Schools Punish Critical Thinkers

Schools Punish Critical Thinkers

A researcher at Williams College set out to study variations in curiosity across elementary school classrooms. She had to abandon the study. The problem was not funding or methodology. As researcher Susan Engel later noted, there was such an astonishingly low rate of curiosity in any of the classrooms she visited that there was nothing to measure. In one classroom, she witnessed a teacher respond to a visibly curious child this way: “I can’t answer questions right now. Now it’s time for learning.”

Read that sentence with fresh eyes. A child’s genuine question was treated as an interruption to learning. The institution designed to cultivate the mind had decided, in that moment, that curiosity was a liability.

Before starting school, children ask their parents an average of 100 questions per day (Warren Berger, A More Beautiful Question, 2014). In school, the rate drops to fewer than one question every two hours. When a teacher-librarian introduced open questioning exercises across grade levels, kindergartners generated questions so quickly they could not write them all down. By fifth grade, many students could not produce a single question to ask. Susan Engel documented a fifth-grade classroom where two full hours passed without one student asking anything at all.

A mind that arrived overflowing with questions has learned, systematically, to keep them to itself.

How Schools Reward Compliance and Call It Education

The architecture of conventional schooling selects for compliance. This is not an accusation; it is a structural description that the research supports consistently.

Joe Feldman’s landmark work Grading for Equity (2018) documents how grades combine academic performance, behavior, attendance, participation, and effort into a single number so entangled that it becomes “often impossible to determine what grades represent.” The American Association of School Administrators confirmed in their 2022 Journal of Scholarship and Practice that teachers routinely use grades as a “compliance device” to assist classroom management, presented as academic assessment. Grades are doing double duty, measuring both what a student understands and whether the student is behaving properly, and the two are impossible to separate.

Edward Deci and Richard Ryan’s meta-analysis of 128 studies, foundational to Self-Determination Theory, found that tangible external rewards systematically undermine intrinsic motivation across all activities studied. Alfie Kohn synthesized more than 70 studies in Punished by Rewards (1993) and reached a conclusion that deserves to be read twice: extrinsic motivators are “not merely ineffective over the long haul but counterproductive with respect to the things that concern us most: desire to learn, commitment to good values.” Kohn observed something many parents have noticed at home without knowing what to call it: intrinsic motivation begins to “tail off sharply” in elementary school, around the same time that grades begin to appear.

The implication is stark. The very mechanism schools use to signal learning is systematically eroding the motivation to learn.

The Neuroscience Is Unambiguous

In 2014, Matthias Gruber, Bernard Gelman, and Charan Ranganath published a study in Neuron that fundamentally reframed what educators should understand about learning. When participants were in a genuine state of curiosity, they retained the information they were curious about more effectively, and they retained completely unrelated information encountered during that curious state with significantly greater accuracy. Curiosity, the researchers found, activates the brain’s dopaminergic reward circuits and enhances the hippocampal connections that consolidate long-term memory.

Curiosity is not a pleasant bonus in the learning process. It is the mechanism by which deep learning actually happens.

Fear and threat operate on an entirely different neural pathway, one that directly competes with curiosity. When students fear punishment for wrong answers, social humiliation for questions, or academic consequences for unconventional thinking, the amygdala activates a stress response. Amy Arnsten’s research (2009, Nature Reviews Neuroscience) demonstrated that this stress acutely impairs prefrontal cortex function, the region responsible for critical thinking, analysis, and creative reasoning. Bruce McEwen and Jason Morrison (2013) showed that chronic stress physically shrinks prefrontal cortex dendritic connections while enlarging amygdala structures, producing what amounts to a larger fear-processing brain alongside a diminished capacity for higher-order thought.

Cortisol data from school children makes this measurable. Hair samples show cortisol levels nearly double during the academic term compared to summer break, with a substantial effect size of d = 0.84 (Psychoneuroendocrinology, 2020). Students carry 15 percent more cortisol on standardized testing days than on regular school days, and those with the highest cortisol spikes perform the worst on those same tests.

The question of whether chronic stress impairs learning was settled by science a long time ago. The question worth asking now is why educational environments are structured in ways that reliably produce that stress that makes learning impossible.

Martin Seligman’s original research on learned helplessness (1967) showed that organisms repeatedly exposed to uncontrollable adverse circumstances eventually stop seeking escape, even when escape becomes available. The 2016 update by Maier and Seligman in Psychological Review made the finding more urgent: passivity is the brain’s default response to prolonged aversive experiences, while the capacity for agency must be actively learned through the medial prefrontal cortex. Schools that deprive children of meaningful control over their learning prevent this neural pathway from developing. As Psychology Today framed it in 2025: “Learned helplessness is not imported by students. It is installed by design.”

What Standardized Testing Did to a Generation of Creative Thinkers

Psychologist Kyung Hee Kim analyzed nearly 300,000 Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking scores collected across several decades and found a pattern that deserves far more public attention than it has received. Creativity scores declined steadily beginning in 1990, precisely the era in which standardized testing became the dominant organizing principle of American schooling. By 2008, more than 85 percent of children tested scored lower on creative elaboration than the average child tested in 1984. The decline was sharpest in younger children, the age group whose creative capacity schools most urgently claim to cultivate.

Banesh Hoffman argued in The Tyranny of Testing that standardized assessments penalize “depth, subtlety, and critical acumen” and require students who are strong-minded, nonconformist, original, or creative to suppress their impulses in order to conform to the format. Kim’s data, gathered a generation later, shows exactly that suppression at scale.

A system that reliably produces this outcome across decades and populations is not experiencing a design flaw. It is producing its design.

The Child Labeled a Problem

Among the most painful findings in education research is what happens to the children who cannot or will not suppress their curiosity in the face of institutional pressure.

James T. Webb, a leading researcher in gifted education, documented that the majority of gifted children referred to his clinical practice “should have been identified as gifted rather than labeled with behavioral disorders” (Webb, 2016). Studies estimate that approximately 20 percent of children diagnosed with ADHD may represent misdiagnoses (Elder, 2010; Merten et al., 2017). Researcher Sue Neu (1993) found that the most disruptive behaviors among academically talented students occurred during “classroom dead time,” the periods in which children had finished the assigned task and were waiting while peers caught up.

A child who challenges a teacher’s reasoning, who asks “but why do we have to learn this,” who finishes the work quickly and continues asking questions, is demonstrating the precise qualities every school claims to value: engagement, intellectual restlessness, and the drive to understand. The same system that lists critical thinking as a “graduate outcome” is sending that child to the office.

Research published in Sage Journals in 2023 found that gifted students are 3.2 times more likely to be victims of bullying than their non-gifted peers. The social consequences of thinking independently in a compliance-based environment are borne by the child, not the institution.

If you were that child, this is not news to you. You have understood it for years in your body, even if you didn’t have the research to explain it. The evidence now exists, and it confirms what you suspected.

Self-Directed Education: What Happens When You Trust Children

There is a growing and substantiated movement organized around a different premise entirely: that children are biologically equipped to educate themselves through play, exploration, and genuine inquiry, and that the role of caring adults is to support that drive rather than to override it.

This is Self-Directed Education, and its intellectual foundation runs deeper than any recent trend.

Consider these conclusions of people who spent careers inside education, watching it from within, and found the same pattern the neuroscience confirms from without.

“Nature does not turn off this enormous desire and capacity to learn when children turn five or six. We turn it off with our coercive system of schooling. The biggest, most enduring lesson of school is that learning is work, to be avoided when possible.”

— Peter Gray, developmental psychologist and author of Free to Learn

“All I am saying can be summed up in two words: Trust Children. Nothing could be more simple, or more difficult.”

— John Holt, educator and author of How Children Fail and How Children Learn

“I’ve concluded that genius is as common as dirt. We suppress genius because we haven’t yet figured out how to manage a population of educated men and women.”

— John Taylor Gatto, New York State Teacher of the Year, 1991

Self-Determination Theory, developed by Edward Deci and Richard Ryan across decades of empirical research, identifies three conditions that human beings require in order to develop and flourish: autonomy, competence, and relatedness. Conventional schooling, by mandating curriculum content, using grades to create hierarchies of success and failure, and structuring adult-child relationships around authority, systematically undermines all three. Self-Directed Education environments are organized to fulfill all three: children choose their activities, pursue genuine mastery in areas that hold real meaning for them, and build authentic community relationships across ages and interests.

Daniel Pink’s synthesis of behavioral science in Drive (2009) reaches the same conclusion from a motivation standpoint: for tasks requiring cognitive skill, creativity, and higher-order thinking, reward-and-punishment systems produce lower performance. The educational model built on grades, tests, and compliance is counterproductive to its own stated aims.

How Democratic and Sociocratic Schools Handle What Conventional Schools Punish

Sudbury Valley School in Massachusetts has operated since 1968 without mandatory classes, standardized tests, or prescribed curriculum. Students ages four through eighteen govern the school through direct democracy, with every student and staff member holding one equal vote. Questions are welcomed, authority is shared, and disagreement is handled through community process rather than discipline. Peter Gray and David Chanoff’s study of graduates, published in the American Journal of Education (1986), found that Sudbury alumni gained admission to higher education without difficulty, pursued deeply varied careers, and consistently reported a lasting passion for learning and a strong sense of personal responsibility. Approximately 90 percent of graduates pursued higher education when they chose to do so.

Agile Learning Centers, a growing network of self-directed communities across North America, operate on the same foundational trust. Adults in these spaces function as facilitators, working to “provide maximum support with minimal interference.” Disagreement and questioning are treated as intellectual resources, not behavioral problems to manage.

In Spokane, Washington, the Spokane Learning Co-op creates this kind of space for families pursuing Self-Directed Education in community. Children come together to follow genuine inquiry, pursue interests that may not fit neatly into any subject category, and develop as thinkers within a community of families who share the belief that children deserve to be trusted as participants in their own education. The Co-op is, in practice, what the research describes in theory: relational, curious, and built on the conviction that learning and living well are not separate endeavors.

A.S. Neill, who founded Summerhill School in England in 1921, observed that children arriving from conventional school settings required a recovery period before they could engage authentically. “The recovery time,” Neill wrote, “is proportionate to the hatred their last school gave them.” In documented cases, that recovery lasted years. When the environment changed, the children changed. This finding is consistent across a century of democratic schooling evidence.

The transformation these communities document is real, and it is repeatable.

What Teachers Can Do Starting Monday Morning

This section is written for the teachers who feel, with clarity, the tension between what they know is right for children and what the institution requires of them. The research is on your side. Your instincts have been correct.

Start a Wonder Wall this week. Post a sheet of paper in your classroom labeled “I Wonder…” and invite students to write any question that comes to mind, about the subject, about life, about anything at all. Spend ten minutes each Friday exploring one student-generated question as a class. This single shift communicates to students that their questions have value independent of the lesson plan.

Swap one phrase per day. Replace “That’s wrong” with “Tell me more about how you got there.” Replace “We don’t have time for that” with “Great question; let’s add it to our Wonder Wall.” Replace “Does anyone know the answer?” with “What do you think? What’s your evidence?” The language of a classroom teaches as continuously as the content. When teachers model curiosity, Susan Engel’s research shows, children become significantly more likely to explore and experiment.

Bring the case to your administration in language they can hear. Rather than leading with educational philosophy, lead with the data administrators are accountable for. Gallup’s longitudinal student polling shows engagement declining from 74 percent in fifth grade to 33 percent in high school, a collapse that happens across every district in the country. Propose a small pilot program: one class, one semester, one subject, with defined outcomes and a documented report. Meta-analytic reviews confirm that academic achievement is significantly higher for students who participate in self-directed learning (Sobral, 1997; Tekkol and Demiral, 2018). Frame it as a student engagement initiative, a personalized learning pathway, a competency-based approach. The language matters less than the direction.

Your love for teaching has not disappeared, but you must foment the conditions that allow it to function.

What Parents Can Do Tonight at the Dinner Table

The single most powerful shift available to parents requires no curriculum, no materials, and no expertise. It requires only different questions.

“How was school?” produces a closed answer. These questions produce something else: “What made you curious today?” “Did anything surprise you?” “What question did you wish you could have asked but didn’t?” “If you were teaching tomorrow’s class, what would you teach?” These questions do not evaluate performance; they communicate that thinking matters more than outcomes, and that the child’s inner experience of learning is worthy of attention.

When a child comes home and reports that a creative answer was marked wrong, resist the twin impulses of dismissing the teacher or dismissing the child. Instead, try: “Tell me about your answer. I want to understand how you thought about it.” Follow with: “There can be more than one way to think about something. The test was looking for a specific answer, but your reasoning is worth examining.”

Watch for the signs that critical thinking suppression is taking hold: your child stops asking questions at home, expresses anxiety about being wrong, rushes through work to complete it rather than understand it, or begins saying “I’m just not smart.” These responses are learned, not innate, and they can be unlearned in the presence of a different kind of attention.

The Homeschool Trap: Are You Replicating School at Home?

For the growing number of families who have chosen to homeschool, one of the most common and least-discussed obstacles is recreating the structure they left. A rigid schedule segmented by subject, heavy reliance on worksheets, grades assigned to completed work, and the recurring phrase “sit down and do your work” are signs that institutional schooling has followed you home in spirit even if not in name.

John Holt and, later, Ivan Illich described the deschooling process: children need approximately one month of genuine transition for every year spent in conventional schooling before their natural curiosity reasserts itself. This is necessary neurological recovery, the gradual restoration of a mind that learned to protect itself by withdrawing.

During this period, observe what your child does when given complete freedom and no agenda. Follow the rabbit holes without converting them into lessons. Resist the evaluation instinct. The Alliance for Self-Directed Education (self-directed.org) maintains a directory of SDE communities, learning centers, family co-ops, and transition resources for families at every stage of this process. You do not have to rebuild alone, and you do not have to figure it out from scratch. Communities of practice already exist, built by families who asked the same questions before you.

Summary

Schools do not merely neglect critical thinking. The research spanning neuroscience, developmental psychology, and educational assessment demonstrates that conventional schooling actively suppresses it: through grading structures that reward compliance over understanding, through chronic stress environments that neurologically impair the prefrontal cortex, and through institutional cultures that respond to questioning children with behavioral intervention rather than intellectual engagement. The data converges from every direction on the same conclusion: the capacity children arrive with is being systematically diminished by the institutions designed to develop it.

Self-Directed Education offers something more substantive than a reform agenda. It offers a genuinely different relationship between adults and children, grounded in the trust that the drive to understand the world is not a problem to be managed but a capacity to be honored. The outcomes from democratic schools, unschooling research, and SDE communities are consistent with that premise: children given genuine agency and a supportive community learn with depth, resilience, and a relationship to knowledge that lasts.

The path forward is neither abstract nor distant. Teachers can shift the culture of a classroom with a sheet of paper and a different question. Parents can change the conditions of a dinner table tonight. Families ready for something more complete will find communities already doing this work with skill and joy. For anyone carrying the memory of a classroom that punished their curiosity: the research now confirms that it did not have to be that way, and the alternative already exists. That recognition is where transformation begins.

By Katy Purviance

William Harold Coltman

William Harold Coltman

For two days and two nights, one small man crawled back and forth across a killing field, unarmed, carrying wounded men out on his back.

His name was William Harold Coltman. He stood just five feet four inches tall. He never carried a weapon. And by the end of the First World War, no enlisted man in the entire British Army had been decorated more times for bravery than he had.

He was an unlikely soldier. Born in 1891 near Burton-upon-Trent in the English Midlands, Coltman was a market gardener and a Sunday School teacher, a devout and gentle member of a Christian group called the Plymouth Brethren. When war came, he volunteered in January 1915 and joined the North Staffordshire Regiment. At first, like every other soldier, he was handed a rifle.

Then came the night that changed him. Trapped in a shell-hole under enemy fire, he lay in the dark listening to the cries of wounded men he couldn’t reach. Something in him settled. He resolved that he would never again shoulder a rifle. He would not take a life. Instead, he would spend the rest of the war saving them, as a stretcher-bearer — the men who ran toward the fallen while everyone else took cover.

What followed reads almost like a legend, except every bit of it is documented.

In February 1917, an officer was shot through the thigh and left stranded in no-man’s-land, in full view of the German lines. Coltman went out and dragged him back to safety under fire. That earned him the Military Medal.

That June, near Lens, he earned a bar to it — effectively a second Military Medal. When a mortar round set an ammunition dump ablaze, he helped bring the danger under control. When another shell tore into the battalion headquarters, he rushed in to treat the wounded. And when a dozen men were buried alive by a collapsing tunnel, he organized the rescue and tended the survivors he helped dig out.

In July 1917 came the Distinguished Conduct Medal, one of the army’s highest honors, for days of hauling wounded men out of the front line under shellfire — and for crawling into no-man’s-land in the dark, again and again, to find those still breathing.

By late September 1918, near the St. Quentin Canal at Bellenglise, the great German defensive wall known as the Hindenburg Line was finally cracking. In the thick of that ferocious fighting, Coltman worked without rest or sleep, ignoring shells and machine guns, refusing to stop until he was certain not one wounded man had been left behind. That earned him a bar to his DCM — a second one.

And then came Mannequin Hill.

Here is what most people miss: the most decorated enlisted soldier of the entire war never once tried to kill anyone. Every medal on his chest was earned rescuing the wounded, not defeating the enemy. We tend to imagine that the bravest man on a battlefield is the fiercest fighter. Coltman quietly proved otherwise. He walked into the deadliest places on the Western Front carrying nothing but bandages and a stretcher, and his faith was never in conflict with his courage — it was the engine of it. His refusal to take a life did not make him timid. It made him unstoppable.

On October 3 and 4, 1918, scarcely a month before the war ended, British troops were pushed back at Mannequin Hill and forced to leave their wounded behind on the field. Coltman couldn’t accept that. He went forward alone into a storm of enfilade fire, found the abandoned men, dressed their wounds, and carried them out on his back — one, then another, then another. For a full 48 hours he tended the wounded without stopping. For that, King George V pinned the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest award for valor, to his chest at Buckingham Palace in May 1919. France added its Croix de Guerre.

He wanted none of the glory. When his hometown planned a hero’s welcome, he slipped off the train early and made his own quiet way home to avoid the crowds. Then he went back to work tending the town’s parks, planting and pruning, as though he’d never done anything remarkable at all. When the next world war came, he served again, commanding the local Army Cadet Force as a captain — still, always, drawn to protecting the young.

He retired from the parks department in 1963 and died in 1974, at the age of 82. His medals now rest in a regimental museum, where a replica trench has been named in his honor. His own church never formally recognized his decorations at all — to them, such honors came from human conflict and the hand of man, not from God. Coltman, a humble man to the end, almost certainly didn’t mind.

True courage is measured not by the lives a person takes, but by the ones they refuse to leave behind.

Quote of the Day

“The highest activity a human being can attain is learning for understanding, because to understand is to be free.” – Spinoza, Dutch Philosopher (1632 – 1677)

Quote of the Day

“The secret of genius is to carry the spirit of the child into old age, which means never losing your enthusiasm.” – Aldous Huxley, Novelist (1894 – 1963)

Calmness Confidence Trust

Calmness Confidence Trust

The whole world observed two different athletes from distinct sports demonstrate that remaining calm is just as strong as having incredible talent.
During the 2026 World Cup, Cape Verde’s 40-year-old goalkeeper Vozinha, who is actually named Josimar José Évora Dias, went up against Spain, one of the most powerful teams in football. Spain kept attacking for 90 long minutes, but Vozinha simply would not give up. He stopped the ball seven times with brilliant saves by diving, blocking, and remaining strong under nonstop pressure. The game ended with a score of 0-0 when the final whistle blew. This was the very first World Cup game for Cape Verde, and they achieved a historic tie. Vozinha won the Man of the Match award, and people all over the world suddenly learned who he was.
Two years before that, a different athlete surprised the world in a totally unique way.
Yusuf Dikeç, a shooter from Turkey, walked onto the shooting range at the 2024 Paris Olympics looking remarkably normal. A lot of the other shooters used unique glasses, special gear to protect their ears, and visors for shooting. However, Dikeç just wore basic glasses, a regular T-shirt, and casually placed one of his hands inside his pocket. He seemed completely relaxed, almost like he was just practicing in his own home.
He kept his cool under pressure through every single shot. He won the silver medal in the 10-meter air pistol mixed team event alongside his partner, Şevval İlayda Tarhan. At 51 years old, Dikeç helped win the first Olympic shooting medal ever for Turkey.
Both Vozinha and Dikeç showed people the exact same meaningful lesson. Making history does not always require expensive gear or wild celebrations. A lot of the time, having quiet confidence, steady nerves, and trust in yourself is all it takes to inspire millions of individuals

Tokyo Trash Recycling

Tokyo Trash Recycling

In Tokyo, trash doesn’t just disappear. It is transformed. The city’s waste management system is incredibly efficient, turning rubbish into a resource. Combustible waste is incinerated, and the smoke and gases are filtered and cleaned before release. What remains is a fine ash that is used in construction.

The ash is mixed with cement to replace clay, which would otherwise have to be mined. This reduces the city’s environmental footprint and reuses materials that would have otherwise been buried in a landfill. The system ensures that almost nothing goes to waste.

A city that builds itself from its own garbage.

Quote of the Day

“Rest satisfied with doing well, and leave others to talk of you as they will.” – Pythagoras, Mathematician (582 – 497 BC)

Dawn Loggins

Dawn Loggins

It’s not so much the cards we are dealt as how we play the hand.

On the morning of Thursday, the seventh of June, 2012, in the gymnasium of Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, North Carolina, approximately ten miles southwest of the town of Lawndale in northern Cleveland County, an eighteen-year-old graduating senior named Ashley Dawn Loggins walked across the stage to receive her diploma from Burns High School, where she had completed three Advanced Placement courses, an honors English course, and three years of consistent A and A-minus grades while working approximately twenty hours per week as a part-time custodian on the same school grounds. She had been admitted, four months earlier, to the entering class of two thousand sixteen of Harvard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She was, by the documented institutional records of Burns High School, the first student in the school’s history to be admitted to Harvard.

Dawn Loggins had been born in 1993 or 1994 and had been raised in Cleveland County and adjacent rural areas of western North Carolina by her mother and stepfather. The household had been characterized by serial economic instability and repeated relocations between rental properties and squatting arrangements. By Dawn Loggins’s documented later accounts in interviews with the Cable News Network, the American Broadcasting Company, the Columbia Broadcasting System, and the Seattle Times, the household at various periods of her childhood had lacked electricity, lacked running water, had been infested with cockroaches, and had been heated only by a wood-burning cook stove.

She and her older brother Shane had walked approximately twenty minutes each direction to a public park in their town of residence to fill water jugs at the public bathroom spigots, in periods when their household’s water service had been disconnected. She and her brother had performed their schoolwork by candlelight on evenings when the household’s electricity had been disconnected. She had, in middle school, often gone several days at a time without bathing.

By the time Dawn Loggins enrolled at Burns High School in Lawndale in March of 2010 at the midpoint of her sophomore year, she had attended four different high schools and had missed an academic year of instruction. Her guidance counselor at Burns High School, Robyn Putnam, identified her academic potential within several weeks of her enrollment. Putnam enrolled Dawn Loggins in remedial-credit courses to recover the missed academic year and advocated for her admission to a series of school extracurricular activities including the photography club, the rock climbing club, and the Spanish club, of all three of which Dawn Loggins was elected president during her junior year.

In the summer of 2011, Dawn Loggins was selected for the Governor’s School of North Carolina — a six-week residential summer program for academically gifted secondary students hosted that year at Meredith College in Raleigh. Robyn Putnam drove Dawn Loggins the approximately two hundred miles from Lawndale to Raleigh to deliver her to the program and purchased the personal clothing and supplies that the program required.

Near the conclusion of the six-week program, Dawn Loggins attempted to telephone her family residence in Lawndale. The household telephone service had been disconnected. When she returned to Lawndale at the program’s conclusion, the household was empty. Her brother Shane had relocated to friends’ homes in nearby Hickory. Her grandmother had been transferred to a local homeless shelter. Her parents had relocated to Tennessee without leaving a forwarding address or contact information. She subsequently learned, several months later, that they had decided to remain in Tennessee permanently. Dawn Loggins was seventeen years old.

She elected, in consultation with Robyn Putnam, to remain at Burns High School to complete her senior year rather than to relocate to Tennessee or to enter the North Carolina Department of Social Services foster care system. Sheryl Kolton, a custodian and bus driver for the Burns Middle School and the mother of one of Dawn Loggins’s high school friends, had met Dawn Loggins only briefly prior to the autumn of 2011, provided her with a permanent residence for the duration of her senior year. The arrangement had been originally proposed by Sheryl Kolton’s daughter, who had told her mother that Dawn Loggins had been couch-surfing among the homes of her high school friends since August of 2011 and that the arrangement was not sustainable for the senior academic year. Sheryl Kolton subsequently agreed to receive Dawn Loggins on a permanent basis through her June 2012 graduation.

Other Burns High School staff contributed to her expenses for clothing, medical care, and dental appointments. Dawn Loggins obtained, through a school workforce program, a part-time custodial position at Burns High School itself — beginning at six in the morning, two hours before her classes commenced at seven-forty.

During her senior year, Dawn Loggins maintained a three-point-nine grade point average across three Advanced Placement courses, an honors English course, and several other classes. She scored two thousand one hundred and ten on the Scholastic Aptitude Test. In December of 2011, on the recommendation of her history teacher Larry Gardner and a community volunteer named Carol Rose, she submitted her fifth college application — to Harvard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The four previous applications had been to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina State University, Davidson College, and Warren Wilson College. All four of the in-state applications had been accepted.

The Harvard admissions decision arrived at Burns High School in March of 2012 in a small envelope. Dawn Loggins was admitted to the Harvard College entering class of two thousand sixteen. The university subsequently confirmed that her financial aid package would cover the entirety of her tuition, room, board, and supplemental expenses for all four years of her undergraduate enrollment. Her brother Shane was awarded a full scholarship to Berea College in Kentucky for the same academic year.

Dawn Loggins graduated from Burns High School on the seventh of June, 2012. She enrolled at Harvard College that autumn.

Flash Shelton

Flash Shelton

When strangers moved into his mother’s house, the police told him there was little they could do.

So he moved in too.

What happened next turned Flash Shelton into one of the most unusual property defenders in America.

The story began during one of the most difficult periods of his life. After the death of his father, Shelton was helping his mother sell her vacant California home when he received shocking news: unknown people had taken over the property and were refusing to leave.

Like many homeowners who face squatters, he expected the situation to be resolved quickly.

Instead, he discovered a frustrating reality.

Because the occupants claimed certain tenant protections, law enforcement treated the dispute as a civil matter rather than a criminal one. The legal process could take months, sometimes even longer.

Most people would have hired a lawyer and waited.

Flash came up with a very different plan.

After studying the laws carefully, he realized that if the squatters were using tenancy rules to remain in the home, he could potentially use those same rules to get back inside.

With his mother’s permission, he established legal tenancy for himself, drove nearly 19 hours to the property, and patiently waited for an opportunity.

When the occupants left, Shelton entered the house, secured access points, installed cameras, and made himself at home.

The next time the squatters returned, they discovered something they had not expected.

Someone else was already living there. ????

And unlike them, he had the homeowner’s permission.

That experience eventually became the foundation of a business that earned him the nickname “Squatter Hunter.”

Instead of relying solely on lengthy court battles, Shelton developed a strategy centered on lawful occupancy and constant presence. His team moves into disputed properties with the homeowner’s approval and remains there until unwanted occupants decide to leave voluntarily.

Music plays.

Common areas are occupied.

The property is actively used.

In short, they make it difficult for squatters to enjoy the comfortable situation they had created.

The goal isn’t confrontation.

The goal is persistence.

What makes the story fascinating is that Shelton didn’t invent a new law.

He simply learned how the existing laws worked and found a way to use them in favor of homeowners instead of against them.

His approach has sparked debate across the country.

Supporters see him as someone helping families recover homes they thought they had lost.

Critics argue that squatter laws exist for important reasons and that every situation is different.

Regardless of where people stand, one thing is hard to deny:

Flash Shelton turned a personal family crisis into a mission that has helped homeowners across America.

Sometimes solving a problem isn’t about fighting harder.

Sometimes it’s about understanding the rules better than the people using them against you.