EPISODE · Mar 3, 2026 · 57 MIN
How a Child Psychologist is Helping Educators Bridge Differences & Build Belonging with Curiosity | Dr. Allison Briscoe-Smith
from A Work of Heart: Human Intelligence in Education · host Breathe For Change
What if cynicism and optimism are actually two sides of the same broken coin? Dr. Allison Briscoe-Smith (clinical psychologist, trauma expert, Senior Fellow at UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center, and co-architect of Breathe For Change's Human Intelligence framework) joins Sam and Ilana for a conversation that might just change how you show up in your classroom tomorrow.Allison defines cynicism not as pessimism, but as 100% certainty that everything will be terrible: a definition that reveals something surprising. It requires exactly zero action on your part. Just like toxic optimism. Both strip you of agency. Both move you toward learned helplessness. And both are spreading fast through schools right now.The antidote is curiosity. It can be used as a daily practice for educators: asking "what happened?" instead of "what's wrong?", wondering instead of knowing, and building the muscle of hopeful skepticism one degree at a time.Sam and Allison also dig into co-regulation, resilience, the difference between protection and preparation, why kids always assume your bad mood is their fault, and what it looks like to show up as a fully human educator (without oversharing or shutting down).If you've ever felt burned out, jaded, or like your best days in the classroom are behind you, this one's for you.Episode Timestamps:0:00 — Cynicism is 100% surety everything will be terrible7:20 — How the system accelerates teacher burnout14:30 — Curiosity as the antidote: hopeful skepticism in practice21:40 — Trauma-informed care: asking "what happened?" not "what's wrong?"28:00 — Co-regulation, mirror neurons, and how educators' emotions travel35:10 — When should educators share how they're really feeling?41:00 — Resilience: the difference between a shield and a bounce-back47:30 — Why boredom is a skill we've stopped teaching52:00 — Three steps back from burnout: awareness, inventory, curiosity56:15 — Resilience stories as resistance: finding hope in a heavy moment
What this episode covers
What if cynicism and optimism are actually two sides of the same broken coin? Dr. Allison Briscoe-Smith (clinical psychologist, trauma expert, Senior Fellow at UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center, and co-architect of Breathe For Change's Human Intelligence framework) joins Sam and Ilana for a conversation that might just change how you show up in your classroom tomorrow.Allison defines cynicism not as pessimism, but as 100% certainty that everything will be terrible: a definition that reveals something surprising. It requires exactly zero action on your part. Just like toxic optimism. Both strip you of agency. Both move you toward learned helplessness. And both are spreading fast through schools right now.The antidote is curiosity. It can be used as a daily practice for educators: asking "what happened?" instead of "what's wrong?", wondering instead of knowing, and building the muscle of hopeful skepticism one degree at a time.Sam and Allison also dig into co-regulation, resilience, the difference between protection and preparation, why kids always assume your bad mood is their fault, and what it looks like to show up as a fully human educator (without oversharing or shutting down).If you've ever felt burned out, jaded, or like your best days in the classroom are behind you, this one's for you.Episode Timestamps:0:00 — Cynicism is 100% surety everything will be terrible7:20 — How the system accelerates teacher burnout14:30 — Curiosity as the antidote: hopeful skepticism in practice21:40 — Trauma-informed care: asking "what happened?" not "what's wrong?"28:00 — Co-regulation, mirror neurons, and how educators' emotions travel35:10 — When should educators share how they're really feeling?41:00 — Resilience: the difference between a shield and a bounce-back47:30 — Why boredom is a skill we've stopped teaching52:00 — Three steps back from burnout: awareness, inventory, curiosity56:15 — Resilience stories as resistance: finding hope in a heavy moment
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How a Child Psychologist is Helping Educators Bridge Differences & Build Belonging with Curiosity | Dr. Allison Briscoe-Smith
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