Episodios

  • Talking Early Years: June O'Sullivan and Howard Roberts
    Jan 9 2026

    This week on the podcast, I’m joined by Howard Roberts, a creative strategist whose superpower is curiosity. The real kind—the kind that asks why, digs deeper, challenges the status quo, and isn’t satisfied with surface-level answers. In the Early Years, we know just how powerful curiosity is. It’s the engine of learning, the spark of joy, the heart of play. But what happens when we apply that same thinking to big public issues—like how we help people truly feel why the Early Years matter?

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    46 m
  • Talking Early Years: June O'Sullivan and Sam Wass
    Nov 28 2025

    I’ve just finished recording a podcast with Professor Sam Wass, and I’m still buzzing. He is Director of the Institute for the Science of Early Years at the University of East London. You may also know him from The Secret Life of Four-Year-Olds. His research is fascinating because it brings neuroscience right into the nursery, helping us understand what children’s brains are telling us about their experiences.

    Sam’s research brings neuroscience directly into early years settings. He uses microphones, cameras and stress monitors to measure how babies and young children actually experience the environments we create for them. This is not guesswork. It’s science showing us what their brains are trying to tell us.

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    39 m
  • Talking Early Years: June O'Sullivan and Catherine Lippe
    Oct 16 2025

    Why Nursery Chefs Are Our Unsung Food Champions

    I recently spoke with Catherine Lippe, a registered nutritionist with more than 18 years’ experience in Early Years nutrition. She reminded me that nursery chefs are far more than cooks; they are “food champions” whose work directly supports children’s development and helps address wider issues of health inequality.

    With the new EYFS nutrition guidance offering clearer direction, there’s a real opportunity to place food firmly at the heart of nursery life. But guidance alone won’t cut it; we need training, funding, and recognition for the people who make it happen.

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    42 m
  • Talking Early Years: In Conversation with Peter Moss
    Sep 22 2025

    Early childhood education is not a neutral or technical service—it is a deeply political space and this is the focus of my podcast guest Professor Peter Moss, the well-known and outspoken academic critic of the UK Early Years policies. He argues that every decision about how we organise, fund, and value the early years reflects our collective beliefs about children, families, and the society we want to build. Yet in England, political action often avoids asking the most important question: What is early education for?

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    37 m
  • Talking Early Years: June O'Sullivan and Ellen Sandseter
    Jul 26 2025

    Risky Play or Not Risky Play - That is the Question!

    Ellen Sandseter is a well-known professor at Queen Maud University College for Early Childhood Education in Trondheim, Norway but we all know her for her thoughtful and challenging work on risky play.

    If you are interested in a conversation about risky play from a leader in the field, listen here!

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    39 m
  • Talking Early Years: June O'Sullivan and Sue Egersdorff
    Jul 7 2025

    The Power of Intergenerational Nurseries

    In this podcast, I speak to Sue Egersdorff, co-founder of the intergenerational Ready Generations Nursery at Belong, in Chester. Her work is a powerful reminder that early childhood settings are not just educational spaces – they’re deeply embedded in the wider social and political landscape.

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    47 m
  • Talking Early Years: June O'Sullivan and Greg Bottrill
    May 30 2025

    Are children deprived of the opportunity to play?...

    ...is not a new question, but one that continues to be tackled on many levels. Greg Bottrill’s book 'Can I Go and Play Now?' remains a catalyst for the conversation and highlights the importance of adults as loving companions, advocating for children’s right to a childhood.

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    34 m
  • Talking Early Years: June O'Sullivan and Frank Cottrell-Boyce
    Apr 8 2025

    If you have been frog marched through books, why would you ever read for pleasure? asks Frank Cottrell-Boyce, the Children’s Book Laureate.

    The award-winning author and screenwriter Frank Cotterell Boyce is the 13th Children's Laureate of the United Kingdom, a role created by The BookTrust to champion every child’s right to a lifetime enriched with books and stories – recognising the transformative power of reading in children's lives.

    Join us on the podcast and hear Frank talk about the rights of children to stories, books, libraries and what he would do with a magic wand.

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    40 m
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