Breaking the Paradigm

Radically transforming education

Breaking the Paradigm is a new media organization that seeks to radically transform education through Montessori and learner-centered pedagogy to create a world that is more humane, equitable, and liberatory for all people. breakingtheparadigm.org

  1. 2D AGO

    Letting Go to Move Forward: The Unfinished Work of Montessori with Kathy Leitch

    What if the biggest obstacle in Montessori is moving past our fear? Kathy Leitch, executive director of the International Montessori Council, joins Breaking the Paradigm to explore what it really means to carry Montessori forward as a living, experimental method rather than a fixed recipe. With decades of experience in Montessori schools around the world, Kathy makes a case that’s both provocative and deeply generous: Montessori is for every child, even if every school, every classroom, and every guide isn’t yet ready for every child. What would change if we stopped treating the album as the method? What happens when we let fear: of parents, of imperfection, of breaking with tradition, drive decisions that should be rooted in love? And what does it actually look like to transform our own spirit before we try to transform education? Kathy names the energy of love as the most powerful and least explored dimension of Montessori's legacy: an organizing force that shows up in highly functioning classrooms and lingers in the adults those classrooms produce. She challenges the protective instincts that keep our movement small: the hierarchy, the gatekeeping, the insistence on perfection. And she calls us back to the inner work that makes everything else possible: the kind of spiritual preparation that doesn't just happen once in training but every time a child triggers something we didn't know we were carrying. This is a conversation about courage, energy, and the unfinished work Montessori left us, not as a limitation, but as an invitation. Thanks Kathy for a great conversation! Are you a Montessori Adolescent educator or leader? Join our Montessori Adolescent Collaborative Forum! Our Purpose: Realizing Montessori’s vision of a new world starting with how we, as practitioners, transform through dialogue and community. Why join the MAC Forum? * Build community: Connect with fellow adolescent guides from around the world. * Co-create the forum: Your questions, observations, and experiments shape the discussion. * Access the archive: Can’t make it live? All sessions recorded and available. Forums are held virtually every second Tuesday at 7:00pm EST Join Today and Find Your Community! The traditional education system had its chance. Now it’s our turn. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    58 min
  2. MAR 22

    From Compliance to Emergence: Rethinking Peace Education and Montessori Teacher Preparation with Tammy Oesting

    What if peace education has nothing to do with teaching kids to be calm? Here’s the provocation from Tammy Oesting in her third Breaking the Paradigm apprearance: Peace education isn’t about mindfulness exercises or conflict resolution scripts. It’s not the “kumbaya approach” where we shield children from the world’s hard truths. Real peace education creates conditions that produce a new human who has embodied interdependence: who knows in their bones that they are part of a web, not standing above it. That’s systems-level work. That requires us to look at what we’re afraid to see. And then there’s the question we need to ask about Montessori teacher preparation: Is all our scaffolding: the affiliations, the compliance measures, the rigid fidelity requirements, supporting the rise of human potential, or is it a cage? Why are we so committed to structures that don’t reflect how adults actually learn? And why do we trust children to organize their own time and follow their developmental path, but then demand adults comply with preparation programs that look nothing like the way Dr. Montessori herself taught? At the heart of everything Tammy is asking us to sit with is this: What happens when we let go of control? What emerges in the chaos? Because from chaos comes emergence. This conversation won’t give you easy answers. It will give you better questions. Thanks, Tammy, for bringing the courage we all need right now! Are you a Montessori Adolescent educator or leader? Join our Montessori Adolescent Collaborative Forum! Our Purpose: Realizing Montessori’s vision of a new world starting with how we, as practitioners, transform through dialogue and community. Why join the MAC Forum? * Build community: Connect with fellow adolescent guides from around the world. * Co-create the forum: Your questions, observations, and experiments shape the discussion. * Access the archive: Can’t make it live? All sessions recorded and available. Forums are held virtually every second Tuesday at 7:00pm EST Join Today and Find Your Community! The traditional education system had its chance. Now it’s our turn. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    1 hr
  3. MAR 15

    45 States, Two People, One Mission: The Work of the Montessori Public Policy Initiative

    What if the most powerful thing Montessori educators could do for children right now isn’t in the classroom, but in the halls of Congress? Mixed-age groupings. The three-hour work cycle. Observation-based curriculum. Teacher preparation rooted in human development. Everything that makes Montessori transformative deserves to be reflected in the laws, funding streams, and regulations that shape what’s possible for schools and families. But when we’re not at the table, the language gets written without us; and that’s exactly what MPPI is working to change. In this special live episode, Kelly and I sit down with Denise Monnier and Vyju Kadambi of the Montessori Public Policy Initiative: a two-person organization with advocates in 45 states doing the essential work of making sure Montessori has a voice where it matters most. They’re not waiting for a crisis. They’re building relationships with legislators so public policy includes and uplifts our work in Montessori. This Thursday, as part of the AMS conference in Washington, D.C., MPPI is leading Montessori on the Move, a day of preparation, storytelling, and over 30 meetings on Capitol Hill. It’s the first time our community has organized something like this at the federal level, and Denise and Vyju want you there! It’s not too late to register. It’s not too late to show up for the afternoon. It’s not too late to be in that group photo on the Capitol steps (and get a cool Montessori hat while you’re at it!). And if you can’t make it to D.C., this conversation will convince you that advocacy is already something you do, and that the leap from advocating for a child in your classroom to advocating for Montessori in your statehouse is shorter than you think. You can find MPPI and get connected at MontessoriAdvocacy.org. See you in DC! Are you a Montessori Adolescent educator or leader? Join our Montessori Adolescent Collaborative Forum! Our Purpose: Realizing Montessori’s vision of a new world starting with how we, as practitioners, transform through dialogue and community. Why join the MAC Forum? * Build community: Connect with fellow adolescent guides from around the world. * Co-create the forum: Your questions, observations, and experiments shape the discussion. * Access the archive: Can’t make it live? All sessions recorded and available. Forums are held virtually every second Tuesday at 7:00pm EST Join Today and Find Your Community! The traditional education system had its chance. Now it’s our turn. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    38 min
  4. MAR 15

    What If We Just Listened? Live from the Student Power Summit 2026

    What if depression and anxiety in young people aren’t signs that something is wrong with them, but proof that something is wrong with what we’re doing to them? This is a special three-part episode recorded before, during, and after the Student Power Summit in Los Angeles: a conference that truly and authentically centered student voice. Students from across the country weren’t just in attendance, they were active participants in sessions, pushing back on what adults were saying, and ultimately presenting their own vision for what education should look like. You’ll hear that in the final segment, and it’s worth the wait. Part one begins with my reflections on Johann Hari’s Lost Connections and the research showing that depression is not a chemical imbalance to be medicated away, but rather a response to environments that disconnect us from meaningful work, from each other, from our values, from the natural world, and from a hopeful future. Sound like any institution you know? Part two is a conversation with Jason Blair, an elementary art teacher from Columbus, Ohio, and Jennifer Goen, teacher and instructional leader at HB Woodlawn, a democratic school in Arlington, Virginia. Fresh off the first day of the summit and inspired by the partnership with Homeboy Industries, Jason and Jennifer dig into what happens when we start from strengths instead of deficits, why the arts hold a key that most schools throw away, and why efficiency may be the single greatest enemy of real learning. Part three is the students themselves, and I’ll leave that for you to experience firsthand. They share clearly what they need in order to thrive. I also want to share some key takeaways I had from the breakout sessions. Dr. Stuart Slavin, while leading a medical school, found that his students had skyrocketing anxiety and depression that only worsened each year. His response wasn’t to offer more counseling. He cut class time by 10%, made all courses pass/fail, freed up every other Wednesday for student-chosen pursuits, and reduced daily homework by one to two hours. Board scores rose. The failure rate was cut in half. Students left their first year of medical school less anxious than when they entered. His metaphor says it all: when the canaries started dying in the coal mines, miners didn’t give the canaries antidepressants. They got out of the mine. Our young people are the canaries. And yet we keep pushing deeper. Slavin also names the toxic mindsets these environments produce: performance as identity, toxic comparison, maladaptive perfectionism, imposter phenomenon, self-blame, shame, and what’s known as the Stanford Duck: being calm on the surface, but with your feet paddling like crazy underneath. These aren’t personal failures. They’re the predictable outcomes of top-down, compliance-driven education. I also had the privilege of meeting Nick Covington and Chris McNutt, cofounders of the Human Restoration Project, for the first time in person. Their work using empathy interviews to collect real-time data from students, and then using that data to reshape the experience of school in the image of the young people inside it, is incredibly powerful work. And they’re doing it in public schools that on the surface seem untouchable. When we change the kind of data we collect, and we have the right intention behind the reforms we pursue, remarkable things become possible. Huge thanks to Mike Nicholson for organizing this truly incredible conference; the first I’ve attended that pushed meaningfully on the systemic implications of our schooling system with this kind of depth and honesty. And a special shout out to Dr. Mary Helen Immordino-Yang for a keynote that I hope to share parts of in a future episode. There’s more footage from the summit coming. But for now, listen to what happens when we stop talking about students and start listening to them. Want to hear more? Breaking The Paradigm will be LIVE, this afternoon, at 4:15pm! We’ll be talking with the Montessori Public Policy Initiative about their upcoming advocacy day as part of the AMS Conference here in DC. Tune in on Substack, LinkedIn, or Riverside! See you then! Are you a Montessori Adolescent educator or leader? Join our Montessori Adolescent Collaborative Forum! Our Purpose: Realizing Montessori’s vision of a new world starting with how we, as practitioners, transform through dialogue and community. Why join the MAC Forum? * Build community: Connect with fellow adolescent guides from around the world. * Co-create the forum: Your questions, observations, and experiments shape the discussion. * Access the archive: Can’t make it live? All sessions recorded and available. Forums are held virtually every second Tuesday at 7:00pm EST Join Today and Find Your Community! The traditional education system had its chance. Now it’s our turn. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    47 min
  5. MAR 1

    Composting Modernity: Unlearning the Stories That Are Unraveling Our World with Raj Chawla and Andrew Kutt

    What if the crisis we’re facing isn’t something to be solved, but something to be composted? Raj Chawla and Andrew Kutt joined me for a conversation that asks us to slow down long enough to feel what’s actually happening beneath the surface of our world, our systems, and ourselves. What Raj illuminates so beautifully is that the assumptions driving our global unraveling: separation, domination, the compulsion to control, aren’t just “out there” in our institutions and economies. They live in our nervous systems. They live in us. This is not a comfortable conversation. It’s not meant to be. What does it mean to truly unlearn something that has been passed down through generations of conditioning? What do we lose when we let go of control, and what becomes possible when we do? And what does any of this have to do with how we educate young people in a time of collapse? Raj doesn’t offer answers. He offers something rarer: a slowing down, a bearing witness, an invitation to compost what modernity has accumulated in us so that something new might emerge in the clearing. This is one of those episodes that will sit with you long after you’ve finished listening. Thanks Raj and Andrew for a great conversation! Are you a Montessori Adolescent educator or leader? Join our Montessori Adolescent Collaborative Forum! Our Purpose: Realizing Montessori’s vision of a new world starting with how we, as practitioners, transform through dialogue and community. Why join the MAC Forum? * Build community: Connect with fellow adolescent guides from around the world. * Co-create the forum: Your questions, observations, and experiments shape the discussion. * Access the archive: Can’t make it live? All sessions recorded and available. Forums are held virtually every second Tuesday at 7:00pm EST Join Today and Find Your Community! The traditional education system had its chance. Now it’s our turn. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    1 hr
  6. What Will Adolescents Do When We're Not Watching?

    FEB 1

    What Will Adolescents Do When We're Not Watching?

    This was our first ever live stream with Breaking the Paradigm, and Kelly and I tackled a question that keeps coming up in our work: What are we really afraid adolescents will do when left unsupervised? The answers people give, ranging from mischief to far more absurd fears, reveal something deeper about how we view adolescents: That there is a fundamental mistrust that erodes our ability to truly see them for who they are. Kelly and I dug into why we feel the need to surveil adolescents constantly, even in prepared Montessori environments where we claim to trust development. Here’s what we explored: When we create environments of control and compliance, we get exactly what we’re afraid of: adolescents who will act outside of the tight boundaries we try to draw. But when we prepare environments rooted in trust and autonomy, adolescents rise to meet our highest expectations and demonstrate meaningful, positive, and engaged citizenship. The question isn’t what they’ll do, it’s what our need to watch them reveals about our own inner preparation and reflection. We also talked about the impossibility of power struggles (spoiler: you (the adult) always lose) and what it actually means to be the prepared adult in relationship with adolescents. This episode launches our new Montessori Adolescent Collaborative (MAC) Forum! Bi-Weekly Dialogues for Practitioners and Leaders. MAC Forum Purpose: Realizing Montessori’s vision of a new world starting with how we, as adolescent practitioners, transform through dialogue and community. Why join the MAC Forum? * Build community: Connect with fellow adolescent guides from around the world. * Co-create the forum: Your questions, observations, and experiments shape the discussion. * Access the archive: Can’t make it live? All sessions recorded and available. Forums are held virtually every second Tuesday at 7:00pm EST in March Join Today and Find Your Community! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    58 min
  7. JAN 25

    Education, ICE, and Montessori - Live Stream Recording

    Yesterday, ICE murdered another innocent bystander, Alex Pretti. He was a US citizen Earlier this week, they took a 5 year old hostage in order to detain his parents. They are legally allowed in this country. Last week, they murdered Renee Good at point blank range outside of her home. These aren’t isolated incidents- it’s a call for those of us who are pushing the education revolution forward. Check out this conversation where Andrew discusses what this means for our work in education- how our human nature is NOT violence and competition, the role of education in creating emergent transformation toward equitable interdependence, and what we must be willing to lose to actually change these systems we find ourselves in. Please share your additional comments, thoughts, and ideas of how we can come together in interdependence and solidarity. Our young people need our collective courage now, more than ever. Thanks to all those who attended live, it was great to hear your thoughts in the comments! Quotes and other resources I shared in the podcast: * I LEAVE YOU FINALLY A RESPONSIBILITY TO OUR YOUNG PEOPLE. The world around us really belongs to youth, for youth will take over its future management. Our children must never lose their zeal for building a better world. They must not be discouraged from aspiring toward greatness, for they are to be the leaders of tomorrow. Nor must they forget that the masses of our people are still underprivileged, ill-housed, impoverished and victimized by discrimination. We have a powerful potential in our youth, and we must have the courage to change old ideas and practices so that we may direct their power toward good ends. (Mary Jane McLeod Bethune, 1999, p. 62) * Paths to the Light and Dark Sides of Human Nature: A Meta-analysis of the Prosocial Benefits of Autonomy and the Antisocial Costs of Control * “The schoolchild who is continually discouraged and repressed comes to lack confidence in himself. He suffers from a sense of panic that goes by the name of timidity, a lack of self-assurance that in the adult takes the form of frustration and submissiveness and the inability to resist what is morally wrong. The obedience forced upon a child at home and in school, an obedience that does not recognize the rights of reason and justice, prepares the adult to resign himself to anything and everything. The widespread practice in educational institutions of exposing a child who makes mistakes to public disapproval, and indeed to a sort of public pillorying, instils in him an uncontrollable and irrational terror of public opinion, however unfair and erroneous that opinion may be. And through these and many other kinds of conditioning that lead to a sense of inferiority, the way is opened to the spirit of unthinking respect, and indeed almost mindless idolatry, in the minds of paralysed adults toward public leaders, who come to represent surrogate teachers and fathers, figures upon whom the child was forced to look as perfect and infallible. And discipline thus becomes almost synonymous with slavery.” Maria Montessori, Education and Peace, pg 16 * “Two paths lie open in the development of personality - one that leads to the man who loves and one that leads to the man who possesses. One leads to the man who has won his independence and works harmoniously with others, and the other to the human slave who becomes the prisoner of his possessions as he tries to free himself and who comes to hate his fellows.” Maria Montessori, Education and Peace, pg 53 * “Nowadays it is considered antiquated and out of fashion to talk of morality or religion. In fact, in these times it is felt that, in order to respect the opinions of adults, one should give no opinions to children. How strange and illogical to think that in order to respect the feelings of adults we must deprive the children of a very necessary help. Now I feel certain that the child himself can be a great assistance to us in understanding this question of morality. That is why I say that the life of the child and the adult are two different things that can help each other. Without doubt we can, for what the child has shown us, consider morality in relation to social life. For the meaning of morality is our relation with other people and our adaptation to life with other people. Therefore, morality and social life are very closely united.” Maria Montessori, “Moral and Social Education” in Citizen of the World, pg 19 * “The need that is so keenly felt for a reform of secondary schools concerns not only an educational, but also a human and social problem. This can be summed up in one sentence: Schools as they are today, are adapted neither to the needs of adolescence nor to the times in which we live. Society has not only developed into a state of utmost complication and extreme contrasts, but it has now come to a crisis in which the peace of the world and civilization itself are threatened. The crisis is certainly connected with the immense progress that has been made in science and its practical applications, but it has not been caused by them. More than to anything else it is due to the fact that the development of man himself has not kept pace with that of his external environment. While material progress has been extremely rapid and social life has been completely transformed, the schools have remained in a kind of arrested development, organized in a way that cannot have been well suited even to the needs of the past, but that today is actually in contrast with human progress. The reform of the secondary school may not solve all the problems of our times, but it is certainly a necessary step, and a practical, though limited, contribution to an urgently needed reconstruction of society. Everything that concerns education assumes today an importance of a general kind, and must represent a protection and a practical aid to the development of man; that is to say, it must aim at improving the individual in order to improve society.” Maria Montessori, From Childhood to Adolescence, pg 56 This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    36 min
  8. JAN 25

    Montessori Lives in the World: Why Justice Can't Wait with Hannah Richardson and Frank George IV

    What if honoring the whole child means honoring the whole of humanity? Sometimes we convince ourselves that our work stops at the classroom door- that if we just prepare beautiful environments and follow the child, peace will somehow emerge on its own. But we don’t have time to wait for perfectly prepared children to fix the world. We need justice now. In this urgent conversation with Hannah Richardson and Frank George IV, co-founders of the Peace Rebellion, we confront what it means to move from conversation to action. They’ve built a nonprofit organization providing Montessorians with concrete tools: emergency defense resources, ICE information, food access guides, labor rights support, community gathering spaces, and global solidarity dossiers. Why must Montessorians engage in justice work right now? How do we prepare environments for our children to grow into as adults, not just as students? What’s the difference between peace as compliance and peace as liberation? Hannah and Frank challenge us to see that Montessori is not safe from the world, it lives in the world. And that means we cannot abdicate our responsibility to create systems of justice and liberation for adults. From fighting for fair wages to providing SNAP benefits resources during government shutdowns, the Peace Rebellion embodies what it means to act with urgency. This conversation isn’t about adding justice to your to-do list—it’s about recognizing that without justice work, we’re not fully embodying Montessori. All these paradigm-shattering insights on action, urgency, and what it truly means to work toward peace, in this episode of Breaking the Paradigm. Thanks, Hannah and Frank, for a great conversation! Check out the Peace Rebellion here: https://www.thepeacerebellion.org/ You just heard another conversation that mainstream education won’t have. The question is: What are you going to do about it? Most educators listen to paradigm-breaking ideas and return to the same broken systems tomorrow. But you’re different - you’re here because you refuse to accept “that’s just how education works.” Ready to move from consuming revolutionary content to building revolutionary alternatives? Start Free: Join the Paradigm Breakers Community - Connect with educators worldwide who are questioning unspoken norms and implementing authentic alternatives. Share your breakthrough moments, get support for your experiments, and contribute to frameworks we’re building together. Go Deeper: Provocations Magazine Subscription - Quarterly investigations into topics mainstream education won’t touch. The conversations you just heard barely scratch the surface of what we explore. Transform Everything: Premium Provocations (Launching Soon) - Join the waitlist for quarterly group coaching calls, 50% off all courses, and direct access to building the frameworks that will reshape education. Here’s the reality: The educational revolution won’t be built by people who just listen to podcasts about change. It’s being built by educators who question everything, implement alternatives, and prove that transformation is possible. The traditional education system had its chance. Now it’s our turn. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingtheparadigm.org/subscribe

    55 min

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About

Breaking the Paradigm is a new media organization that seeks to radically transform education through Montessori and learner-centered pedagogy to create a world that is more humane, equitable, and liberatory for all people. breakingtheparadigm.org

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