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Child in the forest

school culture

The unwritten norms, values, and expectations that shape how schools function. Culture influences discipline, belonging, inclusion, and what behaviours are seen as “good” or “problematic.”

  • Flourishing as an ethical imperative

    Flourishing as an ethical imperative

    Like many of you, I caught CBC’s Ideas episode the other day, where philosopher Angie Hobbs spoke about the ancient Greek concept of eudaimonia—a term sometimes translated as happiness or welfare, but more richly understood as human flourishing. In a world flooded by crisis, it may seem indulgent or impractical to contemplate the good life,…

  • The cost of being careful: how punishment rewires the brain for fear, not learning

    The cost of being careful: how punishment rewires the brain for fear, not learning

    There are classrooms where children learn to think, and there are classrooms where children learn to be careful. Too often, we pretend they are the same. But when punishment—especially collective or public punishment—dominates the emotional tone of a learning space, what emerges is not intellectual risk-taking or social responsibility. What emerges is fear. Surveillance. A…

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