Thursday, December 4, 2025

How to Address School Bullying: Beyond Positive Behavior Support

 Temple Grandin's Case for Skills-Based Education and Structured Discipline: A Critical Analysis



Q: What is Temple Grandin's parenting philosophy? A: Temple Grandin advocates for structured discipline with clear, consistent consequences, systematic exposure to social situations, early work skills development, and pushing children outside their comfort zones while accommodating genuine neurological differences.

Q: Why does Temple Grandin support vocational education? A: Grandin argues that eliminating skills-based education has marginalized visual and kinesthetic thinkers, created skilled trades shortages, and left many capable young people without appropriate career pathways as AI disrupts white-collar jobs.

Q: What does Temple Grandin say about gentle parenting? A: Grandin distinguishes between harsh punishment (which she opposes) and firm, consistent discipline (which she advocates). She argues that overprotective approaches prevent children from developing resilience and practical competence.

Executive Summary

Dr. Temple Grandin, professor of animal science at Colorado State University and one of the world's most prominent advocates for autism awareness, has spent decades articulating a compelling—and increasingly urgent—argument about child development, education, and social preparation. Her message, grounded in both personal experience and professional observation, centers on a provocative thesis: contemporary approaches to parenting and education, despite their therapeutic intentions, may be fundamentally failing children, particularly those on the autism spectrum.

This analysis examines Grandin's core arguments across four critical domains: the necessity of structured discipline and consequences, the vital importance of skills-based vocational education, the dangers of overprotection and "gentle" parenting approaches, and the epidemic of bullying enabled by permissive school environments. Her perspective gains particular urgency in an era when artificial intelligence threatens to displace millions of jobs while skilled trades go unfilled, and when children are increasingly isolated in bedrooms with screens rather than developing practical competencies and social resilience.

I. The Foundation: Grandin's Personal Experience with Structured Discipline

The 1950s Parenting Model

Temple Grandin's success story begins with her mother, Eustacia Cutler, who refused to institutionalize her daughter when doctors recommended it in 1950. Instead, Cutler implemented what Grandin describes as rigorous, consistent discipline combined with systematic exposure to social situations. The approach was characterized by several key elements:

Consistent Consequences: When Grandin had tantrums in elementary school, the penalty was always the same—no television for one night. This rule was enforced consistently at both home and school, creating a unified framework. Grandin emphasizes that her mother handled these situations calmly: she would be sent to her room to scream it out, then invited back to join the family after calming down, at which point she would be told, "You know the rule. There will be no TV tonight."

Critically, Grandin notes that her mother distinguished between tantrums caused by willful behavior and meltdowns caused by sensory overload. The TV penalty was never applied for sensory-related meltdowns—only for deliberate misbehavior. This nuance demonstrates that structured discipline does not mean ignoring legitimate neurological differences.

Forced Social Exposure: At age eight, Grandin was made to serve as a party hostess—shaking hands, taking coats, greeting guests. She describes the 1950s approach as teaching social skills "in a much more rigid way," noting that children who were mildly autistic were essentially forced to learn these skills. Her assessment is stark: "It hurts the autistic much more than it does the normal kids to not have these skills formally taught."

Systematic Skills Development: From age 13, Grandin had paying work—first doing hand sewing for a seamstress two afternoons per week, then at 15 cleaning horse stalls daily and managing a barn. She describes feeling pride in being "in charge of the horse barn" and emphasizes that having a job taught both discipline and responsibility.

The Logic-Based Approach: Grandin explains that her logical mind controlled her social behavior. She interacted extensively with adults and children, experiencing varied social situations. Logic informed her decision to obey social rules—not because she intuitively understood them, but because she learned to avoid unpleasant consequences.

The Critical Distinction

What makes Grandin's experience instructive is not that it was easy or comfortable—it wasn't. But it provided her with a framework for navigating a world that felt, in her words, like being "an anthropologist on Mars." The structure, expectations, and consequences gave her concrete rules to follow when social intuition failed her. This stands in sharp contrast to what she observes today.

II. The Contemporary Crisis: Overprotection and Learned Helplessness

"Stuck in the Bedroom" Syndrome

Grandin reports with increasing alarm that parents regularly approach her at conferences describing children and young adults who are "stuck in their bedrooms playing video games." These are often fully verbal individuals who did well academically but lack basic life skills and work experience. She describes this as a "huge concern" and calls it "a disservice to the child."

The pattern is consistent: high-functioning individuals on the spectrum who should be capable of independence instead remain dependent, unmotivated, and hopeless. When asked about their situation, she consistently identifies parental fear as the central obstacle: "They know their kid isn't going to change anything themselves. But they are afraid to push them."

The Anxiety Transfer

In her work with psychologist Dr. Debra Moore, co-author of The Loving Push, Grandin identifies a critical dynamic: parental anxiety often masquerades as or amplifies the child's anxiety. Moore notes from her clinical experience: "Check your anxiety at the door, because that's what's holding you back. You could be confusing that with your child's anxiety. Maybe your child is not as anxious as you are, in which case that's kind of a disservice to your child."

She observes that mothers, in particular, often struggle with this transition. Having appropriately protected young children, they continue protective behaviors long after the child has outgrown the need: "Moms get really used to protecting when the kid is younger, and sometimes they keep doing it even though the kid's outgrown that."

The Failure Paradox

Moore articulates a crucial principle that runs counter to contemporary protective parenting: "If you're not letting the kid fail, you're probably not pushing hard enough, because that's just going to be part of learning new behaviors and new skills."

This directly contradicts the prevailing therapeutic ethos that prioritizes emotional safety and avoiding situations that might cause distress. Grandin and Moore argue that this protective approach actually increases long-term suffering by preventing the development of resilience and practical competence.

The Label Trap

Grandin warns that autism diagnoses, while helpful for accessing services, can become obstacles when they lower expectations. She cites meeting 16-year-olds who are fully verbal but have never gone shopping alone. Parents think, "Oh, poor Tommy. He has autism so he doesn't have to learn things like shopping."

Her assessment is unambiguous: "It hurts because they don't have enough expectations for the kids. I see too many kids who are smart and did well in school, but they're not getting a job because when they were young, they didn't learn any work skills."

III. The Skills-Based Education Imperative

The Elimination of Vocational Training

Grandin describes the removal of hands-on classes from American schools as "one of the worst things they've done in education." The list of what has been lost is extensive: shop classes, woodworking, metalworking, drafting, sewing, cooking, automotive repair, and other practical skills courses.

This isn't simply nostalgia. The elimination of these programs has had measurable consequences:

Historical Context: In the 1970s, shop classes were prevalent in most American public schools. Seattle alone led the nation in vocational education during that decade. These classes were viewed as necessary parts of the curriculum during a time when working with one's hands in manufacturing was considered a noble profession.

The Decline: The systematic elimination began in the 1980s and accelerated in the 1990s. California's Proposition 13 in 1978 caused a 60% drop in tax revenue for schools, with shop classes being the first cut. In New York, vocational school enrollment declined 25% in just three years around 2000. By the turn of the 21st century, many young people didn't even know what a shop class was.

The Tracking Problem: Part of the decline stemmed from legitimate concerns about racial and socioeconomic tracking—students of color and those from low-income families were disproportionately steered away from college-prep courses into vocational tracks. However, Grandin argues that the solution should have been equitable access to both pathways, not the elimination of vocational education entirely.

The "College for All" Push: The guiding principle that emerged in the 1990s held that college education should be the goal for all students. While well-intentioned, this approach created several problems:

  • It devalued skilled trades
  • It created a caste system where vocational education became stigmatized
  • It left visual and kinesthetic thinkers without appropriate educational pathways
  • It failed to recognize that different types of minds require different approaches

The Three Types of Thinking

Grandin's research, synthesized in her book Visual Thinking, identifies three distinct cognitive styles:

  1. Photo-Realistic Visual Thinkers: These individuals think in detailed pictures and excel at spatial reasoning, design, and hands-on problem-solving. Grandin herself is this type of thinker.

  2. Mathematical Pattern Thinkers: These are "visual-spatial" thinkers who excel at pattern recognition and systemic thinking, often gravitating toward mathematics, engineering, and computer science.

  3. Word Thinkers: These individuals think primarily in language and often excel in areas requiring verbal reasoning.

Grandin emphasizes that to solve major challenges—from climate change to infrastructure—society needs collaboration among all three types. Yet current educational systems, with their emphasis on standardized testing and verbal-mathematical skills, systematically disadvantage visual thinkers.

The Practical Consequences

The impact of eliminating skills-based education extends beyond individual career preparation:

Problem-Solving Deficits: Grandin observes that "a lot of students today don't have very good problem-solving skills" because they haven't had opportunities to work through real-world, hands-on challenges.

Career Mismatch: She meets college graduates who discover too late that they hate the careers they've been pushed toward: "There's a lot of people today that are going down that track, you know, and that's a bad one to go down."

Labor Shortages: There are critical shortages in skilled trades—welding, HVAC, plumbing, electrical work, industrial building, and metal fabrication. These are well-paying jobs that AI and automation are unlikely to eliminate, yet we're importing manufactured goods because we lack people with the skills to make them domestically.

Visual Thinker Marginalization: "I'm seeing too many visual thinkers getting sidelined because we're not very good at math. I have a terrible time with algebra. I got a C in statistics. I'm just a visual thinker." She argues that the current system's emphasis on algebra as a gatekeeper is screening out capable individuals who think differently.

The AI and Automation Context

Grandin's arguments gain particular urgency in the context of artificial intelligence and automation:

White-Collar Job Vulnerability: Recent research indicates that AI and automation are beginning to affect white-collar, entry-level positions that traditionally went to college graduates. Job postings requiring generative AI skills increased by 15,625% from 2021 to 2024, fundamentally changing the employment landscape.

Skilled Trades Resilience: Surveys of Generation Z show that 77% consider it important that their future job is hard to automate, with many pointing to carpentry, plumbing, and electrical work as occupations safe from automation. One young electrician commented: "I don't feel overly threatened by the growth of AI in my industry. That will be a pretty impressive robot that can do my job one day, if it ever happens."

The Swiss Model: Grandin frequently cites successful European apprenticeship programs, particularly in Switzerland, where pronounced focus on vocational education correlates with lower youth unemployment. These systems integrate students with practical skills directly into the workforce to support strong manufacturing bases.

IV. The Bullying Crisis and Therapeutic Inadequacy

The Structured Social Environment of the Past

Grandin's experience with bullying provides important context for understanding contemporary challenges. While she was "teased and bullied in high school," several factors mitigated the damage:

Elementary School Protection: She reports experiencing no bullying in elementary school, which she attributes to several factors. Children carpooled together with neighborhood families, and mothers communicated regularly and established consistent rules and expectations for behavior across households.

Peer-Mediated Instruction: Her elementary teacher employed what would later be recognized as "peer-mediated instruction." The teacher would explain to other students, on days when Grandin wasn't present, that she was different and needed help with social cues and interactions. Grandin credits these conversations with significantly reducing bullying.

Clear Consequences: When she did retaliate against bullying in high school by throwing a book at a girl who called her a derogatory name, she was expelled from the school. While harsh, the consequence was clear and immediate.

Shared Interest Communities: Grandin found refuge and friendship in activities with shared interests—horses, electronics, model rockets. These communities provided social connection based on common passion rather than social performance.

The Contemporary Failure

Grandin expresses profound concern about what she observes in schools today. Your experience as a classroom teacher, which you describe in your request, appears to align with her observations:

Open Bullying Without Consequence: The fact that students can openly bully peers, including those on the autism spectrum, in front of teachers suggests a fundamental failure of school discipline systems.

Positive Behavior Support Limitations: Positive Behavior Supports (PBS) with Tier 1 interventions but without Tier 2 or Tier 3 supports represents an incomplete framework. Tier 1 (universal supports for all students) cannot address severe behavioral problems without more intensive interventions.

The "Gentle Administration" Problem: When administrators adopt a "let them" mentality—essentially permitting maladaptive behaviors in the name of therapeutic approaches—they create environments where bullying, harassment, and even sexual assault can occur without meaningful intervention.

The Gold Star Fallacy: The notion that you can change entrenched behavioral problems through positive reinforcement alone (like giving gold stars) fails when:

  • Parents at home are permitting children to do whatever they want
  • There are no consequences for bullying or harassment
  • The expectation of manners and rule-following isn't established and enforced consistently
  • Students understand that therapeutic language provides protection from accountability

Therapeutic Approaches vs. Clear Consequences

Grandin's position isn't anti-therapeutic—she acknowledges the importance of distinguishing between behaviors driven by neurological differences and those that are willful. However, she maintains that:

Consistency is Paramount: Rules must be consistent at both home and school. Without unified expectations, children learn to manipulate inconsistencies.

Consequences Must Be Real: Therapeutic interventions cannot replace consequences for deliberate harmful behavior. When she had tantrums as a child, there was no TV that night. The rule was always enforced.

Pain and Sensory Issues Must Be Addressed: Hidden medical problems (acid reflux, constipation, yeast infections, toothaches, earaches) can drive aggressive behavior and must be ruled out. Sensory overload requires accommodation, not punishment. But once medical and sensory causes are eliminated, behavioral issues require behavioral consequences.

The "No Means No" Principle: "Kids need to learn that 'No' means No and be rewarded when they do things right."

V. The Broader Social and Economic Implications

The Death of the Middle Class Pathway

The elimination of vocational education has been called "The Death of Vocational Education and the Demise of the American Middle Class." This isn't hyperbole:

Historical Success Stories: Grandin notes that in her generation, the "geeks and nerds" she went to school with—individuals who would be diagnosed as ASD today—all got jobs and some own businesses. Why? Because they had paper routes in middle school, they learned work skills early, and vocational pathways were available and respected.

The Grandfather Effect: Grandin describes a phenomenon where grandparents on the autism spectrum—who had successful careers in engineering, accounting, or computer science, who were married and had children—have grandchildren on the spectrum who are struggling despite being more academically capable. The difference isn't the severity of autism; it's the presence or absence of structured preparation for work.

Current Labor Market Disconnect: We simultaneously have:

  • Record numbers of college graduates
  • Massive student debt
  • Underemployment of degree holders
  • Critical shortages in skilled trades
  • Rising costs for skilled services
  • Jobs going unfilled despite good pay and job security

The Video Game Addiction Crisis

Grandin is particularly concerned about screen time and video game addiction, especially for individuals on the autism spectrum:

Personal Vulnerability: "If video games had been available when I was a small child, I would have been a total addict." She describes once thinking she had played for 30 minutes when she had actually played for several hours.

Research Evidence: "Research clearly shows that individuals on the autism spectrum are more likely to become addicted to video games."

The Bedroom Recluse: She describes meeting "too many parents" whose children are stuck in bedrooms playing video games, with mothers who "don't know what to do." The outcome is predictable: "continued dependency, vulnerability to internet/gaming addiction, loneliness, and insecurity, and a vocational wasteland."

The Silicon Valley Irony: She notes that there's "a dark consensus about screens and kids" emerging even in Silicon Valley, where the technology is created. Those who understand the addictive design of these platforms are increasingly restricting their own children's access.

The Ego Protection Fallacy

Your observation about being "afraid to hurt egos" and "afraid of damaging egos and hurting feelings" speaks to a central tension in contemporary child-rearing:

The Self-Esteem Movement: The emphasis on protecting children's self-esteem has in some cases produced the opposite effect—children who are fragile, entitled, and unable to handle criticism or failure.

Grandin's Counter-Evidence: She credits work experience with improving her self-esteem: "It improved my self esteem to be recognized for doing a job well." True self-esteem came from competence, not from protection from challenge.

The Stretching Principle: "You have to stretch these kids just outside their comfort zone to help them develop." This is fundamentally incompatible with an approach that prioritizes never causing discomfort.

The Failure Necessity: As Dr. Moore observed, if children aren't failing, they're not being pushed hard enough. Failure is an essential part of learning—protecting children from it is protecting them from growth.

VI. The Path Forward: Practical Recommendations

Based on Grandin's extensive work, several concrete steps emerge:

For Parents

Start Work Skills Early: Begin in middle school with jobs outside the home—walking dogs for neighbors, doing simple chores for pay, volunteer work at community centers. These teach independence and responsibility.

Implement Consistent Discipline: Establish clear rules with clear consequences. Enforce them consistently. Distinguish between neurological issues (sensory overload, medical problems) and behavioral choices.

Push Beyond Comfort Zones: Provide choices of "stretching" activities. If a child resists all social situations, offer options: "You can do Boy Scouts or robotics, but you're doing one." Make them order their own food at restaurants. Have them interact with adults.

Limit Screen Time: Be especially vigilant with children on the spectrum. Set hard limits on video game time and enforce them. Use screens as privileges, not rights.

Expose to Multiple Fields: Take children to various work environments. Let them try different activities. Use their fixations productively—if they love trains, use trains to teach math, geography, history.

Teach Manners Explicitly: Don't assume children will pick up social skills naturally. Teach please and thank you. Teach handshaking. Teach turn-taking. Practice these skills repeatedly.

For Educators

Restore Skills-Based Learning: Advocate for the return of shop classes, art, music, theater, cooking, sewing, and other hands-on courses. These aren't peripheral luxuries—they're essential for different types of learners and provide pathways to viable careers.

Recognize Different Thinking Styles: Understand that visual thinkers, pattern thinkers, and word thinkers require different approaches. Use visual aids, hands-on demonstrations, and practical applications where possible.

Build on Strengths: If a student excels at math but struggles with reading, provide advanced math opportunities while supporting reading development. Never hold smart children back because of uneven skills.

Connect to Work: Create opportunities for students to do real work—tutoring younger students, maintaining equipment, participating in school-based enterprises.

Address Bullying Decisively: Implement all three tiers of Positive Behavior Support. Recognize that universal supports alone cannot address serious behavioral problems. Have clear consequences for bullying and harassment, and enforce them consistently regardless of the perpetrator's diagnosis or background.

Partner with Parents: Ensure rules and consequences are consistent between home and school. When parents undermine school discipline or vice versa, children learn to play systems against each other.

For Schools and Districts

Develop Career and Technical Education (CTE) Programs: Modern CTE is not the tracking of old vocational education. It provides pathways to both careers and college, with hands-on learning in fields from healthcare to computer science to construction.

Create Work-Based Learning Opportunities: Establish partnerships with local businesses for internships, apprenticeships, and job shadowing. Use the 4+1 model where students spend one day per week in community work experiences.

Implement Comprehensive Behavioral Systems: Have clear, consistently enforced discipline policies. Therapeutic approaches are important, but cannot replace consequences for harmful behavior. Train all staff in distinguishing between behaviors driven by disability and those that are choices.

Support Different Learners: Provide sensory accommodations for those who need them. Offer flexible seating, movement breaks, noise-cancelling options. But maintain high expectations for behavior and academic effort.

Engage Community Resources: Bring in retired tradespeople, craftspeople, and other community members to teach practical skills and mentor students.

For Policymakers

Reinvest in Vocational Education: Provide funding for equipment, facilities, and qualified instructors. Recognize that these programs require significant resources but provide substantial returns.

Reduce Standardized Testing Emphasis: Current testing regimes disadvantage visual and kinesthetic learners. Consider multiple measures of achievement and competence.

Support Apprenticeship Programs: Study and adapt successful models from Europe, particularly Switzerland. Create pathways from high school to apprenticeships to careers in skilled trades.

Address the Skilled Trades Shortage: Recognize this as a national priority. We face critical shortages in HVAC, welding, plumbing, electrical work, and other essential trades even as we have record numbers of underemployed college graduates.

VII. Addressing Counter-Arguments

"But Gentle Parenting is Evidence-Based"

Gentle parenting advocates point to research on the negative effects of harsh punishment and the benefits of responsive, child-centered approaches. Grandin doesn't reject this research—she distinguishes between harsh punishment and firm, consistent discipline.

Her mother's approach was calm, not harsh. Consequences were predictable, not arbitrary. Sensory issues and medical problems were accommodated, not punished. But behavioral choices had consequences. The distinction is crucial: firmness and clarity need not be harsh or punitive.

"Different Times, Different Challenges"

The argument that 1950s approaches can't work in 2025 because society has changed fails to reckon with why those approaches worked. The fundamental need for structure, consistency, and exposure to challenge hasn't changed. If anything, the chaotic, overstimulating modern environment makes these things more necessary, not less.

"What About Trauma-Informed Care?"

Understanding trauma and its effects on behavior is crucial. But trauma-informed approaches are meant to inform response, not preclude accountability. A trauma-informed approach recognizes why a child might struggle with certain situations and provides appropriate support—but still maintains expectations and consequences for harmful behavior toward others.

"This Stigmatizes Vocational Education"

Grandin's advocacy for skilled trades and vocational education does the opposite—it recognizes these pathways as equally valuable to academic ones, worthy of the same respect and resources. The stigmatization comes from the "college for all" mentality and the systematic elimination of these programs, not from acknowledging their value.

"Not All Children Need Pushing"

True—and Grandin acknowledges this. She emphasizes knowing the individual child, distinguishing between different causes of behavior, and providing appropriate accommodations. But she also notes that parental anxiety often masquerades as the child's needs. The question is whether avoidance is truly serving the child or protecting the parent's emotions.

VIII. Conclusion: The Stakes

Temple Grandin's arguments deserve serious engagement because the stakes are extraordinarily high. We're producing a generation of young people who:

  • Lack basic life and work skills
  • Are isolated in their rooms with screens
  • Have never experienced meaningful consequences for harmful behavior
  • Haven't developed resilience through age-appropriate challenges
  • Are accumulating massive debt for degrees that don't lead to employment
  • Are unprepared for a labor market rapidly being disrupted by AI and automation

Meanwhile, we have:

  • Critical shortages in skilled trades
  • Infrastructure that desperately needs the kind of visual, hands-on thinkers that the educational system is failing
  • An epidemic of bullying and harassment in schools without effective intervention
  • Rising rates of anxiety, depression, and failure to launch among young adults

Grandin's message is that these problems are connected. The overprotection, the elimination of skills-based education, the therapeutic approaches that prioritize feelings over competence, the lack of consistent discipline—these aren't isolated issues. They represent a fundamental shift in how we prepare children for adulthood, and that shift isn't working.

Her alternative isn't a return to harsh authoritarianism or insensitive tracking. It's a return to:

  • High but appropriate expectations
  • Consistent, fair discipline
  • Systematic exposure to age-appropriate challenges
  • Respect for different types of minds and learners
  • Multiple pathways to successful, meaningful adult life
  • Recognition that building competence builds true self-esteem
  • Understanding that protecting children from all discomfort doesn't serve them—it disables them

As she frequently emphasizes, "The worst thing you can do is take children with autism and throw them in a special ed class and let them rot." But the principle extends beyond autism: the worst thing we can do to any child is lower our expectations, shield them from growth opportunities, and send them into the world unprepared.

The evidence suggests that this is exactly what we're doing—and both individual children and society as a whole are paying the price.


This analysis synthesizes Dr. Temple Grandin's positions based on her books, published articles, interviews, and public presentations. While it represents her arguments as accurately as possible based on available sources, readers are encouraged to engage with her original works, particularly "The Loving Push" (with Dr. Debra Moore), "Visual Thinking," "Thinking in Pictures," and "The Way I See It" for fuller context and nuance.

Friday, November 28, 2025

Micromanagement is the enemy of magic. And education without magic is just compliance.

Rekindling Le Feu Sacré: Why Schools Must Restore Hands-On Learning | Education Reform

Rekindling Le Feu Sacré: Why American Schools Must Restore Hands-On Learning to Save Children's Passion

"We've confused reform with control, innovation with standardization, and in our neurotic pursuit of measurable outcomes, we've extinguished le feu sacré—the sacred fire that makes learning worth pursuing."

"Every reform promised to save education. Every mandate vowed to leave no child behind. Yet with each new initiative, we micromanaged away another piece of raison d'être—the very reason for being that makes a student want to learn."

"The irony of education reform: we've become so obsessed with improving schools that we've forgotten what schools are for—to ignite curiosity, nurture passion, and kindle the sacred fire within each child."























The French have a phrase that captures something essential about human drive: le feu sacré—the sacred fire. It's that inner spark, that passion that compels someone to create, to build, to discover. In the days when a sixteen-year-old schoolmarm taught multi-age frontier classes armed with little more than McGuffey Readers and the occasional oversight from the local pastor, children often received a more meaningful education than many receive today. The reason is simple: we have micromanaged the fire right out of our schools.

The Wisdom We're Ignoring: Temple Grandin's Call to Action

Temple Grandin, the renowned animal scientist and autism advocate, warns that schools are eliminating hands-on classes where students discover potential careers. She poses a critical question: if children never encounter welding, machining, or art classes, how will they develop interest in these fields? Grandin emphasizes that one major educational mistake has been removing hands-on learning opportunities.

Her concerns are backed by her own experience as a visual thinker who sees the world in pictures rather than words. Grandin notes that autistic individuals often excel at building machinery due to their visual thinking abilities. But this isn't just about neurodiversity—it's about recognizing that different minds require different approaches, and our current system serves only a narrow slice of human intelligence.

Grandin identifies three distinct types of thinkers: visual thinkers who think in pictures, spatial visualizers who think in patterns, and verbal thinkers who think in words. Our education system, hyperfocused on standardized tests and college preparation, has been designed almost exclusively for verbal thinkers while abandoning the others.

The Great Purge: How We Dismantled Vocational and Arts Education

The statistics tell a devastating story. Over 3.6 million American students lack access to music education, with more than 2 million having no access to any arts education whatsoever. In Oklahoma alone, schools eliminated 1,110 fine arts classes between 2014 and 2018, leaving nearly 30 percent of students in schools with no fine arts offerings.

The vocational trades have suffered equally. Seattle, once a national leader in vocational education during the 1970s, now has only 4 of its original 17 shop classes remaining. What happened? We decided, collectively and disastrously, that everyone needed a four-year college degree.

Between 2008 and 2012, the Los Angeles Unified School District dismissed one-third of its 345 arts teachers, reducing arts offerings for half of elementary students to zero. This wasn't just about budget cuts—it was about priorities. When No Child Left Behind and other accountability measures made standardized test scores the primary metric of school success, everything else became expendable.

The European Alternative: What We Lost and They Retained

When I lived in Sweden studying multicultural education in 1998-1999, I visited a high school that embodied a completely different philosophy. There was no massive sports complex, no Olympic-sized pool, no gleaming football stadium—just a gravel soccer pitch kept deliberately low-maintenance. But inside, the building told a different story.

The library was immaculate and packed with books. Students worked in a fully equipped avionics lab, learning to service airplane engines and frames. Every student was exposed to multiple trades, discovering where their talents and interests lay. This wasn't tracking or sorting—it was exploration and empowerment.

Countries like Japan, Singapore, the Netherlands, and Denmark responded to global economic changes by strengthening both academic and vocational programs, maintaining robust connections between employers and high schools. They didn't force a false choice between intellectual development and practical skills. They understood that a healthy society needs both engineers and technicians, both managers and master craftspeople.

Meanwhile, America made a different choice. In the 1950s, shop classes were prestigious and students accomplished in trades were revered, but by the 1980s, vocational education had been rebranded as education for "bad students". The education system sent a clear message: vocational classes were for failures. We couldn't have been more wrong.

The Micromanagement Epidemic: How We Lost Trust in Teachers

The erosion of hands-on education happened alongside another disaster: the systematic dismantling of teacher autonomy. Federal data from over 37,000 teachers showed that educators reported significantly less classroom autonomy in 2011-12 compared to 2003-04, a decline that coincided with increased standardization and high-stakes testing.

Teachers today face an avalanche of prescriptive mandates. Educators report being micromanaged to absurd degrees—receiving write-ups for activities that are 17 seconds too long, having their wardrobes policed, and being graded on their bulletin boards. In one particularly egregious example, a school saw 80 percent of its teachers leave after excessive micromanagement, despite having the highest test scores in the building.

This isn't just frustrating—it's professionally destructive. Teaching is intellectual work requiring rapid decision-making in conditions of uncertainty. When standardized test scores are tied to teacher evaluations and compensation, teachers inevitably modify their instruction to improve test results rather than focus on genuine learning.

The irony is bitter: we've created a system with more experts, more educational influencers, more publishers, and more talking heads than ever before, yet children are getting a worse education than they did when that frontier schoolmarm taught with autonomy and McGuffey Readers.

The AI Paradox: Why Hands-On Learning Matters More Than Ever

Here's where things get truly interesting. In an age when artificial intelligence can write complete papers in microseconds, the hand-mind connection has become more important than ever in human history.

Research on pilots found that those who relied heavily on automation experienced major declines in cognitive skills, including failures to maintain spatial awareness, track next steps, and handle system failures. The procedural skills remained relatively intact, but the thinking skills atrophied. This isn't just about aviation—it's a warning about what happens when we outsource cognitive work to machines.

Research shows that 83 percent of employees believe AI will make uniquely human skills even more critical, with 76 percent craving more human connection as AI usage grows. As AI handles routine cognitive tasks, the differentiators become uniquely human capacities: creativity, emotional intelligence, adaptability, and the ability to work with one's hands to bring ideas into physical reality.

Grandin expresses deep concern about students growing up completely removed from practical work—they don't cook, don't sew, and have never used tools. These aren't quaint nostalgic skills; they're fundamental connections between mind and matter that develop spatial reasoning, problem-solving, and the ability to troubleshoot complex systems.

The Atelier System and the Lost Art of Apprenticeship

The medieval atelier system understood something we've forgotten: mastery comes through hands-on practice under expert guidance. A master craftsperson, a journeyman, and apprentices worked side by side, with knowledge flowing naturally from experience to novice. This wasn't inferior to academic learning—it was a different, equally valuable form of education.

Northern European countries still maintain robust apprenticeship programs where high school students are paid to learn trades. These aren't second-class alternatives to university—they're respected pathways to skilled professions with strong earning potential.

The United States faces a critical shortage of skilled workers in fields like HVAC, with jobs being added at twice the national average rate, yet young people are being steered away from trade schools by parents and counselors who push four-year colleges. The average starting salary for an HVAC technician in New York City is nearly $47,000, and solar technicians earn over $50,000—solid middle-class incomes without crushing student debt.

The Cost of Our Choices

The consequences of abandoning hands-on education are profound and measurable. Budget cuts for arts programs have disproportionately affected low-income schools, where administrators moved resources from arts to remedial academics to avoid sanctions. These are precisely the schools that would benefit most from robust arts curricula.

Students without access to music and arts education are disproportionately concentrated in major urban communities with high percentages of students eligible for free or reduced-price meals, and are predominantly Black, Hispanic, or Native American. We're not just destroying passion and creativity—we're doing it along deeply inequitable lines.

Meanwhile, only about a third of high schools across the United States offer vocational education programs, despite the fact that 30 percent of students don't attend college at all, and 40 percent of those who do enroll in four-year programs don't complete them.

What We Must Do: A Call to Action

The path forward requires courage to reverse decades of misguided policy:

Restore Full Arts Programs: Every school should offer music, theater, visual arts, dance, and creative writing—not as electives to be squeezed into leftover time, but as core components of a complete education. As one researcher noted, painting bowls of fruit isn't the goal; the goal is teaching students to communicate concepts visually, solve problems creatively, and develop the discipline that comes from honing a craft.

Rebuild Vocational Education: We need to resurrect and modernize shop classes, home economics, and technical training programs. Students should emerge from high school with exposure to welding, carpentry, electrical work, plumbing, computer repair, automotive technology, culinary arts, and dozens of other skilled trades. Grandin points out that there's currently a shortage of certified machinists and welders, and the "quirky, nerdy kids" who excel at these jobs will never discover them without exposure.

Return Autonomy to Teachers: Micromanagement is killing education. Teachers need the professional freedom to design lessons that ignite curiosity, pursue tangents when students show interest, and adapt to the unique needs of their classroom. The frontier schoolmarm succeeded because she had autonomy, accountability to her community, and trust to do her job.

Recognize Multiple Intelligences: Our assessment systems must expand beyond standardized tests to value spatial intelligence, kinesthetic intelligence, musical intelligence, and interpersonal intelligence. Grandin advocates for strategies including encouraging "tinkering" and exploration of different trades, along with hands-on learning that's particularly beneficial for individuals with autism and other learning differences.

Integrate Rather Than Segregate: The false dichotomy between academic and vocational education must end. The best education combines rigorous academics with hands-on application. Math becomes meaningful when you're calculating angles for carpentry. Physics comes alive when you're troubleshooting an engine. History deepens when you're recreating historical crafts or staging period plays.

"We've micromanaged the sacred fire out of our schools."

"Le feu sacré—the sacred fire within—cannot be standardized, tested, or reformed into existence."

"Our obsession with education reform has become education's biggest problem."

"Micromanagement is the enemy of magic. And education without magic is just compliance."

"Every child has le feu sacré. Our job is not to control it—it's to give it oxygen and stand back."

"We've confused measuring learning with causing learning. One requires tests; the other requires trust."

"Raison d'être—reason for being—isn't found in standardized curricula. It's discovered in the margins we've eliminated."

"The frontier schoolmarm knew what we've forgotten: autonomy ignites passion, micromanagement extinguishes it."

"AI can write the essay. Only humans can feel le feu sacré—the sacred fire that makes the essay worth writing."

"We reformed education to death. Now it's time to let it live again."

The Sacred Fire Burns Within

Every child has le feu sacré—that inner fire waiting to be kindled. For some, it ignites when they touch clay on a potter's wheel. For others, it sparks when they successfully solder their first circuit board. Some discover it through the collaborative magic of staging a play, others through the precision of woodworking or the creative problem-solving of cooking.

Our job as educators, parents, and citizens isn't to extinguish these fires through standardization and micromanagement. Our job is to provide the tinder, the oxygen, and the space for these flames to grow. We need to trust children to explore, trust teachers to guide, and trust that passion—not test scores—is the best predictor of a life well-lived.

The sixteen-year-old frontier schoolmarm succeeded not despite having limited resources, but because she had something we've lost: the freedom to recognize and nurture the individual spark in each student. She had no standardized curriculum, no scripted lessons, no testing mandates—just books, students, and the trust of her community.

It's time to rekindle le feu sacré in American education. It's time to let the fire burn again.


This article advocates for a fundamental restructuring of American education to restore hands-on learning, arts education, vocational training, and teacher autonomy. The research makes clear that these changes aren't optional luxuries—they're essential to developing the complete human beings our children deserve to become.


FOOD FOR THOUGHT!:

On Micromanagement and Reform Obsession

"Our collective neurotic obsession with reform has become the very thing destroying education—we've micromanaged the sacred fire right out of our schools."

"We've confused reform with control, innovation with standardization, and in our neurotic pursuit of measurable outcomes, we've extinguished le feu sacré—the sacred fire that makes learning worth pursuing."

"Every reform promised to save education. Every mandate vowed to leave no child behind. Yet with each new initiative, we micromanaged away another piece of raison d'être—the very reason for being that makes a student want to learn."

"The irony of education reform: we've become so obsessed with improving schools that we've forgotten what schools are for—to ignite curiosity, nurture passion, and kindle the sacred fire within each child."

"Micromanagement is the enemy of magic. And education without magic—without that spark of passion, that flame of curiosity—is nothing more than compliance training."

On Lost Passion and Purpose

"We've optimized education to death. Every minute parsed, every standard measured, every outcome predicted. What we've lost in this neurotic precision is le feu sacré—the unmeasurable, unpredictable, sacred fire of genuine learning."

"A child discovers welding and finds their life's purpose. Another touches clay and discovers their soul. But if we've eliminated the welding lab and the pottery wheel in our quest for higher test scores, what have we really reformed?"

"Raison d'être—reason for being. Every child seeks it. Every human needs it. But our education system, in its neurotic obsession with reform, has forgotten that purpose cannot be standardized, passion cannot be tested, and the sacred fire cannot be mandated."

"We've measured everything except what matters. Test scores up, attendance tracked, standards met. But curiosity? Passion? The fire in a student's eyes when they finally understand? Those, we've reformed right out of existence."

On What We've Lost

"The frontier schoolmarm with her McGuffey Readers understood something we've forgotten in our neurotic pursuit of reform: education isn't about control—it's about igniting le feu sacré, the sacred fire that turns information into wisdom and lessons into life purpose."

"Every reform adds another layer of management. Every initiative adds another requirement. And with each addition, the fire dims a little more. We're suffocating education with our attempts to save it."

"We've become so afraid of failure that we've eliminated the very experiences where children discover their raison d'être—the messy, unpredictable, unquantifiable moments in art studios, shop classes, and theater rehearsals where passion ignites."

"The sacred fire doesn't burn in standardized tests. It doesn't flicker in compliance checklists. Le feu sacré ignites in the moment a child's hands create something that didn't exist before—and we've reformed those moments into extinction."

On Teachers and Autonomy

"We don't trust teachers anymore. That's the truth beneath all our reform rhetoric. We've replaced professional judgment with scripted lessons, micromanaged autonomy into oblivion, and wondered why the sacred fire went out."

"A teacher's raison d'être is to kindle the fire in students. But how can they light others' passion when we've extinguished their own through endless mandates, evaluations, and neurotic micromanagement?"

"Every great teacher I ever had was a bit of a rebel—they colored outside the lines, ignored the bell schedule when we were onto something, followed our curiosity down rabbit holes. Our reform obsession has made such teaching impossible. We've regulated away le feu sacré."

"Micromanagement kills teaching the same way it kills art: by demanding that inspiration follow a schedule, creativity meet a rubric, and passion produce predictable outcomes. The sacred fire cannot be timed, tested, or tied to a pacing guide."

On the Path Forward

"The first step in reforming education reform is admitting we have a problem: our neurotic obsession with control has extinguished the very fire we were trying to fan. Le feu sacré cannot be mandated—it must be allowed to burn."

"To restore education, we must stop reforming it. Give teachers autonomy. Bring back shop, art, music, theater. Trust students to explore. Let the sacred fire burn without micromanaging the flames."

"Raison d'être cannot be found in a standardized curriculum. The reason for being, the purpose that drives a life—this is discovered in the margins we've eliminated, the electives we've cut, the exploration we've reformed into extinction."

"Perhaps the most radical reform would be to stop reforming. To trust that when you give children tools, time, and freedom—and when you give teachers respect, resources, and autonomy—le feu sacré will ignite on its own."

On the AI Age

"In an age when AI can write essays instantly, our neurotic obsession with academic reform becomes absurdly obsolete. The sacred fire now burns in what machines cannot do—create with hands, solve with intuition, build with purpose. We're reforming the wrong things."

"Technology has made our test-obsessed reforms irrelevant. AI handles the cognitive tasks we spent decades optimizing. What remains uniquely human is precisely what we've micromanaged away: hands-on creation, artistic expression, skilled trades. We've reformed ourselves into obsolescence."

"The beautiful irony: our neurotic pursuit of measurable academic outcomes prepared students for jobs that AI now performs better. Meanwhile, the shop classes, art studios, and trade programs we eliminated—those prepared students for irreplaceable human work. We reformed in exactly the wrong direction."

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Reclaiming Our Future: Temple Grandin's Vision for Hands-On Education in the Age of AI

Temple Grandin's Vision: Restoring Vocational Education in the Age of AI

 Reclaiming Our Future: Temple Grandin's Vision for Hands-On Education in the Age of AI

The Grandin Awakening: When We Lost Our Way

Temple Grandin stands at podiums across America delivering a message that should alarm every educator, parent, and policymaker: we are failing our children by eliminating the very programs that could save them. In her latest book, Navigating Autism: 9 Mindsets for Helping Kids on the Spectrum, co-authored with psychologist Debra Moore, Grandin presents a framework that transcends autism—it's a blueprint for reimagining education itself.

The irony is staggering. As artificial intelligence prepares to automate knowledge work, we've systematically dismantled the vocational programs that teach irreplaceable human skills. We've closed the wood shops, metal shops, auto repair bays, art studios, and home economics classrooms that once populated every middle and high school in America. We did this in pursuit of "college for all," a noble-sounding goal that has left 85% of autistic adults unemployed and a generation of neurotypical students drowning in debt for degrees they may never use.

Grandin's warning echoes across conference halls: "We need the skills of people who think differently." But we've created an education system that screens these thinkers out through standardized testing, algebra requirements that bear no relation to spatial reasoning, and the elimination of hands-on learning opportunities that would allow visual thinkers to flourish.

The Nine Mindsets: A Philosophy for All Children

Grandin and Moore's nine strengths-based mindsets aren't just for children on the autism spectrum—they represent a fundamental shift in how we approach education for every student:

  1. See the whole child, not just the diagnosis - Move beyond labels to recognize individual strengths, interests, and potential
  2. Understand sensory experiences - Recognize how environment affects learning and behavior
  3. Build on strengths and interests - Use passions as doorways to engagement and skill development
  4. Teach practical skills early - Start work-readiness training in middle school, not college
  5. Provide structured routines with flexibility - Balance predictability with opportunities for growth
  6. Use visual supports and concrete examples - Make abstract concepts tangible through demonstration
  7. Develop social skills through shared interests - Create communities around doing, not just talking
  8. Stretch students gradually - Push beyond comfort zones while maintaining support
  9. Prepare for employment from day one - Make career readiness central, not peripheral

These mindsets directly counter our current educational philosophy, which emphasizes abstract academic achievement while neglecting the practical skills that create employable, fulfilled adults.

The Catastrophic Decline of Vocational Education

The numbers tell a devastating story. Between 1990 and 2009, vocational credits earned by high school graduates dropped 14%—equivalent to two-thirds of a year of training lost. Federal funding for vocational programs plummeted 32% since 1985. By 1992, vocational coursework comprised only 16% of high school curricula, down from 21% in 1982.

This wasn't an accident. Following the 1983 report A Nation at Risk, policymakers pushed for more rigorous academic standards, believing that college preparation was the only path to economic security. The 1990s "college for all" movement further stigmatized vocational education. Shop classes, once populated by the "cool kids" (remember Danny Zuko in Grease?), became dumping grounds for students deemed unfit for college.

The result? Prestigious vocational high schools that once guaranteed good jobs transformed into programs for low-income students. Teachers' unions in districts like Seattle—where only 4 of 17 original shop programs remain—voted to eliminate vocational programs in favor of college-prep courses. California's Proposition 13 in 1978 slashed school funding by 60%, and vocational programs were first on the chopping block.

Meanwhile, we face a skilled labor crisis. HVAC jobs are growing at 15%—twice the national average—with starting salaries around $47,000. Solar technicians earn over $50,000. Yet we can't fill these positions because we stopped training people for them. Instead, we're producing college graduates working jobs that require only a high school diploma, earning $3.50 less per hour than their training should command, while carrying crushing student debt.

The Temple Grandin Model School: A Vision for Tomorrow

Drawing on Grandin's philosophy, Montessori principles, and European apprenticeship models, we can design schools that prepare all students—neurotypical and neurodivergent—for meaningful employment in an AI-driven economy.

Structure and Schedule

Morning (8:00 AM - 12:00 PM): AI-Facilitated Core Academics

Students engage with adaptive AI platforms for reading, writing, mathematics, and theoretical science. The AI system personalizes instruction, identifies learning gaps, and provides immediate feedback. This isn't replacing teachers with screens—it's using technology to handle drill-and-practice while human mentors focus on guidance, emotional support, and higher-order thinking.

Afternoon (12:30 PM - 4:00 PM): Hands-On Vocational Immersion

Students rotate through intensive, real-world training modules:

  • Culinary Arts & Café Management - Students operate an actual café serving the school and community, learning food preparation, inventory management, customer service, and business operations

  • Manufacturing & Making - Modern wood shop, metal fabrication, 3D printing, welding, and product design. Students create marketable products and learn maintenance skills

  • Technology & Engineering - Electronics, robotics, computer repair, coding through physical computing (Arduino, Raspberry Pi), and systems troubleshooting

  • Arts & Creative Industries - Professional-level instruction in visual arts, digital media, music production, theater tech, and graphic design with gallery exhibitions and performances

  • Construction & Skilled Trades - Plumbing, electrical work, HVAC basics, carpentry, and building systems through actual construction projects

  • Agriculture & Environmental Science - Greenhouse management, landscaping, animal husbandry, and sustainable practices with product sales

  • Healthcare & Human Services - Medical assisting basics, child care training, elder care, and therapeutic practices in supervised settings

  • Hospitality & Service Industries - Event planning, property management (operating school facilities or community spaces), and professional service skills

The Apprenticeship Bridge (Grades 9-12)

By ninth grade, students begin apprenticeships with local businesses, splitting time between school-based training and real workplace experience. Following European models, particularly the German dual-education system, students earn certifications while still in school. They receive compensation for their work, learning financial literacy through actual earnings.

Master craftspeople—not just teachers—mentor students. A blacksmith doesn't need a teaching certificate to show a teenager how to forge a knife, any more than a chef needs pedagogical training to teach cooking. We need to recover the ancient master-apprentice model, updated for modern industries.

Academic Integration Through Vocational Context

Math becomes relevant when calculating angles for welding joints, measuring ingredients by ratios, or estimating materials for construction. Physics comes alive through automotive repair or theater lighting design. Chemistry matters when you're mixing compounds for metalworking or understanding soil nutrition for agriculture.

Students don't abandon academics—they discover why academics matter. A visual thinker who struggles with abstract algebra might excel at geometric calculations in drafting. A student who can't focus on traditional history might become fascinated by the evolution of agricultural technology.

The AI Paradox: Why Hands-On Skills Matter More Than Ever

As AI systems take over knowledge work, the value of human skills—particularly those involving manual dexterity, spatial reasoning, creative problem-solving, and interpersonal connection—soars. You cannot download experience. An AI can diagnose a car problem from sensor data, but it cannot physically repair the engine. It can design a perfect kitchen, but it cannot install the cabinets.

Grandin identified three types of thinking: object-visual (mechanical, spatial), visual-spatial (mathematical patterns), and verbal (word-based). Our education system optimizes for verbal thinkers while systematically excluding the first two categories—precisely the thinkers who excel at trades, engineering, and design.

Consider the emerging model: some progressive schools now use AI to teach core academics in the first two hours of the day, then devote the remainder to real-world experiences—operating cafés, managing Airbnbs, building furniture. Tuition runs $39,000 per child because the vocational component requires expensive facilities, expert mentors, and genuine work opportunities.

But here's the revolutionary insight: what if public schools could provide this at scale? The equipment costs less than endless standardized testing and test prep materials. Master tradespeople earn good livings and could teach part-time or late-career. The facilities—kitchens, workshops, studios—already exist in our closed vocational programs; we just need to reopen them.

The European Alternative: What We Can Learn

Northern European countries, particularly Germany, Switzerland, and Scandinavia, never abandoned vocational training. By middle school, students can choose pathways that combine rigorous academics with intensive hands-on training. By graduation, they possess journeyman-level skills in fields from precision metalworking to advanced woodworking.

The European apprenticeship system—where over 450 organizations have pledged to provide 2.5 million apprenticeship opportunities—recognizes that not everyone needs a four-year degree. In Luxembourg, students can earn technician diplomas (DT) or vocational aptitude diplomas (DAP) through programs combining school-based learning with company apprenticeships. These graduates enter the workforce with recognized qualifications, competitive salaries, and no student debt.

Montessori education, particularly at secondary levels in Europe, emphasizes practical life skills, self-directed learning, and mastery through repetition. Students don't just learn about blacksmithing or sculpture—they do it, repeatedly, until they achieve journeyman competence. The philosophy aligns perfectly with Grandin's emphasis on hands-on learning, building through interests, and developing real-world capabilities.

The Economics of Change: Why This Is Actually Affordable

The paradox: we claim we can't afford vocational education while spending more per student than any developed nation. The real barriers aren't financial—they're structural and ideological.

Cost Realities:

  • Shop equipment lasts decades with proper maintenance
  • Master tradespeople earn less than career administrators
  • Student-operated enterprises generate revenue
  • Reduced special education costs (higher engagement means fewer behavioral interventions)
  • Lower dropout rates save money (vocational students stay in school)
  • Reduced remediation costs in college
  • Community partnerships provide equipment, space, and expertise

The Hidden Costs of Current Systems:

  • Standardized testing industry: billions annually
  • Remedial college education: students paying to learn what they should have learned in high school
  • Student loan debt: $1.7 trillion nationally, destroying young adult financial stability
  • Unemployment support: 85% of autistic adults and millions of neurotypical young adults unable to find work
  • Lost economic productivity: unfilled skilled positions dragging down GDP

Vocational education isn't a luxury—it's an economic necessity we can't afford to ignore.

Addressing the Autism Employment Crisis

Current statistics are damning: 85-90% of college-educated autistic adults remain unemployed. Only 14% hold paying jobs. Those who find work average just over two years of employment and earn $3.50 less per hour than neurotypical colleagues. Among young autistic adults, 40% never worked for pay between high school and their early twenties.

These numbers don't reflect inability—they reflect a catastrophic mismatch between education and employment. Grandin herself notes that many autistic individuals who would have thrived in her generation—working as programmers, engineers, machinists—now languish in basements playing video games because we've eliminated the pathways that would have launched them into careers.

The solution isn't more social skills training focused on eye contact and small talk. It's providing authentic skill development in areas where autistic individuals often excel: mechanical reasoning, pattern recognition, detail-oriented work, and specialized expertise. When Grandin's mother arranged for teenage Temple to do hand sewing for a seamstress, she wasn't just keeping her busy—she was teaching work skills that would scaffold future success.

Vocational education naturally accommodates neurodiversity. The expectations are clear: can you perform the task to standard? Interactions center on shared interests and concrete problems, not abstract social navigation. Sensory issues can be managed in workshop environments better than in lecture halls. Success is measurable, immediate, and tangible.

Implementation: A Roadmap for Transformation

Phase 1: Pilot Programs (Years 1-2)

  • Select 10-20 schools across diverse communities
  • Rebuild/reopen existing shop facilities
  • Partner with local businesses for apprenticeship placements
  • Recruit master tradespeople as vocational instructors
  • Implement AI-based adaptive learning platforms for morning academics
  • Establish student-operated enterprises (cafés, repair shops, gardens)

Phase 2: Scale and Refine (Years 3-5)

  • Expand to 100+ schools based on pilot success
  • Develop industry certification partnerships
  • Create teacher training programs for vocational instruction
  • Establish funding mechanisms (blend of public funds, enterprise revenue, business partnerships)
  • Build assessment frameworks that measure skill competency, not just test scores

Phase 3: System Transformation (Years 6-10)

  • Make vocational options available in every middle and high school
  • Establish clear pathways from middle school exploration to high school apprenticeships to careers
  • Eliminate stigma through public education campaigns highlighting vocational success stories
  • Reform college admission to recognize vocational achievements equally with AP courses
  • Create portable digital credentials for skills mastery

Key Principles:

  • No tracking - All students access both academic and vocational education
  • Multiple pathways - Students can pursue trades, college, or hybrid paths
  • Real work - Student enterprises must produce actual products/services
  • Master teachers - Prioritize expertise over teaching credentials in vocational areas
  • Community integration - Schools become economic engines, not isolated institutions
  • Continuous assessment - Measure competency development, not seat time

The Moral Imperative

We face a choice. We can continue down a path that serves perhaps 30% of students well while failing the rest, producing unemployable college graduates and desperate autistic adults who possess talents we refuse to recognize. Or we can reclaim the wisdom that Temple Grandin embodies—that different minds require different approaches, that hands-on skills matter, that work readiness begins in middle school, and that the goal of education is not test scores but capable, employed, fulfilled adults.

Grandin herself succeeded not despite her autism but because she had opportunities to develop her visual-spatial thinking through hands-on work with animals, building projects, and mechanical problem-solving. When school psychologists wanted to take away her squeeze machine, a science teacher encouraged her to research why it worked, launching her into scientific inquiry. When she struggled with abstract academics, her strengths in design and spatial reasoning carried her through.

How many potential Temple Grandins are we losing? How many gifted makers, builders, artists, and craftspeople never discover their abilities because we eliminated shop class? How many autistic teenagers retreat to basements because we've closed every door that would have led them to meaningful work?

The age of AI demands that we reconsider everything about education. Knowledge work—the memorization, calculation, and information processing that schools currently emphasize—will increasingly belong to machines. What remains uniquely human are the skills we've been systematically devaluing: creativity, manual craftsmanship, interpersonal service, artistic expression, and the ability to work with our hands to shape the physical world.

Temple Grandin's nine mindsets offer us a way forward, but only if we have the courage to embrace them. The question isn't whether we can afford this transformation. The question is whether we can afford not to pursue it.

Call to Action

For Educators: Champion vocational programs in your schools. Fight for shop classes, art studios, and hands-on learning. Recognize that teaching kids to weld or cook or build is as important as teaching them to write essays.

For Parents: Demand vocational options for your children. Celebrate their interests in making and doing. Resist the pressure to push every child toward a four-year degree when apprenticeships might serve them better.

For Policymakers: Fund vocational education as robustly as academic testing. Create pathways for master tradespeople to teach without traditional certification. Partner with industry to establish apprenticeship programs.

For Business Leaders: Open your doors to student apprentices. Share your expertise. Recognize that investing in the next generation benefits your industry and community.

For Everyone: Stop dismissing vocational education as "less than." The plumber who can diagnose and fix your broken water heater is exercising problem-solving skills as sophisticated as any knowledge worker. The chef creating a meal demonstrates chemistry, artistry, and timing. The carpenter building your house applies geometry, physics, and spatial reasoning. These are not fallback careers—they are essential, respected, well-compensated professions that AI cannot replace.

Temple Grandin has spent her life building bridges—between the human and animal worlds, between neurotypical and autistic experience, between abstract academia and practical application. Her latest message is urgent: we need to build one more bridge, between the education system we've created and the one our children actually need.

The future belongs to makers, fixers, builders, and creators. It's time our schools reflected that truth.


"I am different, not less." — Temple Grandin

That principle applies to every child sitting in a classroom right now, neurotypical or neurodivergent, academic or hands-on, verbal or visual. The question is whether we'll finally build an education system that honors that truth.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

The Education Consultancy-Industrial Complex

The Fine Art of Educration: Why Education Reform Fails | Op-Ed

 The Fine Art of Educration and Edubation: A Masterclass in Looking Busy and Sounding Wise

How We Perfected the Self-Gratifying Circle of Education Reform

By A Concerned Observer

In the grand tradition of American innovation, we have achieved something truly remarkable in education: we've created an entire industry dedicated to the ancient art of educration—that beautiful marriage of self-congratulation and pedagogical pontificating that produces mountains of strategic plans while classrooms crumble.

The Education Consultancy-Industrial Complex

Why would we trust teachers who spend their days in actual classrooms when we can pay six-figure fees to consultants who haven't seen a student since their own graduation? These brave souls parachute into school districts armed with PowerPoints, buzzwords, and the unshakeable confidence of people who will never have to implement their own recommendations.

"Synergize your learning outcomes!" they cry. "Leverage your stakeholder engagement!" they proclaim. Meanwhile, Ms. Johnson in Room 203 is teaching 34 students with 28 chairs, no working projector, and a curriculum mandated by someone who confused Stanford Design Thinking with a furniture catalog.

The Metrics of Mediocrity

We've replaced the old-fashioned apprenticeship model—where students learned at the pace of mastery under expert craftspeople—with something far more efficient: sorting children like produce. Eight years old? Third grade. Can't read yet? Third grade. Reading at tenth-grade level? Still third grade.

Why? Because we've discovered that age is a much better predictor of educational readiness than silly things like "ability," "interest," or "cognitive development." Plus, it makes standardized testing so much easier to administer!

Speaking of which, we've graciously provided teachers with 47 different assessments to give throughout the year, ensuring that students spend more time proving what they don't know than learning what they could know. But don't worry—each test comes with a detailed data dashboard that no one has time to analyze, creating the perfect illusion of accountability.

The Seven-Year Itch We Scratched Away

Remember the atelier system? Those backwards Renaissance workshops where a master painter took seven years to train an apprentice in the fundamentals of craft? How quaint. How inefficient. How utterly focused on actual skill development.

We've streamlined that nonsense. Now we can produce a certified teacher in four years—less if they're really motivated!—armed with pedagogical theory but unburdened by prolonged exposure to master practitioners. We've replaced mentorship with modules, apprenticeship with webinars, and the slow cultivation of expertise with the frantic acquisition of compliance certificates.

The Conference Circuit of Satisfaction

The true hallmark of modern educration is the professional development conference—that sacred space where educators gather to network, ideate, and engage with thought leaders who will return to their hotel rooms without ever visiting an actual school.

Here, we learn about innovative strategies like "flipped classrooms" (record your lectures so students can ignore them at home instead of school), "gamification" (give points for breathing), and "21st-century skills" (a term coined in 1998 that still sounds futuristic if you say it with enough conviction).

The genius is in the cycle: identify a "crisis" in education, host conferences about it, develop frameworks to address it, train consultants to implement the frameworks, assess the implementation with new metrics, discover the crisis has worsened, repeat. It's a perpetual motion machine fueled by grant money and genuine concern, producing nothing but its own continuation.

The Busy Work Miracle

We've achieved something miraculous: we've convinced an entire generation that education is synonymous with worksheets, rubrics, and proving you've learned rather than actually learning. Students are so busy documenting their learning in portfolios, journals, and assessment reflections that they barely have time for the learning itself.

Teachers, meanwhile, perform elaborate kabuki theater—documenting lesson plans in triplicate, creating bulletin boards that prove engagement, and generating data walls that would make a McKinsey consultant weep with joy. All while the actual teaching happens in those stolen moments between compliance requirements.

The Solution No One Wants

Here's the uncomfortable truth: the real innovations are happening quietly in classrooms where teachers have figured out what works through trial, error, observation, and stealing shamelessly from colleagues who get results. These teachers employ something dangerously close to the old atelier model—they observe, they adjust, they mentor, they build on what succeeds rather than what sounds impressive in a meeting.

But we can't scale that. We can't standardize that. We can't turn that into a district-wide initiative with quarterly benchmarks and a three-year rollout plan. So instead, we'll host another summit about innovation, bring in another expert who's never taught middle school, and generate another strategic framework that will gather dust while teachers close their doors and do what actually works.

The Mirror We Refuse to Face

The real art of educration isn't about improving education—it's about the exquisite pleasure of feeling like we're improving education while ensuring nothing fundamental changes. We've built a system that serves adults beautifully: it provides careers for consultants, justifies administrative positions, creates speaking opportunities, and generates an endless supply of initiatives to manage.

The children? Well, they're somewhere in there, between the data points and the implementation timelines, waiting for someone to remember that education used to mean a master helping an apprentice learn a craft, not an expert helping a system celebrate its own complexity.

But that would require us to stop, observe what actually works, build empathy with those in the trenches, and embrace the humbling truth that the best teachers already know what they're doing—they just need support, not supervision.

And where's the professional satisfaction in that?


The author is a recovering educrat who recently spent a week in an actual classroom and is still processing the trauma of discovering that most educational innovation happens despite, not because of, the education industry.