Belonging in Schools: How Do We Do It?

30/11/2025 1h 3min
Belonging in Schools: How Do We Do It?

Listen "Belonging in Schools: How Do We Do It?"

Episode Synopsis

Belonging is Ofsted’s latest preoccupation.

In the 2025 framework it sits inside inclusion, now judged in its own right.

Schools feel pressure to demonstrate how they notice and support pupils who

meet friction in the system.



Much policy treats belonging as an emotional climate.

Warmth, smiles and pleasant corridors become the accepted tokens of

attachment.

This flattens a serious idea and overlooks the material pupils use to understand

school life.

Knowledge as the foundation of belonging

Belonging grows from access to shared knowledge: the stories, concepts and

cultural structures that let a community recognise itself.

Language sits inside this larger inheritance. It is the most visible branch of a

deeper stock of ideas.

Without shared knowledge, pupils cannot interpret rules, routines or

expectations.

If belonging becomes a feeling, we lose sight of the material that gives the feeling something to attach to.

Language as the medium of participation

Every encounter at school arrives through words: rules, identity, aspiration,

conflict.

Pupils join the community by gaining control of its linguistic repertoire.

To belong is to understand the meaning

world the school inhabits.

The older conversation

The Civitas

report argues for a renewed commitment to classical liberal education in

the UK:

The aspiration is to help children develop conscience, moral judgement,

aesthetic sensibility, and a sense of belonging to a heritage. These qualities

anchor personal freedom in responsibility and shared humanity

Belonging.docx Classical societies bound citizens through a moral vocabulary and a shared

account of the virtues.

Christianity offered a narrative of creation, fall and redemption that gave

communities long memory. In each case, belonging meant learning the knowledge and language of the tradition.

The Civitas vision of education connects directly to our broader argument:

belonging is not just emotional comfort or inclusion. It is entrance into a shared

world of ideas, language, values and history.

Without that shared knowledge and cultural inheritance, belonging risks

degenerating into a patchwork of mood, sentiment or identity fragments.

Reviving classical liberal education offers a way to rebuild the intellectual and

moral basis of belonging: not as compliance, but as membership in a living

tradition one that gives children more than qualifications: a language, a moral

vocabulary, a sense of home in a community of meaning.

The modern tension. The key question sits quietly behind the framework: belonging to what?

Many schools treat belonging as free floating, detached from any story or stock

of ideas.. This reflects the multicultural mosaic, which prizes openness but offers little

shared meaning.

The result can be a community held together by atmosphere rather than

conviction.



Without shared knowledge, belonging collapses into mood.



Mood does not hold communities together. Common stories, common concepts

and a common language do. When pupils lack the background knowledge to follow curriculum discussions, they drift to the margins. They may feel welcome, but they cannot participate

fully in classroom life.



Initiatives that focus on wellbeing surveys or displays of diversity, but do not

teach the knowledge that unifies pupils, history, literature, civic ideas

produce fragile cohesion. Children sit together but do not share a common

frame for thinking.



Public debate becomes incoherent without shared reference points. When

citizens no longer recog

nise the same historical events, moral concepts or civic

principles, discussion dissolves into competing feelings.



Communities with no common story struggle to integrate newcomers. Without

shared civic knowledge, the constitution, national history, the duties of citizenship

“inclusion” becomes a matter of sentiment rather than

participation..

Societies that retreat from teaching their own traditions often see rising

polarisation. Without a common inheritance, people fall back on subcultures,

identities or moods that cannot be reconciled.



Schools face a clear choice. They can induct pupils into a tradition with coherent

knowledge, a shared story and a demanding moral vocabulary, or they can settle

for a mosaic of disconnected narratives

that offers little common ground.



Language sits at the centre of this decision. A shared linguistic repertoire gives

pupils access to the concepts, stories and virtues that shape the community

they join. Without this, belonging has no anchor and no directi

on.



If Ofsted wants belonging to mean more than mood, it must address the deeper

question: not whether pupils feel at home, but whether they are being given the

knowledge and language that make a home possible.



What do we want students to belong to?