Notes from the Inkpot
Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.
The Real Point of A Christmas Carol (And Why We’re Still Missing It)
We often teach A Christmas Carol as a cosy festive tale about kindness and personal change, but Dickens wrote it as a powerful demand for social reform. This post explores what we might be missing when we reduce the novella to seasonal sentiment, and why its true message—collective responsibility and systemic transformation—matters more than ever in today’s classrooms.
You Don’t Kill Someone for Their Ideas: What Charlie Kirk’s Murder Means for Classrooms
Charlie Kirk’s murder is an extreme reminder of where unchecked intolerance can lead. His wife, his children, and a crowd of students witnessed an act meant to silence, when what they expected was debate. As teachers, we can’t solve political violence — but we can shape how young people learn to disagree. In our classrooms, the habits we model and the structures we build matter: separating the person from the idea, listening before responding, refusing caricatures, and treating disagreement as an invitation, not a threat. This isn’t glamorous work. It won’t stop every act of hate. But it gives students practice in something the wider world has forgotten — how to live with difference without resorting to violence.