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Summary:
In this episode of Beyond the Status Quo, we are joined by Will Richardson, who challenges the very foundations of modern education through the lens of “cathedral thinking.” He argues that we are living in a “time between worlds” yet schools continue to prepare young people for systems that are already breaking down.
Will invites us to confront an uncomfortable truth: education is not just out-dated; it is often complicit in creating the very problems it claims to solve. Rather than chasing quick fixes or superficial reform, he calls for deeper honesty, long-term thinking, and the courage to rethink what school is for.
This conversation pushes leaders to move beyond short-term outcomes and instead imagine futures rooted in relationships, wellbeing, and sustainability — even if they take decades to build. It’s not about fixing the system. It’s about questioning whether it still deserves to exist in its current form.
Takeaways:
· We are preparing young people for systems that may no longer exist.
· Schools often prioritise reputation and performance over wellbeing.
· Education is complicit in sustaining outdated and harmful models.
· This is not a problem to fix, but a complex predicament to navigate.
· Short-term thinking is limiting meaningful change.
· Honest, uncomfortable conversations are essential for progress.
· Leaders need to develop imagination, not just strategy.
· “Cathedral thinking” challenges us to think in decades, not years.
· Small acts of relational change still matter.
· New stories are needed to make change visible and possible.
Links:
Confronting Education — Future Serious School
Confronting Education — The Manifesto | Future Serious School
Future Serious | Will Richardson | Substack
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Kathryn Gorman & Tamara Zaple RolfsSummary:
In this episode of Beyond the Status Quo, we are joined by Will Richardson, who challenges the very foundations of modern education through the lens of “cathedral thinking.” He argues that we are living in a “time between worlds” yet schools continue to prepare young people for systems that are already breaking down.
Will invites us to confront an uncomfortable truth: education is not just out-dated; it is often complicit in creating the very problems it claims to solve. Rather than chasing quick fixes or superficial reform, he calls for deeper honesty, long-term thinking, and the courage to rethink what school is for.
This conversation pushes leaders to move beyond short-term outcomes and instead imagine futures rooted in relationships, wellbeing, and sustainability — even if they take decades to build. It’s not about fixing the system. It’s about questioning whether it still deserves to exist in its current form.
Takeaways:
· We are preparing young people for systems that may no longer exist.
· Schools often prioritise reputation and performance over wellbeing.
· Education is complicit in sustaining outdated and harmful models.
· This is not a problem to fix, but a complex predicament to navigate.
· Short-term thinking is limiting meaningful change.
· Honest, uncomfortable conversations are essential for progress.
· Leaders need to develop imagination, not just strategy.
· “Cathedral thinking” challenges us to think in decades, not years.
· Small acts of relational change still matter.
· New stories are needed to make change visible and possible.
Links:
Confronting Education — Future Serious School
Confronting Education — The Manifesto | Future Serious School
Future Serious | Will Richardson | Substack
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.