From Compliance to Curiosity: A Silent Revolution
Most of us are taught, early and consistently, to find the right answer. Very few of us are encouraged to question whether we are asking the right question. That distinction has defined everything for me. Throughout my years of leading institutions and working alongside teachers and students, there was always a part of my mind that would not settle—not out of dissatisfaction, but out of a deep, genuine love for understanding. It kept returning to questions that the day's agenda had no space for. Questions like: Is this system producing learning or merely managing it? Are we building thinkers or training performers? Is doing things well the same as doing the right things? These questions were inconvenient. They were unresolved. And they were, I have come to understand, essential. Because the moment we stop asking them—the moment we become too comfortable inside a well-functioning system to wonder whether it could be more meaningful—we stop growing. And an educator who has st...