
Not long ago, I wrote about the distinction between presence and authority in the classroom. The response to that piece suggested that many teachers recognize the tension instinctively. This article moves the conversation forward, because once we begin questioning authority, a larger question emerges: Where did our classroom habits come from in the first place?
Teachers inherit more than lesson plans and coursebooks. We inherit systems, expectations, and professional instincts that were shaped long before we entered the classroom. Some of these inheritances serve us well. Others remain simply because they have always been there—and what’s problematic to me is that this seems to be the only reason they continue to be embraced: they are venerable, sacrosanct, ossified, and fossilized.
