This is Mr. Funky Teacher with BeAFunkyTeacher.com. I’m coming to you with another Be a Funky Teacher podcast. Today’s episode is called Start Where They Are, Not Where You Wish They Were. This one matters. It matters for kids, for teachers, for our sanity, and for our classrooms. Kids don’t show up as the version we imagine. They show up as themselves, and that’s where the real work begins. Before we get into it, I want to share three things I’m thankful for today. The first thing I’m thankful for is field trip celebrations with students. There’s something powerful about seeing kids learn outside the classroom, building joy, curiosity, and shared memories. The second thing I’m thankful for is clear tape. Simple but essential. It fixes posters, saves projects, and quietly holds classrooms together. The third thing I’m thankful for is ribbon shirts and ribbon skirts tied to Native culture. They represent identity, heritage, pride, and belonging. Culture isn’t just something we include. It’s something we honor. Now let’s get into the main topic. Start where they are, not where you wish they were. We all carry an image of the ideal class. Students on grade level. Emotionally regulated. Homework turned in. Well-rested. Calm homes. Organized backpacks. But real students are all over the map. Some arrive thriving. Others arrive surviving. Some come in hungry, exhausted, scared, or dysregulated. Some carry stories and heavy things we can’t see. Teaching the imaginary child leaves the real one behind. Behavior isn’t disrespect. Behavior is communication. The student who shuts down, fidgets, blurts, avoids work, or hasn’t turned in homework is sending a signal. When teachers take it personally, reactions escalate. When teachers treat behavior as information, responses become effective. Expectations are not the enemy. Rigid expectations are. Students need structure, clarity, consistency, and high expectations. They also need flexibility, understanding, patience, and room to be human. Adjusting the approach doesn’t lower the bar. It makes the bar reachable. Imagine a racetrack. Some students start at the line. Others start behind it. Some are still trying to find the track. You can’t yell “run faster” without first meeting them where they are. Great teaching says, “Let’s start here. We’ll grow together.” When teachers start where students are, trust builds. And when trust grows, behavior improves, engagement increases, confidence forms, and relationships deepen. Kids today carry trauma, loss, anxiety, attention challenges, sensory needs, cultural identity questions, and exhaustion. Starting where they should be is a fantasy. Starting where they are is the only path forward. To do this well, use checkpoints instead of assumptions. Slow down to speed up. Offer scaffolding to everyone. Celebrate small wins. Build from strengths, not deficits. Ask better questions. Remind students you are on the same team. Students aren’t failing expectations. They are starting where life placed them. When teachers say, “I see you. I’m with you. We’ll start here,” students rise. They rise because they feel safe. They rise because they feel seen. They rise because someone met them at their starting line. Real progress begins with real presence. Remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.