Parent the Child You Have: Helping Students Build Skills That Stick (Ep 129)  episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 9, 2026 · 51 MIN

Parent the Child You Have: Helping Students Build Skills That Stick (Ep 129)

from Surfing the Quicksand · host Kathy Vines

Supporting kids with organization, motivation, and follow-through isn’t about creating perfect systems; it’s about understanding development, executive function, and who the child actually is. In this episode of Surfing the Quicksand, Kathy Vines talks with Tiffany Blassingame, educator, professional organizer, and academic life coach, about how families can move beyond power struggles and rigid expectations to create systems that truly support students. Tiffany explains why executive function skills, like time management, planning, and task initiation, can’t be forced through compliance, and why treating the student as the client changes everything. Drawing on her experience as both an educator and a parent, she shares practical insights on device management, environmental design, and helping kids build agency rather than dependence. They also explore how parents can shift from “fixing” to partnering, why analog solutions sometimes solve digital problems, and how understanding peak energy times can unlock motivation for both kids and adults. The conversation closes with Tiffany’s personal reset rituals and her refreshing reminder that stepping away (physically and mentally) can be the key to getting unstuck. Key Takeaways Executive function is developmental, not a character flaw. Kids aren’t lazy or defiant; they’re building skills in real time. Parent the child you have, not the one you wish you had. Systems must match this child’s brain and capacity. The student is the client. When kids have agency, systems are more likely to stick. Environment matters. Physical and digital spaces can either reduce or increase cognitive load. Devices aren’t “bad,” but they do need boundaries. Analog tools can sometimes solve modern problems more effectively. Motivation follows energy. Scheduling hard tasks during peak times makes avoidance less powerful. Stepping away creates clarity. Physical distance and reduced device use can reset both mind and body. Resources & Mentions Follow Tiffany on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tblassingame/ Tiffany’s company – Simple Organization: https://www.simpleorganization.org   About Tiffany Blassingame  Tiffany Blassingame, owner of Simple Organization, offers strategies to help busy adults and their families go from chaos to calm by achieving wellness through organization and productivity. Tiffany's varied experience as an educator makes it natural for her to specialize in student organization. Her specialties include working with families of elementary, middle, and high school students as well as college students and educators. Tiffany is a member of the National Association of Productivity and Organizing Professionals (NAPO) as well as the vice-president of the National Association of Black Professional Organizers (NABPO). She is also a professional organizer with Ebony & Orderly, a collaboration of 6 Black professional organizers in Atlanta. She speaks frequently on the topics of diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice, and about the founding of microschools on various platforms.

Supporting kids with organization, motivation, and follow-through isn’t about creating perfect systems; it’s about understanding development, executive function, and who the child actually is. In this episode of Surfing the Quicksand, Kathy Vines talks with Tiffany Blassingame, educator, professional organizer, and academic life coach, about how families can move beyond power struggles and rigid expectations to create systems that truly support students. Tiffany explains why executive function skills, like time management, planning, and task initiation, can’t be forced through compliance, and why treating the student as the client changes everything. Drawing on her experience as both an educator and a parent, she shares practical insights on device management, environmental design, and helping kids build agency rather than dependence. They also explore how parents can shift from “fixing” to partnering, why analog solutions sometimes solve digital problems, and how understanding peak energy times can unlock motivation for both kids and adults. The conversation closes with Tiffany’s personal reset rituals and her refreshing reminder that stepping away (physically and mentally) can be the key to getting unstuck. Key Takeaways Executive function is developmental, not a character flaw. Kids aren’t lazy or defiant; they’re building skills in real time. Parent the child you have, not the one you wish you had. Systems must match this child’s brain and capacity. The student is the client. When kids have agency, systems are more likely to stick. Environment matters. Physical and digital spaces can either reduce or increase cognitive load. Devices aren’t “bad,” but they do need boundaries. Analog tools can sometimes solve modern problems more effectively. Motivation follows energy. Scheduling hard tasks during peak times makes avoidance less powerful. Stepping away creates clarity. Physical distance and reduced device use can reset both mind and body. Resources & Mentions Follow Tiffany on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tblassingame/ Tiffany’s company – Simple Organization: https://www.simpleorganization.org   About Tiffany Blassingame  Tiffany Blassingame, owner of Simple Organization, offers strategies to help busy adults and their families go from chaos to calm by achieving wellness through organization and productivity. Tiffany's varied experience as an educator makes it natural for her to specialize in student organization. Her specialties include working with families of elementary, middle, and high school students as well as college students and educators. Tiffany is a member of the National Association of Productivity and Organizing Professionals (NAPO) as well as the vice-president of the National Association of Black Professional Organizers (NABPO). She is also a professional organizer with Ebony & Orderly, a collaboration of 6 Black professional organizers in Atlanta. She speaks frequently on the topics of diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice, and about the founding of microschools on various platforms.

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Parent the Child You Have: Helping Students Build Skills That Stick (Ep 129)

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This episode was published on April 9, 2026.

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Supporting kids with organization, motivation, and follow-through isn’t about creating perfect systems; it’s about understanding development, executive function, and who the child actually is. In this episode of Surfing the Quicksand, Kathy Vines...

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