Before you go
Let’s stay connected
I’ll send you anecdotes, resources, and opinions regarding education, accessibility, and disability justice.
"*" indicates required fields
We were taught to mistrust our intuition. We were trained to need external influences to motivate us.⠀
⠀
Today’s parents are the product of the authoritarian model of education.⠀
⠀
When parents don’t trust their skills to guide their children, it’s because the militant educational model has succeeded in its mission: to train large populations of young minds how to think. After so many years of conditioning, today’s grown-ups have learned to look outward, accept, and comply.⠀
⠀
It shaped the need for clearly defined maps designed by others in higher tiers. It generated dependence. It orchestrated self-doubt.⠀
⠀
Dependence keeps us doubting ourselves.⠀
⠀
Self-doubt keeps us mistrusting our world.⠀
⠀
Mistrust keeps us quiet, compliant, and small.⠀
⠀
This is also true for teachers and other professionals who have little influence over educational policies. They, too, do what they are told and report to superiors with little desire to create change because they know what effort it would require to be heard. They comply.⠀
⠀
The cycle continues into the workforce until retirement. Answering to teachers and principals shifts to answering to supervisors and CEOs, who then report to a government that reinforces militant thought. They comply, too.⠀
⠀
What if children were given the autonomy to think and the independence to learn in ways that matter to them?
What if they didn’t have to line up like soldiers and raise their hands to be seen and heard?
What if children were valued just as much as the adults in the room?
How would their future look?
Who would they be?
What kind of organizations would they lead, and how?⠀
If you’re a leader looking to create real change in your organization, we can work through your vision together.
Continue reading my essays, activities, and case studies for supporting the education of disabled/chronically ill and neurodivergent children.
0 Comments