The Classroom Is an Environment Too
Jun 04, 2025
A child cannot tell their story freely in an environment that has never been designed with them in mind.
When we talk about dysfunctional environments and children's wellbeing, we tend to look outward from the school gate. We look at family circumstances, community deprivation, adverse childhood experiences. These matter enormously and the evidence on their impact is clear. But there is a dysfunctional environment we look at far less honestly, partly because we are inside it and partly because it is so thoroughly normalised that it does not feel like an environment at all. It feels like education.
The correction-first classroom is a dysfunctional environment for children's wellbeing. Not because teachers are unkind. Not because structure and standards do not matter. But because a child who spends years learning that their first instinct is wrong, that their voice requires fixing before it merits attention, that the measure of their effort is the number of marks on the page, is being shaped by that environment in ways that go far beyond literacy outcomes.
When we ask what produces the child who says "I can't write," the answer is almost never an intrinsic incapacity. It is an accumulation of experiences in which the act of expressing themselves generated correction rather than curiosity. The blank page does not produce anxiety in the abstract. It produces anxiety because of what the child has learned will happen next. That learning is environmental. The environment produced it. The environment can change it.
This is precisely what StoryQuest demonstrates at scale. When the environment changes, the behaviour changes immediately and completely. One hundred per cent engagement across 465 children, including those carrying labels that implied engagement was unlikely. Zero behavioural incidents. Not because the children changed. Because the environment changed. No correction during creation. Complete creative freedom. A trusted adult whose only function was to capture what the child imagined. A story that got published.
The seven transformations documented across 318 children are not the result of an intervention applied to children. They are the result of children encountering a functional environment, possibly for the first time in their experience of school, and responding to it exactly as children respond when the conditions are right. With joy. With pride. With the discovery that their voice was always worth hearing.
Shifting toward complete state wellbeing in schools does not require a new programme. It requires an honest reckoning with what the existing environment is teaching children about themselves. And the courage to change it.