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Academic Coaching for Parents with Dr Anna York-Weaving
#44 - How to Teach Critical Thinking to Teenagers in a World of Social Media & Misinformation with Dr Maree Davies
Have you ever asked yourself, in a world shaped by social media, algorithms and constant information, how do we know if our children have the skills to think critically, recognise misinformation and think for themselves?
In this episode, I am joined by Dr Maree Davies, a researcher and senior lecturer based at the University of Auckland, whose work focuses on critical thinking and how young people engage with information in an increasingly complex digital world.
Her research explores how students develop the ability to question, evaluate and form reasoned judgements, particularly in the context of modern challenges such as social media, algorithms and misinformation. She is especially interested in how these skills can be taught explicitly, rather than assumed within education.
Dr Davies is also the author of Teaching Critical Thinking to Teenagers, published by Routledge, a book that offers a structured and practical approach to developing critical thinking skills in young people. She introduces the Street Smarts model, designed to help students navigate information, think independently and engage more thoughtfully with the world around them.
In this conversation, we explore what critical thinking really involves, why it has become such an essential skill today, and how parents and educators can support young people in developing it.
šļø In this episode, we discuss:
ā What critical thinking actually means
ā Why teenagers can be vulnerable to fake news and misinformation
ā How social media algorithms influence thinking and decision-making
ā What is happening in the adolescent brain during this key stage of development
ā How to recognise cognitive bias and flawed thinking patterns
ā Practical ways to help your child think independently and form their own views
ā How the Street Smarts model can be applied at home and in education
Whether your child is navigating social media, forming opinions or learning how to think more independently, this episode will give you the tools to better understand and support their thinking in a complex digital world.
š Links & Resources
Research & University Profile - https://profiles.auckland.ac.nz/mj-davies
https://www.linkedin.com/in/maree-davies-22a39411/
Teaching Critical Thinking to Teenagers Book
š© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent or educator interested in learning, productivity and sustainable success.
š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30 minute consultation with me via my website:
https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/
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9. #45 - Struggling to Support Your Child During Exams? A Practical Guide to Revision Season
15:24||Season 4, Ep. 9Have you ever felt unsure how to support your child during exam revision season, despite wanting to help them succeed?Because more often than not, the challenge is not your childās ability, but the lack of a clear system for how to revise effectively.Revision season can be a stressful time not just for students, but for parents too. It can feel like you are constantly trying to motivate, guide and support, without always knowing what actually works. In this episode, I walk you through practical strategies to help your child approach revision with more structure, focus and confidence.šļø In this episode, I discuss:ā Why studying is a skill that needs to be taught, not something students automatically know how to doā How to create a realistic and effective daily revision structure using focused study blocksā Why routine, rest and sleep are important for memory, focus and performanceā How to build a clear revision plan to reduce stress and avoid decision fatigueā Practical ways to support your child with phone use and minimise distractions during revisionWhether your child is preparing for GCSEs, A Levels or internal mock exams, this episode will give you the tools to support them more effectively during one of the most demanding periods of the academic year.š Links & Resourcesš© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent or educator, and donāt forget to subscribe for more conversations on academic success and student wellbeing.š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30-minute consultation via my website:https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/š Looking for more structured support during revision season?Explore my Exam Revision Accelerator designed to help students build focus, structure and effective revision habits:https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/exam-revision-accelerator
7. #43 - GCSE & A-Level Exam Stress: Is Your Child Revising Properly?
10:06||Season 4, Ep. 7Have you found yourself wondering whether your child is actually revising properly for their GCSEs or A-Levels?In the final weeks before exams, many students are sitting at their desks, but without a clear plan, effective study strategies or a structured approach to revision. And as a parent, that uncertainty can feel incredibly stressful.In this episode, I unpack why this stage often feels overwhelming, not because students arenāt capable, but because they havenāt been shown how to revise effectively.I also explain what tends to go wrong in the final weeks before exams, what effective revision actually involves, and how you can start to recognise whether your child is on the right track.Most importantly, this episode will help you understand what your child really needs at this stage, and why having the right structure and guidance in place can make such a significant difference.šļø In this episode, youāll learn:ā Why ājust revising moreā is often not enoughā What many students get wrong in the final weeks before examsā What effective revision actually involves (based on cognitive science)ā How to recognise whether your child is on the right trackā Why this stage often creates stress and uncertainty for parentsIf your child feels lost, unstructured or unsure where to start with revision, this episode will help you make sense of whatās happening and what matters most right now.There is still time to make a difference, but it starts with understanding what to focus on.šĀ Links & Resourcesš Learn more about the 6-week Exam Accelerator Programme:https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/exam-revision-acceleratorš Book a free 30-minute consultation to discuss how I can support your child:https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/š© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent or educator, and donāt forget to subscribe for more evidence-based insights on academic success and student wellbeing.
6. #42 - Why Working Less Makes You More Productive with Alex Soojung-Kim Pang
01:18:20||Season 4, Ep. 6In a culture that celebrates busyness and long working hours, rest is often treated as something we earn after productivity.But what if that idea is completely wrong?In this episode ofĀ Academic Coaching for Parents, I am joined byĀ Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, founder of 4 Day Week Studio and a globally recognised expert on the future of work. Alex has worked with companies, nonprofits and governments around the world to rethink how productivity and work culture should function.He is the author of several influential books includingĀ Rest,Ā Shorter,Ā Work Less Do More: Designing the 4 Day WeekĀ andĀ The Distraction Addiction. His work explores how individuals and organisations can better integrate rest, creativity and focus into modern working life.His research challenges the deeply embedded belief that working longer hours leads to better results. Instead, it shows that many highly creative and productive individuals rarely worked more than four focused hours per day and built their lives around deliberate rest, recovery and deep focus.In this conversation we explore how rest supports creativity, learning and sustained performance and why working less can sometimes help us achieve more.šļøĀ In this episode, we discuss:ā Why many high performers rarely work more than four hours of deep work per dayā What deliberate rest really means and why it is essential for productivityā Why rest is often misunderstood as laziness in achievement focused culturesā The role of walking, sleep and deep play in creativity and problem solvingā Why morning routines and focused work rhythms matter more than long working hoursā How modern work culture may be undermining productivity rather than improving itThis episode is about how all of us work, learn and live in a world that constantly demands more productivity.If you have ever felt the pressure to work longer, push harder or do more, this conversation may completely change how you think about success.šĀ Links & ResourcesWhere to find Alexš 4 Day Week Studiohttps://www.4dayweek.studioāļø Newsletter:Ā Rest, Work and the Good Lifehttps://askpang.substack.comš Alexās books and writinghttps://pangwrites.comš¼ LinkedInhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/askpang/Recommended readingšĀ RestĀ -Ā Why You Get More Done When You Work LessšĀ ShorterĀ -Ā Work Better, Smarter and Lessš° āRest Takes Hard Workā - Time Magazinehttps://time.com/6566763/rest-takes-hard-work-essay/š§ āHow to Rest Wellā - Psychehttps://psyche.co/guides/how-to-rest-well-and-enjoy-a-more-creative-sustainable-lifeš” āWhy We Need to Consider Switching to a 4 Day Workweek Nowā - TED Ideashttps://ideas.ted.com/case-for-4-day-workweek/š© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent or educator interested in learning, productivity and sustainable success.š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30 minute consultation with me via my website:https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/
5. #41 - Is My Child Lazy? Why Students Avoid Work and What Actually Helps
12:33||Season 4, Ep. 5Have you ever looked at your child, perfectly capable, intelligent and full of potential, and wondered why they delay starting their work?Many parents describe this behaviour as laziness. But more often than not, something else is driving that behaviour.In this episode, I unpack what is really going on when students procrastinate or struggle to begin their work. Drawing on neuroscience, psychology and learning science, we explore why simply telling a child to try harder rarely works and what actually helps.You will learn why starting a task is often the hardest step, how executive function and planning skills affect a studentās ability to organise their work and why factors such as cognitive overload and mental fatigue can create behaviours that look like low effort from the outside.šļø In this episode, youāll learn:ā Why the word ālazyā is rarely an accurate explanation for academic procrastinationā How executive function and planning skills influence a childās ability to start and organise workā Why motivation often follows action and not the other way aroundā What activation energy means in behavioural science and how reducing it helps students begin tasksā How cognitive load and overwhelm can cause students to avoid work altogetherā Why avoidance can sometimes be a protective response rather than a lack of effortWhether your child struggles to start homework, delays revision or often feels overwhelmed by schoolwork, this episode will help you understand the science behind those behaviours and what parents can do to support stronger focus, motivation and study habits.š Links & Resourcesš© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent who might benefit from it and donāt forget to subscribe for more conversations on academic success and student wellbeing.š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30-minute consultation via my website:https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/
4. #40 - The Incredible Teenage Brain Explained: How Conversations, Boundaries and Brain Development Shape Adolescence with Dr Bettina Hohnen
44:51||Season 4, Ep. 4Have you ever felt confused or overwhelmed by your teenagerās behaviour and emotional reactions?In this episode of Academic Coaching for Parents, I am joined by Dr Bettina Hohnen, Clinical Psychologist and Lecturer at University College London, to explore what is really happening inside the teenage brain, and how understanding brain development can transform the way parents communicate, set boundaries and support learning during adolescence.Adolescence is a period of profound neurological change. Emotions feel stronger, behaviour can seem unpredictable and motivation often fluctuates. Drawing on neuroscience, clinical experience and her work on The Incredible Teenage Brain, Dr Hohnen explains why the teenage brain is often described as being āunder reconstructionā and how this perspective helps parents respond with empathy rather than frustration.We discuss how conversations can become one of the most powerful tools parents have to support emotional regulation, resilience and wellbeing, alongside the role of boundaries, daily habits, sleep and routine in shaping attention, memory and mood. We also explore how understanding the developing brain can help parents better support neurodiverse children.šļø In this episode, youāll learn:ā What is happening in the teenage brain during adolescenceā Why emotions, behaviour and decision-making can feel so intenseā How brain development influences motivation and learningā How to set boundaries that support safety, trust and independenceā Practical strategies to support emotional regulation and resilienceThis episode is for parents who want to move beyond power struggles and towards connection, confidence and evidence-based support, while protecting both learning and wellbeing.Dr Bettina Hohnen:https://drbettinahohnen.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/bettina-hohnen-412776194/?originalSubdomain=ukBooks - The Incredible Teenage Brain & How to Have Incredible Conversations with Your Childš© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent or educator, and donāt forget to subscribe for more conversations on academic success and student wellbeing.š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30-minute consultation via my website: https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/
3. #39 - My Child Did Badly in Mocks - What Should I Do Next?
13:58||Season 4, Ep. 3Mock exam results can be unsettling, especially when they are lower than expected. Many parents feel pressure to act quickly, often assuming that more teaching or tutoring is the answer.I take a step back and look at what disappointing mock results actually tell us. I then outline practical ways parents can respond to support early progress.Rather than reacting with panic, we explore how mock results can be used as valuable feedback, highlighting what isnāt working yet and where change will have the greatest impact.Drawing on my academic coaching work and research-informed practice, I walk through my five-pillar framework for diagnosing underperformance and transforming how students learn and perform in exams.šļø In this episode, you will learn:ā How to use disappointing mock results as a diagnostic toolā Why learning methods, not just effort, affect exam performanceā How poor time management and unrealistic revision plan undermine progressā Why focus, environment and screen time matter more than many parents realiseā How motivation is linked to long-term vision, not pressure or ātrying harderāThis episode is designed to help parents respond calmly, logically and effectively, using mock results as an opportunity to strengthen learning systems well before the final exams.š Links & Resourcesš© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent navigating mock season, and donāt forget to subscribe for more evidence-informed conversations on academic success and student wellbeing.š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30-minute consultation via my website to discuss what might be holding your child back and how to address it: https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/
2. #38 - Creating Your Dream Life: Resilience, Reinvention and Purpose with Kristina Karlsson
01:13:33||Season 4, Ep. 2In this episode of Academic Coaching for Parents, I am joined by Kristina Karlsson, founder of the global stationery brand Kikki. K, bestselling author and creator of the Your Dream Life Starts Here coaching programme.Kristinaās journey is extraordinary. From a single 3am list that sparked a global brand, to navigating the loss of Kikki. K and stepping into a completely new chapter of her life, her story offers powerful lessons on resilience, intention and purposeful living.š§ In this conversation, we explore:ā How Kristinaās 3am list shaped the direction of her life and careerā The habits and mindset behind building Kikki Kā What losing a business taught her about resilience and growthā How to rethink failure as a foundation for progressā The power of dreaming as a practice for life direction and purposeā How reflection and small intentional actions turn dreams into realityā How Your Dream Life Starts Here supports people through change and uncertaintyWhether you are a parent supporting your child, a student facing uncertainty, or someone navigating a period of change, this episode offers reassurance that you donāt need everything figured out. Creating a dream life isnāt about overnight transformation, itās about clarity, reflection and taking small steps forward, wherever you are.š§ If youāve ever asked yourself āwhatās next?ā - this episode is for you.š Links & ResourcesYour Dream Life Starts Here Coaching Programme https://www.yourdreamlifestartshere.com/Your Dream Life Starts Here Book https://www.amazon.co.uk/Your-Dream-Life-Starts-Here/dp/064831720XDream Life https://www.thedreamlifestore.com/LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/kristina-karlsson/?originalSubdomain=auInstagram https://www.instagram.com/kristinadreamlife/?hl=en š© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent or educator, and donāt forget to subscribe for more conversations on learning, motivation and student wellbeing.š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30-minute consultation via my website: https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/
1. #37 - If Your Child Is Struggling at School, Listen to This First
16:27||Season 4, Ep. 1Have you ever looked at your childās academic struggles and felt an urgent need to explain why?Because one of the most consistent patterns I see in my academic coaching work is this: when students struggle, parents understandably rush to explanations, before checking whether the foundations for learning are actually in place.In this episode, I introduce a foundations-first approach to academic success and start with the most practical, and most overlooked, skill of all, which is planning.Planning isnāt about being organised or controlling your childās time. Itās about reducing cognitive overload, creating structure and giving students a system they can fall back on when learning feels overwhelming.š§ In this episode, youāll learn:ā Why academic struggles are often a systems problem, not an ability problemā Why planning is cognitive scaffolding - not just organisationā What I see again and again when students donāt have a planning systemā How lack of planning can look like poor focus, low motivation or overwhelmā A simple, realistic planning framework you can start using immediately:yearly overviewsideal weekly structurestask lists and time allocationvisual clarity and weekly resetsAt the beginning of the year, if youāre looking to improve and accelerate your childās learning and success, this is the place to start.š Links & Resourcesš© Enjoyed this episode? Share it with another parent or educator, and donāt forget to subscribe for more conversations on learning, motivation and student wellbeing.š Interested in personalised academic coaching? Book a free 30-minute consultation via my website: https://www.york-weaving-education.co.uk/