This might be a controversial blog post, depending on where you land with the following thoughts, and that’s ok…
Education was once about cultivating the whole child, nurturing intellect, creativity, character, and critical thinking through a well-rounded liberal arts approach. However, this vision has been overshadowed by overemphasizing standardized testing in recent decades. The goal was to produce workers and cultivate virtuous, thoughtful citizens who could engage the world with wisdom and integrity. Schools now prioritize data-driven performance (which is neither wrong nor bad) over holistic development, often at the expense of creativity, curiosity, and a love of learning, by narrowing the focus to what is easily measurable rather than truly meaningful.

Educating the whole child recognizes that education is not just about producing test scores but about shaping individuals to be well-rounded, who can think critically, communicate effectively, and contribute meaningfully to society. Subjects like music, art, philosophy, and history were once considered essential in developing a student’s ability to analyze, innovate, and understand the world. In today’s educational setting, these subjects are frequently marginalized as schools spend more time and resources preparing students for high-stakes tests in various subjects.
The educational shift that we have now embraced has consequences. Many teachers feel pressured to “teach to the test,” limiting the depth and breadth of instruction and missing out on many teachable moments. So much of education now has students who experience anxiety and burnout, seeing education as a series of hurdles rather than a discovery journey, leading to creativity and problem-solving. The journey of discovery highlights intellectual, physical, spiritual, and social growth, each essential to the definition of educating the whole child. When education neglects these essentials, it fails to prepare students for a life of service, leadership, and moral responsibility, where in an ever-changing world, these vital skills to function in society are taking a backseat to memorization and test strategies.
Education, now and in the future, needs a teaching environment that can complement the shift we have now gone to in education. A shift that can ensure students they are not just test-takers but also promote and encourage them to become thinkers, creators, and lifelong learners. A balance is needed where we continue to provide opportunities for students to engage in lessons that promote the arts, explore humanities, and develop emotional intelligence. Returning to whole-child education does not mean that education must abandon accountability; it allows redefining it.
Is education more than test scores? I believe it is. Education should be about shaping individuals who can engage meaningfully with the world, to become productive citizens in a society that needs some resemblance of what is right. Students are not just future employees but whole persons with souls that need nurturing.
As you step into your role today, remember that you are not just an educator and leader but a shaper of the future. Your actions and decisions profoundly impact the lives of those you guide. Go, be the great educator and leader that our future needs.
Remember… Think Leadership and Be For Others…
©2025 J Clay Norton
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This is so true Norton, and I feel like the days where I can just teach and take my class on a walk to talk is so much more fruitful than giving them test prep materials. I felt a conviction about this over Christmas when I was reflecting on my classical education in middle school and high school; I read the best works in literature and that inspired and challenged me, and I learned actual skills that benefit me to this day. Very grateful, and I desire to do the same in my students’ education. Thank you for this thought that encourages me to seek out those moments more often.
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Thanks for reading. We need more educators to shift the paradigm back to this thought.
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