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If the Space Doesn’t Change, Neither Will the Outcome
We spend time speaking about the Portrait of a Graduate. We name the attributes, we celebrate the language, we point to the vision. We do not always examine the studio that makes that portrait possible. A Portrait of a Graduate does not develop in abstraction. It is shaped by the conditions we design: the resources we fund, the adults we prepare, the spaces we curate, and the expectations we normalize. The studio is not just a room. It is the ecosystem that tells students whe
Catherine Addor
May 153 min read


Majority Neutral?
We like to believe the curriculum is neutral. It feels objective. Structured. Safe. It is not. Every curriculum reflects choices about whose knowledge matters. What we include and what we exclude sends messages about value and power. What is presented as “standard” or “core” is never accidental. “Neutral” curriculum often defaults to dominant narratives. It centers some voices while marginalizing others, even when that is not the intention. Students notice. Even when we do no
Catherine Addor
May 103 min read


Who are they becoming?
Too often, students move through lessons completing tasks without fully understanding how they are meant to engage as learners. Clarity around the student role shifts learning from compliance to purpose and transforms classrooms into spaces of active thinking and ownership. Defining the student role is not about labeling participation. It is about positioning students as thinkers, creators, problem-solvers, and contributors within the learning process. When the role is intent
Catherine Addor
May 83 min read


Get Back to Mess
Glitter. Say the word out loud and watch what happens. People flinch. They laugh nervously. They immediately picture the aftermath instead of the moment. Flour. Put it in the hands of a child, or even a teenager, and suddenly the kitchen is alive. Hands move, laughter builds, and yes, flour flies. Counters are dusted. Floors are coated. The experience expands beyond the recipe, becoming something shared, remembered, and deeply human. Somewhere along the way, we began to equat
Catherine Addor
May 13 min read


Hoot and the Truth About Student Agency
A boy notices something others ignore. A construction site. A disturbance. A question that will not let go. In Hoot, Roy Eberhardt does not wait for permission to care. He does not raise his hand and ask if he is allowed to act. He sees an injustice, endangered burrowing owls, and chooses to do something about it. That is student agency. Not compliance. Not participation. Not engagement framed by adult direction. Agency is ownership. It is identity. It is action rooted in pur
Catherine Addor
Mar 273 min read


The Discipline of Letting Students Struggle
Is it Support or Control? In education, we care deeply. That is both our strength and our vulnerability. We step in because we want students to succeed. We clarify directions before confusion sets in. We remind them about deadlines. We fix formatting. We redirect quickly. We anticipate mistakes before they happen. Here is the uncomfortable leadership question: Is what I am doing truly support, or is it control? The distinction matters more than we think. A Classroom Scenario
Catherine Addor
Feb 203 min read
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