• Season Two's Best Advice for Parents and Educators
    May 19 2026

    What does it really mean to support kids at home, at school, and everywhere in between? In this season finale, host Dr. Christopher Villarreal revisits the conversations that resonated most from this season of Mindshift. From a first-grade teacher's story about a student who learned to name his feelings, to an FBI agent's reminder that your kids are already dealing with more than you think, to a communication coach's simple belief that conversations create change. Whether you're a parent, an educator, or anyone who cares about the young people in your life, this episode is a reminder of why these conversations matter. Find links to every full episode featured today at plcschools.org/mindshift.



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    13 mins
  • How Do I Help My Child Transition to Middle or High School?
    May 13 2026

    What Parents Need to Know About School Transitions

    Jessica Prusha, assistant principal at PLSHS, and Joel Bails, assistant principal at PLHS, join hosts Dr. Christopher Villarreal and Dr. Deb Anderson to pull back the curtain on what schools are already doing to help students navigate the move from elementary to middle school and middle school to high school, and what families can do at home to make those transitions smoother.

    Discover how both high schools use freshman centers to break a big building down into a school within a school, why the friendships kids make in middle school look very different by the time they reach high school, and what the shift from on-level to honors coursework really demands of students who've been on academic cruise control. Whether you're a parent watching your child approach a new school for the first time or an educator looking for fresh language to share with the families you serve, this episode is a practical and reassuring guide to one of the most common anxieties in a student's academic journey.

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    16 mins
  • Is Social Media a Real Career? What Parents Need to Know
    May 5 2026

    More Than Followers: Building a Real Career in Social Media

    "It's not that easy." That's Sophie Denker's answer when her parents ask if she's getting paid from social media yet, and it's also the starting point for a much bigger conversation. The PLSHS grad and athlete marketing professional joins Dr. Christopher Villarreal and Dr. Deb Anderson to talk about what a career in the social media space actually looks like, from her first brand deals in college to managing name, image, and likeness partnerships full time for athletes at Texas A&M.

    Sophie breaks down why experience matters, how brands are actively seeking out smaller creators because of their niche influence, and why the real money in the influencer world comes from brand partnerships rather than follower counts. She also makes the case that most social media careers happen entirely off camera, with behind-the-scenes roles at every company and in every industry.

    Whether you're a student wondering if this is a legitimate career path or a parent unsure what to say when your kid wants to work in social media, Sophie's message is clear: the blueprint exists now, and it's only going to keep growing.

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    16 mins
  • What's the Most Important Parenting Change I Can Make?
    Apr 29 2026

    Parenting: The Small Shift That Changes Everything

    What if the small shift that changes everything in your parenting has nothing to do with your kids? In this episode, Dr. Christopher Villarreal and Dr. Deb Anderson talk with Erin Bagwell, a licensed clinical social worker and mental health professional at Family Enrichment in Omaha, about how our own stress, history, and perfectionism quietly drive so many of our parenting struggles.

    Erin offers a practical, judgment-free look at why parents intervene too quickly, why we over-schedule, and what it actually takes to give our kids room to fail and grow. She also shares grounding tools for surviving those moments when you're running on empty and your kid can't find their scissors.

    Whether you're a parent, a teacher, or anyone who works with kids, this conversation will leave you with one clear takeaway: a little self-compassion goes a long way.

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    16 mins
  • How Is School Curriculum Actually Decided? What Parents Need to Know
    Apr 22 2026

    What's Really Behind What Your Kids Learn at School

    For most parents, curriculum is invisible. Kids go to school, take classes, and that's that. But the decisions behind what your children learn, when it changes, and how teachers deliver it involve a process most families never see.

    In this episode of Mindshift, co-hosts Dr. Christopher Villarreal and Dr. Deb Anderson sit down with Dr. Shureen Seery, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning at Papillion La Vista Community Schools, to pull back the curtain on how curriculum actually works.

    Discover why curriculum is far more than a textbook, how districts balance state standards with local autonomy, what triggers a curriculum revision outside the normal cycle, and the specific ways parents can be part of the process. Dr. Seery also shares why the "science of teaching" is consistent statewide while the "art of teaching" belongs to each classroom, and what that means for your child.

    Whether you're a parent trying to understand what's happening in your student's classroom or an educator thinking about how curriculum shapes learning, this conversation offers a clear-eyed look at one of the most important parts of public education.

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    15 mins
  • How to Talk to Teens About Drugs and Alcohol: What Actually Works
    Apr 15 2026

    Teen Substance Use: Why 'Just Say No' Doesn't Work Anymore

    Teen substance use looks different than it did a generation ago. Today's adolescents are increasingly turning to substances to self-medicate anxiety and depression—not just to party. In this episode, clinical psychologist Dr. Trevor Bixler explains why traditional "just say no" approaches fall short and what actually works.

    Dr. Bixler shares warning signs parents often miss, introduces the concept of "splintering"—a tactic teens use to avoid accountability—and explains why consequences like "you're grounded forever" backfire. He advocates for creating safe spaces where teens can ask questions without judgment and seeking professional help to craft realistic, enforceable consequences tied to behavioral change.

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    16 mins
  • Understanding AP Courses: What Parents Need to Know Before Enrollment
    Apr 8 2026

    Is Your Student Ready for AP? What Parents Need to Know

    What does it really mean when your student signs up for an Advanced Placement course? Dr. Julee Sauer, Director of Curriculum and Secondary Education for Papillion La Vista Community Schools (and a former AP English teacher) joins hosts Dr. Christopher Villarreal and Dr. Deb Anderson to break down what families should know before, during, and after the AP experience.

    Discover how AP courses can earn college credit and strengthen applications, what attitudes and study habits set students up for success, why taking fewer AP classes can sometimes be the smarter move, and how parents can support their student without taking over. Plus, Julie shares specific resources families can use right now to prepare.

    Whether you're planning ahead for a future high schooler or helping your teen navigate course selection today, this episode gives you the practical insight to make confident decisions about AP.

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    16 mins
  • Why Family Conflict Is Actually Healthy: Raising Resilient Kids
    Apr 1 2026

    The Role of Conflict in Raising Resilient Kids

    Every parent dreads hearing "I hate you" from their child. In this episode, hosts Dr. Christopher Villarreal and Dr. Deb Anderson sit down with Dr. Ashley Harlow, a licensed psychologist at Children's Nebraska, to unpack the moments of parent-child conflict that catch us off guard. Dr. Harlow breaks down what kids are really trying to communicate when emotions run high and shares a practical two-step framework: respond with empathy in the moment, then revisit with consequences once everyone has cooled down. Discover why conflict is actually a sign of healthy development, how to tell the difference between being permissive and being responsive, and why anger deserves space in your family. Whether you're parenting a five-year-old who's "running away" or a teenager pushing for more independence, this conversation will change how you navigate your next family disagreement.

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    16 mins