Possibly. But if it is, I don't recognize it.
What I had in mind was a lot simpler! no light delays, no acceleration. Those features are important to explain the twin paradox, where the relativistic effects are asymmetric. But as I said, the present situation is symmetric. Explaining it involves nothing more than the bare bones Lorentz transformation and its inverse.
(1) x' = γ(x - v t)
(2) t' = γ(t - v/c
2 x)
(3) x = γ(x' + v t')
(4) t = γ(t' + v/c
2 x')
Here (x, t) are the coordinates in Earth's inertial reference frame, while (x', t') are the coordinates in the ship's inertial frame.
The ship is located at x' = 0, so from Eq.(4) we have t = γt'. That is, since γ > 1, from the ship's perspective the ship's time t' is less than the Earth's time t.
On the other hand, the Earth is located at x = 0, so from Eq. (2) we have t' = γt. That is, from the Earth's point of view, the Earth's time t is less than the ship's time t'.