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Staff member says classroom relationships, not just rigor, drive student engagement

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Summary

A staff member said the district prioritizes educating the “whole child,” reporting classroom observations that pair rigorous instruction with caring relationships that motivate students to work for teachers.

A staff member said the school system prioritizes educating the “whole child,” describing classroom observations that combine rigorous instruction with care and strong teacher-student relationships.

The staff member said, “we're educating the whole child,” and that they frequently go into classrooms to observe instruction. They said they often see “rigorous instruction, but with that care and that passion for kids,” and added that “that relationship…is what really, the reason why kids wanna work for a teacher.”

The comment framed the affective or relationship-based elements of teaching as central to student motivation, not merely academic rigor. The staff member characterized these relationship dynamics as part of an “affective model” that supports learning by fostering students’ willingness to engage with teachers and classroom tasks.

No specific policy changes, budget items, or formal actions were presented in the remarks; the statement focused on classroom practice and instructional priorities. The record does not identify the speaker by name or provide further details about how the observations will change district programs or evaluations.

The discussion concluded without a vote or formal direction noted in the record.