How performative outrage and groupthink are reshaping education—and why it matters.
There’s a shift happening in education right now—and it’s not a good one.
What used to be professional frustration has started to harden into something else entirely.
Identity.
Spend any time in online education spaces, and you’ll see it unfold in real time:
- Teachers positioning themselves as the only ones who understand what’s happening in classrooms
- Administrators are painted as disconnected, performative, or incompetent
- System-level decisions reduced to sound bites and outrage
- Complex realities flattened into “common sense” solutions
It’s not just venting anymore.
It’s groupthink.
And it’s being rewarded.
The rise of performative outrage
There’s a new currency in education discourse:
Say something sharp. Make it simple. Make it emotional. Pick a side.
And watch it spread.
The more absolute the take, the more traction it gets.
“Bring back consequences.”
“Ban technology.”
“Go back to basics.”
“Teachers aren’t being listened to.”
These statements feel powerful. But they’re not analysis, they’re reactions, and reactions—especially when amplified at scale—have a way of becoming belief systems.
The lie that’s gaining traction
Let’s say it plainly:
The “admin bad / teacher good” narrative is intellectually lazy.
It collapses an entire profession into opposing camps for the sake of emotional clarity, and it ignores a fundamental truth:
The system being criticized is made up of educators.
Principals are teachers.
Consultants are teachers.
Curriculum leads are teachers.
Student services teams are made up of teachers.
Different roles don’t mean different values; they mean different vantage points.
When we pretend otherwise, we stop engaging professionally—and start reacting tribally.
Consultation is not a democratic free-for-all
Another idea gaining traction:
“If teachers weren’t consulted, the decision is flawed.”
That sounds fair, but it’s also unrealistic.
Public education is not a flat structure. It can’t be. There are layers of responsibility, timelines, legal obligations, and system-wide considerations that require decisions to be made without full consensus every time.
That’s not disrespect. That’s reality.
And when every decision that doesn’t include full consultation is framed as a failure, we create a system where trust erodes faster than any initiative can succeed.
Nostalgia is not pedagogy
“Back to basics” is trending again. It always does when things feel hard, but let’s be honest about what’s being implied:
- More punishment (rebranded as “accountability”)
- Less flexibility
- Less responsiveness to individual needs
- A return to a system that worked better for adults than it did for many kids
Here’s the problem:
None of this is grounded in current, peer-reviewed research as a universal solution. It’s grounded in memory, and memory has a way of editing out the students who didn’t thrive under those conditions.
We know better—and that matters
Modern research hasn’t made education softer. It’s made it more precise.
Frameworks like the Neurosequential Model have helped us understand something critical:
You can’t expect skills from students who haven’t developed the capacity for them yet.
This isn’t theory. It’s neuroscience.
- Regulation precedes cognition
- Development drives behaviour
- Stress impacts access to learning
So when a student struggles, the response isn’t:
How do we tighten control?
It’s:
What’s missing, and how do we build it?
That’s harder work.
It’s also the only work that actually moves the needle.
The real risk: when frustration replaces thinking
This becomes dangerous when enough people repeat the same emotionally charged ideas; they start to feel like the truth.
Not because they’ve been tested, but because they’ve been echoed. That’s how groupthink works. In a profession that should be grounded in evidence, that’s a problem.
Because once frustration becomes identity, you stop questioning it.
You defend it.
This isn’t about silencing teachers
Let’s be clear:
Teachers should speak.
Teachers should advocate.
Teachers should challenge systems.
That’s part of a healthy profession, but advocacy without grounding becomes noise. Noise doesn’t build better schools.
It just makes it harder to hear what actually works.
At eduKARE, the work is not about ideology.
It’s about alignment with what actually helps kids learn and grow:
- Relationship before compliance
- Regulation before expectation
- Skill-building over punishment
- Precision over generalization
Not because it sounds good.
Because it works.
A necessary gut-check
Before we post, share, or double down on the latest viral take, there are questions worth asking-
Is this grounded in evidence?
Or is this just how I feel right now?
Because those are not the same thing. Right now, education doesn’t need louder voices.
It needs clearer thinking.
Frustration without evidence is just noise.
