Twenty-Five Years of Truth: A Dyslexic Teacher's Manifesto
A Proposed TED TALK By Sean David Taylor, M.Ed.
I eventually learned to read every word by sight—the same method used for learning Chinese. And I became a reading teacher. A dyslexic reading teacher who has spent 25 years in the trenches, watching what works and what destroys children.
Here's what I know after a quarter-century: We're building a generation of children who are distracted, toxic, fragile children, and we're doing it deliberately; we have commodified childhood.
The Lies We Tell
We give grades children haven't earned. We don't call them on sociopathic behavior they've learned from other toxic, fragile children. We refuse to implement structured discipline with real consequences that have actual deterrent-level outcomes. We're not building children who can thrive—we're building children who cannot function.
I'm neurodivergent. Dyslexic and dysgraphic. Temple Grandin is one of my educational heroes, and she's been advocating what I've witnessed for years: we need to push children, stretch them academically and social-emotionally. In almost every lecture, she states that her mother "pounded rules and manners into her" and refused to let her become a recluse in her room.
Temple Grandin is right to warn that when adults confuse “gentle” with “no limits,” schools can become deeply unfair and unsafe for the students who come ready to learn, follow rules, and treat others with respect. However, the problem is not true gentle parenting itself, but the way many families and schools have abandoned firm, consistent boundaries and real consequences for a small but highly disruptive minority of students
And we're still afraid to tell the truth.
The Grade Inflation Scam
We're afraid to tell the truth to parents. Afraid to tell the truth to children. Afraid to give them an F when they've done F-level work. We engage in what I call "grade inflation or B-flation"—just giving away grades because we don't want the argument with the principal, with the fellow teachers, with the child, with the parents.
So it's easier to fly under the radar. Easier to lie. Easier to use platitudes and euphemistic language so we don't have to deal with the behavior that we ourselves have created by refusing to address it.
What We Used to Know
When I was getting my degree in special education from Northern Arizona University—this was before the 2004 reauthorization where many protections were gutted—your job was to be an advocate, a fiduciary for that child's education. That meant you could NOT lie to the parents, to the child, to the principal.
You had to be honest.
You had to tell parents that if their child was on the autism spectrum, they had a 10-15% chance of being fully educated and fully employed. That means 85-90% of children on that spectrum—or any neurodivergent classification—have very little chance of being fully educated and fully employed.
And it's even worse now, in this age where we push so hard for test results and interactions with educational technology while ignoring two-thirds of the thinking ways that neurodivergent students thrive in.
The Political Dystopia
We're catering to politics, politicians, and publishers. We've created a dystopian vision of education that serves no one—least of all the children.
In public schools, we ignore the visual thinkers, the kinesthetic learners, the kids who need to work with their hands. Temple Grandin identifies three types of thinking: visual thinkers who see in pictures, pattern thinkers who excel at mathematics and systems, and verbal thinkers. Our entire education system is designed for maybe one-third of students—the verbal thinkers—while systematically screening out and failing the other two-thirds.
We eliminated shop classes. We gutted arts programs. We removed every hands-on pathway that would allow different types of minds to discover their capabilities and launch into careers. And now we wonder why 85% of autistic adults are unemployed, why we have critical shortages in skilled trades, why young people are drowning in student debt for degrees that lead nowhere.
The Behavior Crisis
But here's what enrages me most after 25 years: the behavior.
I watch students openly bully their peers—including autistic students—right in front of teachers. I watch schools implement Positive Behavior Support with Tier 1 interventions but refuse to implement Tier 2 or Tier 3 supports for the students who actually need intensive interventions.
I watch administrators adopt a "let them" mentality—essentially permitting maladaptive behaviors in the name of therapeutic approaches. They create environments where bullying, harassment, and even sexual assault occur without meaningful intervention.
They actually believe you can change entrenched behavioral problems with gold stars.
The Gentle Parenting Disaster
Here's what gentle parenting has given us: parents permitting children to do whatever they want at home, with no consequences for bullying or harassment at school, no expectation of manners or rule-following. Students understand that therapeutic language provides protection from accountability.
When I have students who meet DSM criteria for sociopathic tendencies—and I do, every year—the response is more "understanding," more "trauma-informed care," more excuses. Never consequences. Never real intervention.
Temple Grandin's mother had it right. When Temple had tantrums in elementary school, the penalty was always the same: no television that night. The rule was enforced consistently at home and school. Her mother handled it calmly—sent Temple to her room to scream it out, then invited her back after she calmed down. "You know the rule. There will be no TV tonight."
Critically, Temple's mother distinguished between tantrums caused by willful behavior and meltdowns caused by sensory overload. The TV penalty was never applied for sensory-related meltdowns—only for deliberate misbehavior.
That's not abuse. That's not trauma. That's parenting. That's structure. That's teaching a child that actions have consequences.
What Actually Works
I learned to read despite my severe dyslexia because people had expectations. Because consequences were real. Because I couldn't just opt out or retreat to my room with a screen.
Temple Grandin succeeded because her mother forced social exposure—made her be a party hostess at age eight, shaking hands, taking coats, greeting guests. Made her learn social skills "in a much more rigid way." Temple herself says, "It hurts the autistic much more than it does the normal kids to not have these skills formally taught."
From age 13, Grandin had paying work—first hand sewing for a seamstress two afternoons per week, then at 15 cleaning horse stalls daily and managing a barn. She felt pride in being "in charge of the horse barn." Having a job taught discipline and responsibility.
Her logical mind controlled her social behavior because she learned to avoid unpleasant consequences. Not because she intuitively understood social rules, but because she learned that following them avoided problems.
The Students We're Failing
I meet too many parents whose fully verbal autistic teenagers are stuck in bedrooms playing video games. Kids who did well academically but lack basic life skills and work experience. Parents describe them as unmotivated, hopeless, dependent.
The pattern is consistent: high-functioning individuals on the spectrum who should be capable of independence remain dependent. When I ask about their situation, I consistently identify parental fear as the central obstacle: "They know their kid isn't going to change anything themselves. But they are afraid to push them."
We've confused accommodation with low expectations. We think, "Oh, poor Tommy. He has autism so he doesn't have to learn things like shopping." So we meet 16-year-olds who are fully verbal but have never gone shopping alone, never held a job, never been pushed to stretch beyond their comfort zone.
The Skills-Based Education We Destroyed
We eliminated what students needed most. The shop classes where visual thinkers discover they're gifted at welding or machining or electronics. The art studios where creative minds find their voice. The home economics classes where students learn practical life skills. The vocational programs that provided pathways to solid middle-class careers without crushing debt.
We did this in pursuit of "college for all"—a noble-sounding goal that has left millions of young people with useless degrees, massive debt, and no practical skills. Meanwhile, we face critical shortages in HVAC, welding, plumbing, electrical work, and other skilled trades that pay well and can't be automated.
The kids I went to school with in the 1970s and 80s—the "geeks and nerds" who would be diagnosed as autistic today—they all got jobs. Some own businesses. Why? Because they had paper routes in middle school. They learned work skills early. Vocational pathways were available and respected.
The AI Reckoning
Now we're entering an age where artificial intelligence can write perfect essays in seconds. All that academic knowledge work we've been optimizing for? AI does it better. What remains uniquely human are precisely the skills we eliminated: hands-on creation, skilled trades, artistic expression, interpersonal service, and the ability to work with our hands to shape the physical world.
The irony is crushing. We reformed education to prepare students for jobs that AI now performs better. Meanwhile, the shop classes, art studios, and trade programs we eliminated would have prepared them for irreplaceable human work.
What We Must Do
After 25 years, here's what I know we need:
Tell the truth. Stop lying about grades. Stop making excuses for sociopathic behavior. Stop pretending that therapeutic language fixes problems that require real consequences.
Implement real discipline. Positive Behavior Support needs all three tiers. Tier 1 universal supports cannot address severe behavioral problems. Students who bully, harass, and assault need Tier 3 interventions with real consequences, not gold stars and gentle conversations.
Restore work skills training. Middle school students need jobs—walking dogs, doing yard work, helping at community centers. By high school, they need apprenticeships, internships, and real work experience. Not as punishment, but as preparation for adult life.
Bring back vocational education. Every school needs shop classes, art programs, culinary training, and skilled trades pathways. Visual thinkers and kinesthetic learners aren't broken—they're screened out by a system designed for verbal thinkers.
Push students outside comfort zones. Temple Grandin is clear: "You have to stretch these kids just outside their comfort zone to help them develop." If they're not failing occasionally, you're not pushing hard enough. Protecting them from all discomfort protects them from growth.
Teach manners explicitly. Don't assume children will pick up social skills naturally. Teach please and thank you. Teach handshaking. Teach turn-taking. Practice these skills repeatedly. Be the broken record.
Set real consequences. When Temple had tantrums, no TV that night. Always. Consistently. Calmly enforced. That's not trauma—that's teaching that actions have consequences.
Partner with parents. Rules must be consistent at home and school. When parents undermine school discipline or vice versa, children learn to manipulate the system.
The Chernobyl of American Education
I wrote recently that American education is experiencing a slow-motion Chernobyl. At Chernobyl, Geiger counters screamed warnings. The invisible became measurable. The catastrophe was undeniable.
American education has no such instrument. We have no dosimeter to measure the radiation of administrative idiocy, no alarm to sound when exposure to bureaucratic doublespeak reaches lethal levels. Instead, we have "frameworks," "assessments," "data-driven outcomes," and "research-based practices"—a lexicon designed not to illuminate but to obscure.
And so we march toward our own Chernobyl. Except ours will be worse. Because when the reactor core of American education finally melts through the concrete of public trust, there will be no dramatic explosion. There will only be millions of young people inheriting a world they were never properly equipped to navigate.
The difference between Chernobyl and American education is this: the Soviets eventually admitted they had a problem.
Le Feu Sacré—The Sacred Fire
The French have a phrase: le feu sacré—the sacred fire. That inner spark, that passion that compels someone to create, to build, to discover.
We've micromanaged the sacred fire right out of our schools.
Every reform promised to save education. Every mandate vowed to leave no child behind. Yet with each new initiative, we micromanaged away another piece of raison d'être—the very reason for being that makes a student want to learn.
Micromanagement is the enemy of magic. And education without magic—without that spark of passion, that flame of curiosity—is nothing more than compliance training.
Every child has le feu sacré. Every neurodivergent student, every visual thinker, every kinesthetic learner has that sacred fire waiting to be kindled. Our job isn't to control it, measure it, or standardize it. Our job is to give it oxygen and stand back.
Twenty-Five Years of Watching
I've spent 25 years watching what works and what destroys children. I've seen gentle parenting create entitled tyrants. I've seen therapeutic management enable bullies. I've seen grade inflation rob students of honest feedback. I've seen the elimination of vocational education destroy pathways to meaningful work.
I've also seen structure create security. I've seen real consequences teach responsibility. I've seen hands-on learning ignite passion. I've seen work experience build genuine self-esteem.
I learned to read despite severe dyslexia because people had expectations, because consequences were real, because structure provided me a framework when my brain couldn't create one on its own.
We owe our students nothing less.
The Choice
We face a choice. We can continue down this path, building fragile children who cannot handle adversity, giving away grades they haven't earned, making excuses for sociopathic behavior, eliminating every hands-on pathway to meaningful work, and wondering why students are anxious, depressed, and unemployable.
Or we can tell the truth.
We can restore real discipline with real consequences. We can bring back vocational education. We can push students outside their comfort zones. We can teach manners explicitly and enforce them consistently. We can stop lying about grades and start preparing students for actual adult life.
Temple Grandin succeeded not despite her autism but because she had structure, expectations, consequences, and opportunities to develop her hands-on skills. The squeaky wheel getting the grease? That's not how it worked for her. She got pushed, stretched, and held to standards—with appropriate accommodations for genuine neurological differences, but never lowered expectations for effort and behavior.
That's what worked then. That's what works now. And that's what we've systematically dismantled in pursuit of therapeutic approaches that sound compassionate but produce fragile, entitled, unprepared children.
After 25 years, I'm done being afraid to say it.
Our neurotic obsession with reform has become the very thing destroying education. We've reformed education to death.
Now it's time to let it live again.
Sean David Taylor, M.Ed., is a dyslexic reading teacher who has spent 25 years finding innovative ways to teach reading and critical thinking. He learned to read all words by sight and believes that ALL children are gifted and can learn to read. He writes at Reading Sage (reading-sage.blogspot.com) and advocates for structured discipline, hands-on learning, and honest expectations for all students.



