Why "Difficult" Kids Might Be Your Most Important Students (And How to Reach Them)
APR 18, 202616 MIN
Why "Difficult" Kids Might Be Your Most Important Students (And How to Reach Them)
APR 18, 202616 MIN
Description
What if the most "difficult" kid in your classroom is actually the one you should be paying the closest attention to — not to discipline, but to champion? In this episode of the Empower Students Now podcast, host Amanda Werner breaks down a powerful Atlantic article by Russell Shaw called "In Praise of Difficult Kids" and explains why the students who challenge you, interrupt you, and push back against your lessons may be developing the exact skills our society needs most right now.Amanda connects Shaw's insights to her own experience as a former class clown turned compliant masker, sharing how school systems trained her to suppress her natural instincts for questioning and humor — and the damage that caused. She also offers practical strategies teachers can use to channel students' defiance into critical thinking, respectful dissent, and civic courage.In this episode, you'll learn:The story of "Ned," the disruptive student who later became a teacher and credited his experience in Shaw's class as formativeWhy compliance culture in schools can silence the very students who are developing critical thinking and a strong sense of justiceHow punishing defiant behavior in front of compliant students makes everyone less likely to speak up — even about real injusticesAmanda's personal experience as a class clown in elementary school who was shaped into a "good girl" mask by middle school — and what that cost herPractical strategies for creating structured opportunities for dissent: classroom debates, devil's advocate roles, "challenge the teacher" days, and student-led discussionsHow to reframe "bad behavior" into strengths using specific language — like telling the class clown "you have a strong presence" or the passionate arguer "your sense of justice will serve you well"Why this moment in history makes teaching kids to dissent respectfully more important than everThe difference between compliance time and dissent time, and how naming both gives students clarityArticle discussed:"In Praise of Difficult Kids" by Russell Shaw, The Atlantic (linked in show notes — if you don't have a subscription, ask a subscriber to gift it to you)If you found this episode helpful, please share it with a teacher, parent, or anyone who cares about raising kids who can think critically and speak up when it matters.