Saturday, April 18, 2026

Education is friendship, not work

Sandeep Dutt’s Masterclass

To explore Adlerian psychology’s application to education and self-reliance.

Key Takeaways

  • Problem behaviour is a cry for help: Students act out to find a sense of belonging, not just to misbehave.

  • Education is friendship, not work: The teacher’s role is a counsellor-educator who builds relationships based on trust and equality.

  • All problems and joy are interpersonal: Suffering and happiness both arise from relationships, making them the central focus of life and education.

  • True worth is self-reliance: External validation (e.g., rewards, grades) creates dependence, turning individuals into “clockwork dolls” who cannot move without being wound up.

Topics

Recap: Adlerian Principles

  • Problem behaviour is a direct plea for help, stemming from a student’s need to belong.

  • External validation creates dependence, undermining self-reliance.

  • Reward/punishment systems are “immature and violent” forms of control.

  • Teacher happiness is a prerequisite for helping students; a “messiah complex” is a sign of a teacher’s own unresolved unhappiness.

Case Study: Adler’s Patient

  • A patient with severe mental illness, committed for 8 years, recovered completely after 30 days of counselling with Adler.

  • Adler’s Approach:

    • Spoke to her patiently as an equal, even when she was unresponsive.

    • When attacked, he offered no resistance and looked friendly, treating her as a friend in distress.

  • Diagnosis: Her behaviour (barking, spitting) was a subconscious rebellion, keeping open a wound to her dignity from being treated “like a dog.”

  • Insight: The patient was “keeping the wound open with her own hands,” highlighting the self-perpetuating nature of psychological pain.

Core Principle: Education as Friendship

  • The case study’s lesson: the teacher’s role is a counsellor-educator who interacts with students as a friend.

  • Friendship vs. Friendliness:

    • Friendship is a genuine relationship built on trust.

    • Friendliness is a superficial act.

  • My Good School Retreat Example:

    • Living with students in a hostel fostered a deep connection.

    • A student’s question (“Why do you have such a glow?”) demonstrated the trust and purity of this friendship.

Adler’s Life Tasks & Interpersonal Psychology

  • Adler’s three life tasks (Work, Friendship, Love) are all interpersonal.

  • Premise: All problems are interpersonal relationship problems.

    • Rationale: Suffering (conflict, envy, loneliness) arises only in relation to others.

    • Corollary: All joy is interpersonal relationship joy.

  • Friendship’s Role:

    • Definition: “In friendship, we see with the eyes of another, listen with the ears of another, and feel with the heart of another.”

    • Friendship is the primary setting for developing “community feeling”—a sense of belonging and contribution.

    • School is the first place children learn about friendship and community.

Q&A: Practical Application

  • Q: Should grades and awards be removed?

    • A: The focus should shift from “work” as a task to “work” as a relationship. True education is reading with reflection, which builds relationships.

  • Q: What is “insanity”?

    • A: In the text, it refers to the youth’s perception that the philosopher’s ideas about love and relationships are “madness.”

Next Steps

  • Sandeep Dutt:

    • Share Adler’s friendship quote in the group chat.

  • All Participants:

    • Reflect on Adler’s definition of friendship.

    • Invite a friend to the next masterclass.


  • FATHOM AI-generated notes

Affection vs Rejection: Part 1

Learning Forward Saturday

To read and reflect on Chapter 4 of the book Wanted Back-bencher & Last-Ranker Teacher “Affection vs. Rejection."

”ey Takeaways

  • Staff rooms can be toxic. The chapter’s staff room scene highlights how gossip and negativity can create a draining atmosphere, in contrast to Brinda’s experience of a supportive, collaborative space.

  • Use marking schemes to empower students. Posting a detailed marking scheme with answer breakdowns (e.g., 1/2 mark per step) helps students understand why they lost marks, reducing disputes and fostering accountability.

  • Teachers’ personal lives impact the classroom. Roma’s story shows how personal events (like a broken engagement) can become public gossip, creating a stressful environment that distracts from teaching.

  • Empathy is the foundation of effective teaching. A teacher’s own struggles build empathy, which is essential for connecting with students and creating a safe, supportive learning environment.

Topics

Chapter 4: “Affection vs. Rejection”

  • The chapter opens in a staff room where teachers are stressed by heavy workloads, including multiple substitution classes.

  • The atmosphere shifts to gossip as teachers pry into Roma’s personal life, specifically her broken engagement to Ravi Srivastava.

    • Significance: This scene illustrates how gossip can create a toxic environment that distracts from professional collaboration.

  • The narrative then moves to Roma’s first Open House, where she dreads the “dissection” of student performance.

  • Roma reflects on the immense effort of grading papers, noting the challenge of deciphering messy handwriting and finding answers in unexpected places.

    • Significance: This highlights the teacher’s responsibility to find value in every student’s work, even when it’s poorly presented.

Discussion & Reflection

  • The Problem: Staff Room Culture

    • The chapter’s staff room scene sparked a discussion about negative workplace dynamics.

    • Brinda’s contrasting experience: A former staff room was a supportive “earning ground” where teachers shared strategies, and the principal fostered humility.

    • Conclusion: Staff rooms should be collaborative spaces, not centres of gossip.

  • The Solution: Detailed Marking Schemes

    • Brinda suggested using a detailed marking scheme to address student questions about grades.

    • How it works: Create the scheme with the question paper, breaking down marks for each step or part of an answer (e.g., 1/2 mark for correct formula).

    • Benefit: Posting the scheme allows students to self-diagnose where they lost marks, reducing disputes and fostering accountability.

  • The Framework: Reading, Reflection, Relationships

    • Sandeep introduced a triangle model with bi-directional arrows connecting Reading, Reflection, and Relationships.

    • Principle: Each element strengthens the others. For example, reading improves reflection, which improves relationships.

    • Goal: Encourage deep thinking over rote note-taking.

Next Steps

  • All Participants: Reflect on your staff room experience and its purpose.

  • All Participants: Submit reflections via WhatsApp or the session’s comment section.

  • Sandeep: Share the session recording and key takeaways to aid reflection.

FATHOM AI-generated notes.

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