"It’s choppy out there – but hope is happening...": Rethinking Education 2025 end of year review
- James Mannion
- Dec 26, 2025
- 2 min read
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SHOW NOTES
As 2025 draws to a close, James and David come together for a wide-ranging Christmas conversation that reflects on a turbulent year in education – and looks ahead to where hope, change, and renewal might yet be found.
Kicking off with a powerful metaphor drawn from winter sea swimming, the discussion explores why schools currently feel so ‘choppy’, from behaviour and attendance to widening inequality and system-level pressures. Along the way, we reflect on what really matters in education – relationships, belonging, and being known – and why these often get squeezed out by accountability and assessment.
The episode revisits key debates sparked by the Curriculum and Assessment Review, including the future of GCSEs, the limits of ‘manageable change’, and the uneasy separation of curriculum, assessment, and pedagogy.
A powerful detour into restorative justice, inspired by Punch and the story of Jacob Dunne, deepens the conversation about connection, responsibility, and what happens when people are truly seen. The parallels with schooling – and with how society treats its most vulnerable young people – are stark.
The episode closes on a deliberately hopeful note, spotlighting examples of schools doing brave, relational, and imaginative work within the current system, and outlining plans for the podcast in 2026: fewer trench wars, more light-shining on practice that actually helps children and young people thrive.
James also shares upcoming programmes and projects focused on oracy, behaviour, botheredness, and learning beyond subjects – all grounded in the belief that meaningful change is possible when we start with relationships and implementation.
In this episode, we explore:
Why education feels ‘choppy’ – and what the winter swim metaphor reveals
Behaviour, discipline, and the limits of coercive models
Restorative justice, Punch, and the power of being known
What the Curriculum and Assessment Review did – and didn’t – make possible
GCSEs, adolescent development, and the problem of high-stakes exams at 16
Why relationships matter more than systems – and what the evidence says
Examples of hopeful practice already happening in schools
What’s next for the podcast in 2026
CREDITS
The Rethinking Education podcast is brought to you by Crown House Publishing. It is hosted by Dr James Mannion and David Cameron, and produced by Sophie Dean.
Outro track: How it is and how it should be by Grit Control
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