Do schools kill creativity?
The case for knowledge before novelty and why constraint enables original thought
Do schools kill creativity?”
It’s a seductive story. But creativity isn’t a free-floating spark waiting to be protected from schooling. It grows from knowledge, constraint, revision and judgement. Far from killing creativity, schools breathe life into it.
open.substack.com/pub/daviddid...
07.03.2026 07:24
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A somewhat unexpectedly creepy find down a vomit splattered back alley in Preston.
07.03.2026 11:38
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Thanks 😊
28.02.2026 19:05
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What textbook writing taught me about making shared resources
Planning lessons for others means you can’t rely on your own subject knowledge or ability to explain things on the fly, says Mark Enser, who shares his advice for making centralised resources
Finally, a great TES article by @ensermark.bsky.social about making resources for others. As he notes, it's relevant in many different scenarios and there's clearly a danger of AI shortcuts meaning that the resources fail the requirements that Mark sets out.
www.tes.com/magazine/tea...
28.02.2026 13:08
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Five questions to ask about quality assurance in your school - Headteacher Update
Five questions that every school leader can ask to ensure quality assurance processes are fit-for-purpose
Is your school’s quality assurance helping or hindering improvement? QA should be about curiosity & clarity – not compliance. @ensermark.bsky.social & @greeborunner.bsky.social explore five essential questions every leader should ask to make QA purposeful and impactful: buff.ly/jcBWkGe #schools
27.02.2026 11:42
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I had non-specialists and slt teaching the other class in my subject. I had to provide explicit lessons with everything they needed to deliver. Actually worked better then when I allowed for more flexibility in some circumstances.
26.02.2026 21:15
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Shift from personal planning to public pedagogy, when resources have to carry the reasoning, not just the activity.
Limiting factor becomes transfer, clarity under pressure, likely misconceptions, checks for understanding & smallest set of choices a colleague needs to teach with fidelity.
26.02.2026 17:48
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Most teachers will, at some point, write lessons they will never teach themselves.
Heads of department do it constantly.
That shift changes everything.
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26.02.2026 08:33
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Works really nicely with subject specialists (and/or experienced teachers) and capacity.
Sometimes the reality of teachers with other specialisms, high turnover and perhaps less experience etc. might mean that it's not quite so easy to operationalise.
26.02.2026 12:21
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As a Hod I preferred to give a model that said, these are the things the students need to learn (and not learn according to spec), why they need to learn it (v important IMO),these are some resources you might find helpful and this is roughly how many lessons you have.
26.02.2026 09:45
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Shared planning is now normal in most departments.
The real question is whether our resources genuinely support professional judgement, or quietly rely on it.
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26.02.2026 08:33
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Shared materials need:
• Clear curriculum logic
• Explicit explanations
• Likely misconceptions surfaced
• Usability under pressure
Otherwise they increase workload rather than reduce it.
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26.02.2026 08:33
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My latest TES article explores what writing a textbook taught me about shared curriculum resources.
The key lesson?
Make the reasoning explicit.
If the thinking stays in your head, the resource won’t travel well.
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26.02.2026 08:33
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Most teachers will, at some point, write lessons they will never teach themselves.
Heads of department do it constantly.
That shift changes everything.
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26.02.2026 08:33
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Inclusive geography teaching after the white paper: from principle to practice
What inclusive geography teaching really looks like
In my last Substack piece I looked at the implications of the white paper for curriuclum thinking - today, I turn my attention to what it means for the classroom.
open.substack.com/pub/enserm/p...
25.02.2026 14:22
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Inclusive geography teaching after the white paper: from principle to practice
What inclusive geography teaching really looks like
In my last Substack piece I looked at the implications of the white paper for curriuclum thinking - today, I turn my attention to what it means for the classroom.
open.substack.com/pub/enserm/p...
25.02.2026 14:22
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I think you’re right. Structural stuff matters insofar as changes what happens in lessons.
SEND section is attempt to redesign operating conditions so curriculum access deliverable at scale.
If capacity doesn’t materialise, “curriculum” becomes aspiration and exclusion-by-drift does the rest.
24.02.2026 09:06
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Thank you.
24.02.2026 06:14
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I really enjoyed reading this, Mark. It has definitely provoked my thinking and I’ll be sharing it 👏🏻
For too long inclusion has been an add on at best, or worse, a removal of access.
If education is the great leveller we want it to be, we have to get this right. Now. At last.
*hopes*
23.02.2026 22:54
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Every Child Achieving and Thriving - It happens in the Curriculum
What the new Schools White Paper really means for curriculum
Everyone is talking about the structures in the new schools white paper.
But what if the real story is curriculum?
In my latest piece I argue Every Child Achieving and Thriving is fundamentally a curriculum and pedagogy document, not just a reform plan.
23.02.2026 12:51
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Every Child Achieving and Thriving - It happens in the Curriculum
What the new Schools White Paper really means for curriculum
What does it mean for subject leaders and classroom practice?
Read here:
open.substack.com/pub/enserm/p...
Would love to hear what others think.
#education #curriculum #schoolleadership
23.02.2026 12:51
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Every Child Achieving and Thriving - It happens in the Curriculum
What the new Schools White Paper really means for curriculum
Everyone is talking about the structures in the new schools white paper.
But what if the real story is curriculum?
In my latest piece I argue Every Child Achieving and Thriving is fundamentally a curriculum and pedagogy document, not just a reform plan.
23.02.2026 12:51
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Decomposition for dummies: how to break down a curriculum
Does the way knowledge is stored in the brain tell us anything about how to design a curriculum?
Do brain scans tell us anything about how to structure a curriculum? Should we be lead by what cognitive psychology indicates about how we learn or by what neuroscience suggests about how knowledge is stored?
open.substack.com/pub/daviddid...
21.02.2026 06:46
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Image of the first edition cover. Green. Title and a lino cut print of main street. Timbered cottages and a cobblestone street..
1. A Year in Willerby.
12 stories from a haunted village.
First edition run of 100 sold out but we're building a waiting list for edition two, which will be mostly the same with some interesting differences.
Here's the link for the list.
More detail in thread.
www.welcometowillerby.co.uk/blank
16.02.2026 11:15
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