This is Mr. Funky Teacher with BeAFunkyTeacher.com. I’m coming to you with another Be a Funky Teacher podcast. Welcome everyone to today’s episode. Today we’re going to be focusing on managing risk and teaching, balancing challenges and safety. That’s what we’re focusing on today. But first, let’s talk about three things I’m thankful for. The first thing I’m thankful for is friends who help. When I needed help fixing a chainsaw, I was able to reach out to a friend who knows a lot about chainsaws. I’m still learning how to use one while cutting down trees at my dad’s place, and I had the chain throw while I was working. My friend took time to help me, give guidance, and offer tips, and I really appreciated that. The next thing I’m thankful for is when risky things go smoothly. Cutting down trees comes with risk, especially when structures are nearby. I was nervous, but I did research, practiced, and took multiple safety precautions. There are never guarantees when you’re learning something new, but things went smoothly, and I was thankful for that. The third thing I’m thankful for is sleep. When I’m tired, a good night’s rest makes all the difference, especially after physical work like cutting trees. All of those things connect to work I’m doing at my dad’s place, but they’re also meaningful and relevant to my life. Now let’s get into managing risk in teaching and balancing challenge and safety. Teaching carries risk, just like using a chainsaw. Some risks are obvious, like lessons flopping or behaviors escalating. Other risks are more subtle, like trusting students with independence. Risk isn’t about recklessness. It’s about being intentional, being prepared, and being willing to stretch ourselves as professionals. We have to balance challenge with safety. Students need challenge to grow, but they also need a safe environment. Safety has to come first. When we give students big projects, we scaffold support so they can be successful. I love giving students projects that take weeks or even months, but I put supports and micro goals in place to help them succeed. Our role as educators is to create safety nets while still raising the bar. We can’t bubble wrap students or ourselves. Kids need opportunities to take risks and try hard things, and teachers do too. I think about performances, presentations, and large projects like the Great Americans Wax Museum. Those experiences require time, trust, and vulnerability from students and teachers. They carry risk, but when scaffolding is in place, students succeed. They surprise themselves, and they show families and communities what they can do. Risk creates growth. That’s important. Some strategies for meaningful classroom risk include preparation, support, reflection, and celebration. We prepare lessons and give clear models. We support students by breaking big challenges into micro steps. We reflect when something doesn’t go as planned and adapt. And we celebrate courage, effort, and resilience, not just outcomes. Students learn courage by watching us take risks. Safe classrooms don’t avoid risk. They teach students how to navigate it. Risk doesn’t mean recklessness, but it does mean believing in growth enough to step outside comfort zones. Whether it’s cutting down trees or putting kids on stage, the reward comes when we prepare, support, reflect, and celebrate together. That brings our episode to a close. Remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.