Millennial Mom Thoughts

Jordan Spicklemire and Helen Plevka-Jones

Two millennial moms...sharing some thoughts. As parents and as education professionals, we discuss our past, present, and future relationships with changing technologies. We're interested in how it impacts ourselves, our students, and our kiddos, and we're learning how to advocate for the issues we care most about.

  1. قبل ساعتين

    EPISODE 39: Be Tech Wise! Springtime

    We start off by sharing some recent artistic adventures with our kids. Jordan reminds listeners about the upcoming playing & reading outdoor event on May 9th in Morton. Helen prepares for her final week of class and summer giggles. We then dig in to our main topic: Fairplay’s Be Tech Wise! resource, which shares expert advice on technology for families with children ages 0-5. Fairplay is an organization whose mission is working “to enhance children’s well-being by eliminating the exploitative and harmful business practices of marketers and Big Tech.” We focus most of our time discussing the tips from the Be Tech Wise with Baby! resource and share our experiences with technology as first-time moms. Helen shares how in her home, they decided to move the TV down to the basement so there was a screen-free family space in the living room. Jordan talks through regrets of phone use in the early days with a new baby and the things she would have done differently if she had different information at the time. We each talk through the pros and cons we found while using baby diapering/feeding tracking apps. Jordan then talks about how older siblings contribute to language development for younger siblings - and shares an example of how her two-year-old now repeats “six seven” thanks to her six-year-old. Check out the Be Tech Wise! series from Fairplay. Find Helen on Substack at ⁠⁠⁠⁠Resonances⁠⁠⁠⁠. Join Jordan in ⁠⁠⁠reConnect Morton⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ through Four Norms.

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  2. قبل ٦ أيام

    EPISODE 38: Preserving memories while being present

    Jordan starts off by sharing an exciting community update: she was awarded a grant to place screen-free activity stations in town from the Morton Community Foundation. Jordan is preparing to celebrate National Children’s Book Week and Screen-Free Week on May 9th by organizing a local outdoor event in Morton. Helen is excited for summer after accepting a teaching position at the local community college. She will be working with high school students in the TRIO Upward Bound program. We then discuss ancestry, preserving memories and documenting the important (and the everyday) moments in our lives. We ponder what we hope to pass down to our future generations. Helen shares ideas from Ian McEwan’s What We Can Know and Valeria Luiselli’s Lost Children Archive, two novels that explore how we document the present moment and question what happens to that documentation in the future. Helen also brings pieces of her dissertation into the discussion, including the history of the personal camera and how documenting famiy life has changed over time. Jordan then divulges the total number of photos and videos currently on her phone…it’s a lot. We try to reckon with how to preserve memories while also being present in the moment. We end by putting a request out for Joey Fatone to join our podcast. Find Helen on Substack at ⁠⁠⁠Resonances⁠⁠⁠. Join Jordan in ⁠⁠reConnect Morton⁠⁠⁠⁠ through Four Norms.

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  3. ٩ أبريل

    EPISODE 36: Remorse and Renorming

    We spend our episode focused on a recently published article by Natasha Singer in the New York Times, “Chromebook Remorse: Tech Backlash at Schools Extends Beyond Phones.” Before diving in, we recap our recent spring break and Easter travel adventures. And it turns out Helen’s daughter is no fan of the Easter Bunny. The article features a public middle school principal in Kansas, Mrs. Inge Esping, and her decision to eliminate her school’s 1:1 student Chromebook program this school year. We talk through the challenges teachers who have spent years using certain tech platforms to build their class materials may face and what it really looks like to renorm technology use in the classroom. We talk through ways districts can be more tech-intentional by sharing a resource developed by ScreenStrong: “Seven Core Values for Using Technology in the Classroom.” One thing Helen loved from the article was how reducing tech in the classroom led to students finding “old school” ways of being ornery, like sticking paper darts in the ceiling! We end the episode with Jordan sharing a 3rd grade, hand-written essay she recently discovered about her vision for Americas’s future. Find Helen on Substack at ⁠Resonances⁠. Join Jordan in reConnect Morton⁠⁠ through Four Norms ⁠. Follow along with the episode by reading the NYT article on Chromebook remorse, reviewing the ScreenStrong Seven Core Values document and the Granville County Public Schools playbook, checking out the Phone Free Schools Report, catching up with our local news on tech use in a nearby school, and fact-checking Jordan on students' off-task behavior statistics :) And then once you've done all that...give us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify! Who doesn't love homework!?

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  4. ١ أبريل

    EPISODE 35: Social media on trial and the verdict

    We first catch up on our latest life happenings, including (but not limited to): an E.R. visit, book clubs, and trying to remember to promote our own various spaces on the internet: Substack, YouTube, and Four Norms. Then we dive into the results of the bellwether social media trial in Los Angeles that just concluded on March 24 and the implications for the future. The jury found that Meta and YouTube intentionally built addictive platforms, which caused harm to the plaintiff, K.G.M., and they awarded her several million dollars in damages. Jordan mainly followed along the trial with the coverage thanks to the Scrolling2Death podcast and Instagram account. We discuss the questions the jury had to answer and how the public can now view evidence online for themselves. Jordan talks about her emotional reactions to hearing the verdict and thinking of the many families that have lost children over the years due to social media harms. We recap some of the points Emily Cherkin made in Episode 31 about the differences between ed tech and tech ed and the importance of media literacy. Helen then gives us a lesson on em dashes, en dashes, and hyphens after Jordan shares a recent AI cheating mishap. Find Helen on Substack at Resonances. Join Jordan on Four Norms through reConnect Morton. And why don’t you support Millennial Mom Thoughts on YouTube, too! Follow up with the episode by reading the internal documents, learning more about the families impacted, and listening to an analysis of the verdict.

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  5. ١٢ مارس

    EPISODE 32: GenAI, deleting photos, and ethical dilemmas

    We reflect on our last episode with Emily Cherkin, and Jordan shares her not-so-conspiracy theory about why there was low engagement on the posts we shared on social media. Helen details her new video essay adventure: GenAI on GenAI. Listeners can find this on her Substack, Resonances. Helen aims to answer the question: What does it mean to be a teacher in a world with generative AI? Naturally, that conversation leads to aging and mustaches. Jordan shares about an upcoming early birthday celebration with friends, and Helen describes what a float bath is and how relaxing it is – Jordan, however, is still not convinced this is a good idea. We talk about Jordan’s recent decision to delete all photos of her kids off social media and the plan to no longer share their pictures. We talk through the factors that lead to this choice and how online spaces like social media are no longer what they once were. Jordan then shares how Meta patented an AI tool that allows social media accounts to continue posting posthumously. Helen discusses her latest class activity for her students with six scenarios to discuss ethical decision making in education. She modeled one of the scenarios after Jordan’s decision to opt out her son from the iPad at school. We end with Jordan talking through her current project of applying for a community grant to place screen-free activity bins in businesses with waiting areas around town where families bring their kids. And make sure to listen to the end to hear about how someone once left a lunchbox full of yogurt on Helen’s porch.

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Two millennial moms...sharing some thoughts. As parents and as education professionals, we discuss our past, present, and future relationships with changing technologies. We're interested in how it impacts ourselves, our students, and our kiddos, and we're learning how to advocate for the issues we care most about.