
Fear Is a Bad Curriculum
Be A Funky Teacher Podcast · Mr Funky Teacher Nicholas Kleve
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Show Notes
Episode Summary
This episode focuses on how fear is quietly influencing decisions in education right now. With increasing pressure, urgency, and expectations, it can become easy for teachers to react instead of respond with intention.
There is a growing sense of uncertainty, and that often leads to fear—fear of falling behind, not knowing enough, or not keeping up. That fear can begin to shape classroom decisions, environments, and priorities in ways that aren’t always helpful.
This matters because fear changes how teaching looks and feels. It can shift classrooms toward compliance instead of thinking, urgency instead of clarity, and pressure instead of purpose. Over time, that impacts both teachers and students.
The takeaway is that fear should not guide teaching. Slowing down, staying grounded, and focusing on what truly matters allows teachers to create better classrooms built on clarity, stability, and meaningful learning.
Show Notes
- Fear in education right now
- Pressure and urgency in teaching
- Responding vs reacting
- Decision-making under fear
- Classroom tone and environment
- Compliance vs thinking
- Importance of slowing down
- Staying grounded as a teacher
Key Takeaways
- Fear speeds up decision-making
- Fear narrows focus to short-term thinking
- Students feel the emotional tone of the classroom
- Fear can lead to compliance over learning
- Not everything requires immediate action
- Slowing down is a strength
- Grounded teachers create stronger classrooms