "I don't even understand the question, let alone what the answer would be." It really makes a class-- I think it just sets the whole class's standards a lot higher for every single student because within a classroom there's so much competition. I think even if I'd been asking these questions, it wouldn't have the same effect as an actual student asking those questions or responding in a very eloquent way to a question or coming up with a really in depth answer. I think there's no substitute for that within a classroom and I think it just makes everyone want to do better within the class and aspire to have that understanding of what's going on. Kids really have a hard mentality. Most children don't want to stand out-- primary school children anyway. They don't want to stand out and they don't want to be different. They really, really want to conform and I think that is one part of it.

A lot of studies have been done. When I did my thesis I was looking at a lot of different studies. I had slightly different opinions, but generally they found that putting the higher attaining children all in one class will benefit the higher attaining children slightly more. But the lowest group of students it disadvantages hugely. So actually in terms of overall equity, it's much better to just have a mixed class if that is what you want is overall equity.

Ben (01:03:25):

Yes. So we mentioned it depends what KPI you want and there's all of these caveats. There's no golden rule for everything. But that's really interesting. So the deficit for high attainment students is not that much and maybe might be overcome if you are aware of it to compensate for that. But obviously if you're looking—Particularly, say you take a utilitarian value, expected value per student in a mixed class you're saying would be higher than the two separate given that you'll have to teach them all at any point.

Jade (01:03:57):

Yeah. I think there are also different skills that the higher attaining students can get within a class. It's not that they're just sitting there bored and thinking, "I've done this Maths already." You have to be quite creative with that in terms of you would get that student to then explain to another student, "This student doesn't know how to do it. Can you teach them how to do it?" Then that's really getting that student to learn a whole new set of skills. Obviously it's not teaching them algebra in a fractions lesson, but it's teaching them leadership skills and empathy for other students.

Ben (01:04:33):

Yeah. Well, regardless of those which I think are really strong; empathy, leadership, how to teach. I actually always learn something when I try and teach something even if I do know it really well. Actually, when you try and teach it, it's kind of like, "Oh, well I understand it like this. But they obviously understand it like that in order to do that." That's really interesting. And so in general, would you say it's true? I think there's an expression, "Antelopes like running with the faster antelopes. You run faster with the herd." So you're kind of saying as long as there aren't huge differences in the herd that's probably true. That at least in primary, people like running with the herd and so if you run faster with that-- I guess it's true in running groups. You kind of have a pacemaker and you run with a group and it drags the middle and the less pacey people along.

Jade (01:05:25):

Yeah, I would agree with that.

Ben (01:05:28):

Okay. I guess two or three other things would be uniforms. Are we neutral, underrated, overrated? They don't really make a difference? Seems to be very heated. I don't know whether it makes as big a difference as it does, but maybe sometimes it does.

Jade (01:05:43):

Certainly in primary school I really agree with uniforms. In general I agree with uniforms actually. I think maybe less so in secondary schools because children are more keen to express their individuality. I have to say primary school kids aren't that keen to express their individuality. They are much more concerned about fitting in and looking the same and I think that's very natural. I think also children at that age have so much to worry about already. I mean, they're learning how to manage relationships for the first time, their teeth are falling out. Why give them a worry about what they look like and what clothes they have to wear every day? Teaching them how to judge other people on their socioeconomic status by what they're wearing? It just seems so irrelevant when they're that young. I think they have the rest of their lives to be judging people on what they wear and worrying about the clothes they wear. I don't think they need to be exposed to that on a daily basis at primary school.

Ben (01:06:57):

Interesting. I hadn't thought of that as clearly that there is. That they've got so many other things to worry about taking that. I do think that's one of the reasons that actually boys have it slightly easier in the city and financial services. At least until recently, you didn't really have to think about what you wore. You have a sort of uniform, right? Shirt/ tie, now, no tie, suits. Then regardless of any other things like makeup, you just don't have to think so much. So you just put that on, you can do enough and you're out. Whereas women obviously have a more complex uniform in general; call it uniform fashion. Do you think also then out of uniform…? So if you're not in uniform, even in primary, it seems to be that girls cue onto this a little bit sooner. Again, this is average, there's lots of exceptions. But then that gives them a higher burden because they're a little bit more worried about what they're wearing already at that stage, although I can see it definitely in some boys as well. But it would seem to me on equity grounds as well, it seems to remove one more thing on that line of argument.

Jade (01:08:00):

Yeah, definitely. I think it just makes it easier for all children to be able to fit in at school. I don't think primary school encourages children to be hugely individual.

Ben (01:08:28):

At least not through clothing.

Jade (01:08:30):

Oh yeah, definitely not through clothing. But they are expected to conform in so many ways. It's almost teaching them the rules first so then they can break them later. I don't think that primary school children should be expected to already be trying to break the rules. They're literally just learning the rules of the game.

Ben (01:08:52):

Sure, that makes sense. So maybe the arguments are a little bit weaker in secondary, but depending on the circumstances you'd maybe be pro that. On secondary, although there's a stronger argument maybe for individualism. It's interesting because you probably do get exceptional primary school children and then a little bit more in secondary where that urge to express that individualism is so strong that they're really great against those, but it does seem to be rarer. But you see them and actually, I see them. I'm close to what we might call some of the homeschool community and some have ended up there. But just because these rules or whatever they are, that institution as you said right at the beginning is just something which doesn't fit them. But that seems to be a structural fit issue when you do have children like that. That might be accommodating a minority as opposed to a majority.

Jade (01:09:48):

Yeah. Generally when I have come across students that want to express their individuality in primary school, it's generally not how they look. They generally don't want to express themselves through how they look. I see it more through behavior and more through the stories they write, the art they produce. The sort of creative academic outlets I see it much more. I sort of see these signs and I think, "Okay, that child is probably going to dress different in secondary school, but right now that hasn't expressed itself yet. I think the first things that they express is actually more in their writing and their behavior.

Ben (01:10:31):

Okay. That's really interesting. Great. So we've done that. Overrated, underrated then on Physical Exercise or PE?

Jade (01:10:44):

I think PE is hugely important. I think it's tough in the city London schools to find the space to do PE. I say that, but then there are so many things you can do that you don't need a lot of space for like dance or things like that. All the kids love playing football on the playground and things like that. But I think it's really, really important. I think just in general-- not just for PE but just in general-- I feel like one of the best things that primary school education gives you is hopefully to give you a love of education. For me, I obviously want my class to be able to read, write, and do basic Maths when they leave school. But one of my biggest things is I really want them to leave school enjoying learning and not thinking about school as a chore, or really wanting to learn and giving them that zest for education and asking questions.

Ben (01:11:50):

That seems fair. School start times? So there's an argument within secondary that they're too early; I think weaker argument within primary. But maybe a little bit more time for teachers to prepare and maybe go into later in the day. On the continent they tend to start earlier but then they finish much earlier. So any view on school start times?

Jade (01:12:12):

I agree definitely for secondary school start times are too early because the circadian rhythm of a teenager is they wake up much later. Their circadian rhythm is they wake up later and they go to bed later and I think we as an education system need to respond to that because it seems ridiculous that they're coming into school so tired yet still staying up really late at night. I think for primary school students, that's not really the case. Actually, the children are the most responsive in the mornings before lunch. As a primary school teacher you'll always put your Maths and English lessons in the morning and then your more fun, more creative things in the afternoon like DT, Art, PE in the afternoon when they have a bit less energy. So I would say primary school start times are fine as they are.

Ben (01:13:19):

That's really interesting. I had sort of heard that. It seems to be a real consensus on secondary school that basically post puberty you should be much later. It's really interesting when I hear that from teachers and academics and then obviously it's based on the biology when you've got such a strong consensus and the system can't move there. I mean, there's a handful of schools who have set their ability and you can do it. And where it's most studied, I think in the US, where because they can drive from late teen, they show that states or little districts which have moved later have many fewer accidents because the teenagers who drive to school aren't so tired and that. So when they drive they're having many fewer accidents as well as everything else. But it's very obvious that that's an effect and still seems very difficult to implement which I guess is the downside of old institutions. Although if you were to implement it, then you could get it better on the institutional bit. Okay, last one on the school things; school meals. Are they good, bad? Should they be better? Should we be investing in them more? Are they overrated, underrated?

Jade (01:14:29):

Oh my gosh. All the state schools I have observed and visited the food has been so bad. Honestly, terrible. It was chips and beans. It was really, really bad. I really like eating vegetables and I just couldn't get any. It was all refined carbohydrates. Overall, the ones I've seen do make an effort to reduce the amount of salt they add to the food and reduce the amount of sugar. But that means that you're left with super tasteless food as well as it being very carb heavy. I think that's a response to children's pallets as well, that they like quite plain food as well. So obviously nothing spicy. I feel for state school caterers though because they have a really tight budget...

Ben (01:15:31):

Like 50 p or a pound or something?

Jade (01:15:34):

I'm not sure of the exact numbers, but I know their budget is so tight and they're trying to feed so many children with so many diverse eating requirements. So obviously if a child has an allergy to anything, they basically have to cut that food out of almost all of the food within the school. I mean, certainly every school I've been to have been a no nut school so nuts are completely out. Some students have a really severe allergy to quite a specific vegetable. They'll just cut that whole vegetable out of any school meal for the whole school just to reduce the risk. But also it just makes catering a lot easier for them as well. And if they're on such a tight budget as it is, you can't really blame them.

We do try and teach healthy eating and a balanced diet within schools, but I don't really see that quite so much in terms of the school meals that are offered. There's always a salad bar that'll be offered with little chunks of cucumber and a few lettuce leaves and things. But I have to say the students hardly ever help themselves to that part of the meal. So yeah, they're kind of catering to what the students will be helping themselves to and eating and also the options. But then comparing it to-- This is a big thing you would get with a private school, the food is much better. Just in the private school and the experience when I was at school, there'll be great salads, really interesting roasted vegetables. The food is a lot better. I think that's probably a big part of what you're paying for as a private school parent.

Ben (01:17:30):

That’s actually a recent change. I remember the early 1990s private school food wasn't that good and then that was a...

Jade (01:17:39):

Even in comparison to state school food?

Ben (01:17:41):

I don't know in comparison. It probably was a little bit, they were both really awful. But then food awareness really started kicking in a lot with it. You had celebrity chefs that started and there was a huge outcry. I remember in many private schools once parents found how much was being spent on the food-- and it was still a low amount. I remember it's kind of like one or two pounds. You couldn't even quite buy a sandwich regardless of inflation. So there's this outcry so food started to uniformly increase. At least these are from London private schools which is my experience from what I know. But then that's kept today there does seem to be a more-- I guess up to a certain level there's quite a direct correlation between how much you spend on food and what food you get although you can be very creative. When you're creative with cheaper foods you need to spend more time and also your time constraint within schools. Okay. So maybe last question on the school thing and then a couple to wrap up on. So on the school one is, have you been asked or what are the most awkward questions you've been asked? Maybe this is a segue and loop around with during pandemic or post pandemic. Do primary school children ever ask about death or around that or illness and things like that?

Jade (01:19:08):

Yeah, they do. I mean, certainly over Covid I knew of a few students whose parents passed away. I don't know whether it's Covid related. But obviously the staff body is made aware so we can keep an extra close eye on that student and check in on the family as well. I'm not sure how big of a topic it is discussed. I think it deeply scares primary school students that it's not really a topic that's discussed very much because it is quite a scary thought. I mean, depending on what age within primary school. Certainly my year four class were very aware of death and what that meant and were very sensitive to other students in class that were grieving.

But I don't think it's a topic that is discussed. I wanted to share with my class parts of my experience of when my mom passed away and how I felt because I knew there was a student in my class that had lost a parent. Actually, I knew there were multiple students in my class that had lost parents. It was a PSHE class so I wanted to make sure that they felt like I was sharing as well as asking them to share with us. I mean, obviously it wasn't asking individuals to share, but just in general we were in on that topic. I shared with them the experience of my mom dying and things like that and I have to say I just felt fear from them actually. There wasn't a huge curiosity. I think they were too scared to ask questions not necessarily because it would hurt-- Well, maybe because they were worried it would hurt my feelings. But I think they didn't even want to think about it.

Ben (01:21:40):

That's interesting. As you know, we've had some conversations around being the phrase, "Is death positive?" Children might be different. In general society, we don't talk about death or grief enough given its importance. Also, compared to 50 or a hundred years ago or else in different societies. But the studies I've seen have suggested now in western societies children understand the concept of death around the ages of seven-ish. So that's sort of towards primary. But actually in what we'd call these emerging market nations and not the western nations, it happens earlier because they're surrounded by it. There's some evidence that 50 or a hundred years ago it also happened earlier because the stats you have in like 1900, 50% of children under the age of five wouldn't survive. So it would be very common to see it. It was just much more talked about it around then. So I do think that is something that we don't fully appreciate and actually that children do just-- They know a lot, they ask a lot. Your point about fear, that there are certain things that maybe we need to help them not be as fearful about if there's no good reason to be fearful. Death is obviously a little bit of a complex topic. I don't know whether you'd want to have any final reflections on how your mum have influenced you into teaching or how it made you reflect or what death has meant in your own life.

Jade (01:23:26):

Yeah. I think it's about being present in so many senses of the word to really appreciate or try and appreciate every day that you have and be present in a sense. I try not to eat with my mobile phone; in that sense. If I'm having a meal with somebody, to really try and be present for them and appreciate that moment. I love being a teacher and I really enjoy working with children and it feels great to be doing a job that I wake up every day and I'm interested in. I'm thinking about afterwards, "How could I have made that better?" I think maybe to find that in your life, to find something that you want to get up every day and do is really important. I hadn't really experienced a career before recently that I enjoyed. I didn't even think that that was a possibility because everyone talks about, "A job is a job and ultimately you're going to be doing the same thing and a lot of it is repetition and you're kind of doing it to get paid," which I do agree to a certain extent. But there's a gradient of that and I guess really getting to know yourself and finding out what you want to do.

Ben (01:25:11):

So that's a little bit of-- The aphorism is, "Find a job you love and never work a day in your life." It's probably a little bit extreme, but towards that you can be content.

Jade (01:25:21):

Yeah, definitely. It's about finding contentment. I knew mom always wanted me to be happy more than anything else. So yeah, kind of finding ways to make myself happy.

Ben (01:25:40):

Great. Would you like to share any final life advice or that does seem to be pretty good which is find something to be content with?

Jade (01:25:51):

Yeah. I would say being present, appreciating... I think also being grateful for what you have. Really feeling and expressing gratitude is really, really important. I try to teach my class that.

Ben (01:26:06):

Do they keep gratitude journals? I'm always keen on data and the science has a quite strong science behind it that it makes people happier.

Jade (01:26:15):

Yeah, I've read about that as well. Sheryl Sandberg's book “Lean In,” she talks a lot about a way that she overcame her grief for her loss of her husband was doing a gratitude diary or every day writing three things she was grateful for. I definitely try to do that because there is a lot to be grateful for.

Ben (01:26:38):

Great.

Jade (01:26:39):

You can always find something.

Ben (01:26:40):

Well Jade, you strike me as an awesome and brilliant teacher who is going to go on and you have many great ideas. So I hope you go on and do much more teaching and get promoted and make a real big difference which you seem to be doing. So Jade, thank you very much.

Jade (01:26:55):

Thank you. Thanks, Ben. Thanks for chatting with me.

In Arts, Podcast, Life Tags Jade O'Brien, Teaching, Teachers, Education, SEB, disability, investment, arts
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