The Wheelhouse
Drift is one of the most dangerous forces in education because it rarely announces itself. Schools do not usually drift all at once. They drift slowly. Quietly. Almost invisibly. The system keeps moving. Meetings still happen. Initiatives still launch. Adults stay busy. But over time, the work can begin to move away from its original purpose — and students often feel that shift long before the adults are willing to name it. In this hiatus episode of The Wheelhouse, the conversation turns toward one of the foundational ideas in the Students Matter ecosystem: drift. Not as a buzzword. Not as a theory. But as a real condition that shows up when educational systems become disconnected from purpose, coherence, and the lived experience of students. This episode asks a direct and uncomfortable question, If we say every student matters, why do our systems sometimes produce experiences that suggest otherwise? Additional Notes The Wheelhouse team steps into a different kind of conversation as Dr. Chandler moves from host to guest, allowing the team (Kathy Mohney, Michael Pipa, and Dr. Alicia Monroe) to press deeper into the meaning of drift and why it matters now. Together, they explore how schools can remain active and operational while slowly becoming misaligned with what students actually need. The episode also introduces five types of drift: 1. Purpose drift — when the work becomes disconnected from why it exists. 2. Interpretation drift — when people begin making meaning in different directions. 3. Action drift — when activity continues but impact weakens. 4. Human drift — when systems lose sight of the people they are meant to serve. 5. Coherence drift — when initiatives, priorities, and practices stop working together. This is not a conversation about blame. It is a conversation about awareness, honesty, and leadership. Because drift does not correct itself. It has to be noticed. It has to be named. And then leaders have to make deliberate moves to bring the work back into alignment. At its core, this episode is a reminder that schools can be busy and still be adrift. The real leadership challenge is not simply doing more. It is staying oriented to purpose, to students, and to the human reasons the work exists in the first place. Takeaways: * Drift is not sudden failure. It is a slow movement away from purpose, clarity, and coherence. * Students often experience drift before adults recognize it. * A school system can look busy and functional while still being misaligned with student needs. * Naming drift is not about blame; it is about leadership responsibility. * Educational leaders have to stay oriented to purpose, humanity, and the lived experience of students. Follow Students Matter, LLC on Instagram or LinkedIn or find any of us there individually: Kathy Mohney, Michael Pipa, Dr. Alicia Monroe, and Dr. Grant Chandler. To learn more about the Students Matter Ecosystem, stop by: Students Matter [Http://ourstudentsmatter.org] LearnHarbor [https://learnharbor.thinkific.com] Until next time remember: See every student. Keep your doors open and your hearts even wider.
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