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When the Classroom Becomes a Stage for Adult Anxieties

business & leadership children's wellbeing education & storytelling Mar 12, 2025

Children arrive at school with stories about who they want to become. The question is whether the classroom makes space for those stories or replaces them with ours.

Children arrive at school with aspirations. They want to be footballers, vets, astronauts, game designers, artists, engineers, explorers. These are not naive ambitions to be gently managed downward. They are the natural expression of a developing human being whose imagination is not yet constrained by adult experience of what is probable.

Something has happened to the space for that imagination in the modern classroom. The curriculum is crowded with content that reflects adult preoccupations: global challenges, environmental crisis, systemic injustice, digital risk. These are real concerns. They matter. But the medium through which they are transmitted, the child's school day, the child's classroom, the child's relationship with learning, belongs to the child, and there is a genuine question about what it does to a child's sense of their own future when the primary message about the world they are inheriting is that it is damaged, dangerous, and requiring urgent remediation.

Children who are asked what matters to them, when given the freedom to actually say, do not typically lead with climate anxiety or global crisis. They talk about their families, their friendships, their interests, their dreams. They talk about what they want to become. They are, by nature, oriented toward the future with hope rather than dread, and that orientation is one of the most protective qualities a developing person can have.

The classroom that makes space for children's voices, aspirations, and dreams is not ignoring the real challenges of the world. It is building the humans who will be capable of meeting them. A child who has been heard, who has experienced their creativity as something of value, who has held their published story in their hands and understood that their voice produces things that matter, is a child who will face difficulty with agency rather than resignation. That is not a small thing. It may, in the long run, be the most important thing education produces. And it requires the adults in the room to get out of the way long enough to let children inhabit their own futures.

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