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In this episode of Agile Ed, we explore a simple but often overlooked truth about teaching and learning: relationships come first.
Sustainable teaching practices aren’t built on tighter policies, heavier surveillance, or increased rigor. They’re built on trust. When classrooms are relationship-rich, instructors can step back from over-functioning, learners can take intellectual risks, and productive failure becomes possible. Without that relational environment as a foundation, even the best-designed learning experiences can collapse under strain.
The conversation connects intellectual humility, expertise, imposter syndrome, and GenAI to a deeper structural question: What actually holds learning in place and ensures it has sufficient room to grow? The answer isn’t control. It’s connection, cooperation, and collaboration.
If we want teaching practices that endure times of rapid social and technological change—we need structures that are relational, not reactive. This episode unpacks what that looks like in practice.
Attributions
By Dr. Lindsay Richardson & Dr. Ashley ThompsonIn this episode of Agile Ed, we explore a simple but often overlooked truth about teaching and learning: relationships come first.
Sustainable teaching practices aren’t built on tighter policies, heavier surveillance, or increased rigor. They’re built on trust. When classrooms are relationship-rich, instructors can step back from over-functioning, learners can take intellectual risks, and productive failure becomes possible. Without that relational environment as a foundation, even the best-designed learning experiences can collapse under strain.
The conversation connects intellectual humility, expertise, imposter syndrome, and GenAI to a deeper structural question: What actually holds learning in place and ensures it has sufficient room to grow? The answer isn’t control. It’s connection, cooperation, and collaboration.
If we want teaching practices that endure times of rapid social and technological change—we need structures that are relational, not reactive. This episode unpacks what that looks like in practice.
Attributions