A reflection on classroom ecology, gestalt learning, sensory regulation, and why many autistic and gestalt-oriented students are failed not by inability, but by systems that mistake compliance, fragmentation, and noise for learning.
Today’s conversation with Cathy kept circling back to one central idea: ecology. Not accommodation as an afterthought. Not support as a bolt-on intervention once a student is already drowning. Ecology in the deeper sense—the total sensory, emotional, relational, and epistemic field that a person must live inside in order to learn at all.
We talked about classrooms, but really we were talking about nervous systems. About the way schools often assume that fluorescent light, constant chatter, crowded walls, synthetic scents, abrupt transitions, and performative “joyful noise” are neutral conditions rather than highly specific environmental preferences. The dominant system treats these atmospheres as normal because they suit the people who designed them. But for many autistic and gestalt-processing students—and, frankly, for many autistic adults working within those systems—they are physically and cognitively destabilising. The hidden question beneath the whole conversation became: who is a classroom already designed for before accommodation is ever discussed?
A second throughline emerged around curiosity and institutional rigidity. Cathy spoke about educators beginning to notice children for whom phonics-first approaches simply do not work. Children who read in wholes. Children whose literacy emerges through scripts, patterns, emotional attachment, rhythm, repetition, and meaning rather than sequential decoding. And yet so much of the institutional machinery remains invested in defending the method rather than investigating the mismatch. I realised again that much of my own work—whether the books, the Substack scripts, the journal papers, or the classroom improvisations—comes from refusing that closure. From remaining curious where systems become static. From continuing to ask what happens when the framework itself is the thing failing the student.
The conversation also kept returning to the distinction between part-to-whole teaching and whole-to-part understanding. Cathy described young children becoming engaged through personalised books, favourite scripts, and meaningful narratives. I found myself extending the same logic into secondary mathematics and science. The principle never actually changes. Many students cannot meaningfully hold fragmented procedural steps without first perceiving the shape of the system they belong to. Once the whole becomes visible, the parts begin to organise themselves naturally. But most curricula are designed in reverse. They scatter disconnected fragments across years and expect coherence to somehow emerge through repetition alone.
What sat quietly underneath all of this was the reality that autistic people often spend their lives performing invisible ecological calculations. Not simply “can I do this task?” but “can I survive this room?” Can my body tolerate the lights, the sounds, the smells, the social atmosphere, the pace, the unpredictability? I realised whilst speaking that much of my classroom has become an unconscious refusal of environments that once harmed me. The natural light, the quiet room during assemblies, the lack of sensory clutter, the permission to stim, build, regulate, or simply exist without constant performance—none of these things began as pedagogical theory. They began as survival strategies. But because they emerge from lived necessity rather than institutional design, students recognise them almost immediately.
Another theme running through the discussion was the way education systems mistake compliance for comprehension. Students are rewarded for reproducing procedures and disconnected facts, even when no real understanding has formed beneath them. High-stakes testing then measures whether students can successfully navigate the language of the system itself. And when they cannot, the failure is located inside the student rather than in the architecture of the curriculum, the assessment, or the environment surrounding them.
I think the deepest thread tying the entire conversation together was this: learning is inseparable from meaning, and meaning is inseparable from ecology. Minds do not develop in abstraction. They develop in relationship to environments that either permit coherence to form or continuously fracture it. And when institutions only recognise one acceptable route to knowledge, one acceptable sensory profile, one acceptable developmental rhythm, they do not merely exclude other minds. They render those minds unintelligible within the system itself.
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