The competency our classrooms can’t ignore: Consciousness

It is a new year with new possibilities and new aspirations. It is also time for us as educators to reset, prioritize and set goals for self-growth and professional development. Times are changing and technology is evolving. Yet, our needs as humans remain the same. We need each other to grow and prosper, and we need each other to lead healthy and successful lives.We need to be conscious of who we are and how the world around us is impacting us. Equally, we need to raise conscious children who are empowered to question, think critically and work collectively to create a better tomorrow.In an age and time when information is easily available, one competency is more needed now than ever: consciousness. Artificial Intelligence can generate text in seconds and create images instantly. News travels across the world before we can even interpret what is happening around us. We are constantly surrounded by content, images, videos and notifications. Think about children. What do they really need nowadays? It is not memorization or test-taking skills. It is the ability to see clearly, understand deeply and ask questions with courage.What is Consciousness? Consciousness is not abstract. As educators, we can raise students’ consciousness by modelling how to approach content and what critical questions to ask in different situations. Consciousness is developed by helping students ask questions such as: What am I seeing? Why am I seeing it this way? What is missing in these narratives? And how can I use this information in a positive way? In a world where information is easily available, consciousness allows students to evaluate content and act with intention and deliberation.Consciousness requires more than critical thinking skills. It requires noticing. It requires sustained attention and an ability to interrogate narratives and determine one’s position within their community. When students engage in reading activities in class, they should be invited to ask questions about whose narrative is centered and whose narrative is missing. They should be prompted to use evidence to decide how accurate and ethical the content is. The same applies to AI generated text. Consciousness allows students to understand that technology is not neutral. It reflects human choices, cultural assumptions and, often, biased content.The Importance of Student VoiceStudent voice is crucial to raising consciousness. They should be given the opportunity to speak, question, challenge and voice their opinions. Their shared experiences should be viewed as an integral part of learning, not just “a nice to have”. Student voice affirms that their thinking matters and that they, just like their teachers, have the power to shape their communities and contribute to their progress.An important strategy for incorporating student voice is critical discussions. Question routines need to be established so that students get in the habit of answering questions such as: Whose perspective is represented here? How does this connect to what I know? What assumptions am I making? How might someone else see this differently?These moments shift students’ perspectives from passive to proactive. Students would no longer merely be knowledge receivers. Instead, they are cocreators of understanding. This will eventually extend outside the classroom and will help students develop a sense of agency. They will become better equipped with making decisions that are ethical and inclusive. They also become more aware of the consequences of their actions and the skills that they possess to effect positive change. They become adults who can resist manipulation, identify bias, and avoid the trap of simplistic thinking.Consciousness is also deeply linked to mental and emotional well-being. When students can articulate what they see and feel, they experience a sense of grounding. When they understand how systems operate, they learn that challenges are not failures but rather reflections of larger structures.The future belongs to those who can interpret the world with depth and humility. It belongs to a generation that holds multiple truths and that listens as much as it speaks, and that which imagines possibilities. Raising consciousness gives students the tools not only to navigate complexity but also to transform it. It prepares them to succeed in a changing world and to shape the direction of that change.In a time defined by rapid technological growth and overwhelming global noise, raising consciousness is not simply one goal among many. It is the educational goal that makes all others possible. While new schools are opening and international models are adopted, it is important to stay true to who we are. It is also important to prepare students who are grounded and strongly connected to their culture and context. This is how we help students not only grow and develop but also give back.

The competency our classrooms can’t ignore: Consciousness
It is a new year with new possibilities and new aspirations. It is also time for us as educators to reset, prioritize and set goals for self-growth and professional development. Times are changing and technology is evolving. Yet, our needs as humans remain the same. We need each other to grow and prosper, and we need each other to lead healthy and successful lives.We need to be conscious of who we are and how the world around us is impacting us. Equally, we need to raise conscious children who are empowered to question, think critically and work collectively to create a better tomorrow.In an age and time when information is easily available, one competency is more needed now than ever: consciousness. Artificial Intelligence can generate text in seconds and create images instantly. News travels across the world before we can even interpret what is happening around us. We are constantly surrounded by content, images, videos and notifications. Think about children. What do they really need nowadays? It is not memorization or test-taking skills. It is the ability to see clearly, understand deeply and ask questions with courage.What is Consciousness? Consciousness is not abstract. As educators, we can raise students’ consciousness by modelling how to approach content and what critical questions to ask in different situations. Consciousness is developed by helping students ask questions such as: What am I seeing? Why am I seeing it this way? What is missing in these narratives? And how can I use this information in a positive way? In a world where information is easily available, consciousness allows students to evaluate content and act with intention and deliberation.Consciousness requires more than critical thinking skills. It requires noticing. It requires sustained attention and an ability to interrogate narratives and determine one’s position within their community. When students engage in reading activities in class, they should be invited to ask questions about whose narrative is centered and whose narrative is missing. They should be prompted to use evidence to decide how accurate and ethical the content is. The same applies to AI generated text. Consciousness allows students to understand that technology is not neutral. It reflects human choices, cultural assumptions and, often, biased content.The Importance of Student VoiceStudent voice is crucial to raising consciousness. They should be given the opportunity to speak, question, challenge and voice their opinions. Their shared experiences should be viewed as an integral part of learning, not just “a nice to have”. Student voice affirms that their thinking matters and that they, just like their teachers, have the power to shape their communities and contribute to their progress.An important strategy for incorporating student voice is critical discussions. Question routines need to be established so that students get in the habit of answering questions such as: Whose perspective is represented here? How does this connect to what I know? What assumptions am I making? How might someone else see this differently?These moments shift students’ perspectives from passive to proactive. Students would no longer merely be knowledge receivers. Instead, they are cocreators of understanding. This will eventually extend outside the classroom and will help students develop a sense of agency. They will become better equipped with making decisions that are ethical and inclusive. They also become more aware of the consequences of their actions and the skills that they possess to effect positive change. They become adults who can resist manipulation, identify bias, and avoid the trap of simplistic thinking.Consciousness is also deeply linked to mental and emotional well-being. When students can articulate what they see and feel, they experience a sense of grounding. When they understand how systems operate, they learn that challenges are not failures but rather reflections of larger structures.The future belongs to those who can interpret the world with depth and humility. It belongs to a generation that holds multiple truths and that listens as much as it speaks, and that which imagines possibilities. Raising consciousness gives students the tools not only to navigate complexity but also to transform it. It prepares them to succeed in a changing world and to shape the direction of that change.In a time defined by rapid technological growth and overwhelming global noise, raising consciousness is not simply one goal among many. It is the educational goal that makes all others possible. While new schools are opening and international models are adopted, it is important to stay true to who we are. It is also important to prepare students who are grounded and strongly connected to their culture and context. This is how we help students not only grow and develop but also give back.

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