Sunday Special: We Don’t Work Alone… We Work Within Systems
Sunday Special
We Don’t Work Alone… We Work Within Systems
Opening
We see behaviour.
We react to behaviour.
We label behaviour.
“This teacher is not motivated.”
“This student is careless.”
“This employee is negative.”
It feels immediate.
It feels obvious.
But rarely do we pause to ask:
What is shaping this behaviour?
The Silent Reality
A sincere teacher becomes quiet.
A curious student becomes disengaged.
An energetic individual becomes passive.
What changed?
Was it the person…
Or the system around them?
One classroom I observed stayed with me.
A teacher who once encouraged questions
slowly stopped asking them.
Not because the curiosity disappeared -
but because every extra question meant “falling behind the syllabus.”
Nothing changed in the teacher.
But the system quietly changed the teaching.
The Lens Shift
We often look at people in isolation.
As if behaviour is a personal choice alone.
But in reality, no one works in a vacuum.
Every action, every response, every hesitation
is influenced by something larger.
A system.
Social Math Insight
Let us express this simply:
Behaviour = Individual × System × Experience
When the system is supportive,
even average effort can grow.
When the system is restrictive,
even strong intent begins to shrink.
The Nature of Systems
Systems are not always visible.
They exist in:
• Expectations that are never spoken
• Rules that are selectively applied
• Cultures that quietly reward or punish
• Power dynamics that shape voice and silence
Over time…
People don’t resist the system.
They adapt to it.
The Slow Transformation
No one suddenly becomes:
• disengaged
• negative
• silent
These are not instant traits.
They are gradual responses.
A result of repeated signals:
“Stay within limits.”
“Don’t question too much.”
“Just follow.”
And slowly…
Energy turns into compliance.
Curiosity turns into caution.
Behavioural Understanding
People do not act in isolation.
They respond to:
• incentives
• constraints
• recognition
• fairness
• psychological safety
Change these…
And behaviour begins to change.
The Core Realisation
Before we judge behaviour,
we must understand the system that produced it.
A Deeper Reflection
In classrooms…
In staff rooms…
In organisations…
We often try to fix people.
Motivate them.
Train them.
Correct them.
But a quieter question remains:
Are we willing to improve the system they are part of?
The Responsibility Shift
It is easier to say:
“This person needs to change.”
It is harder to ask:
“What in the system needs to change?”
Because systems are not abstract.
They are built through:
• daily interactions
• small decisions
• leadership behaviour
• cultural signals
Even a small shift in a system can begin to change behaviour.
A space where questions are welcomed.
A moment where effort is acknowledged.
A decision where fairness is visible.
Sometimes, transformation does not require redesigning the system -
just becoming more aware of the signals it sends.
The Turning Point
When systems evolve:
• voices return
• participation increases
• ownership emerges
Not because people changed suddenly…
But because the environment allowed them to.
Closing Thought
We do not work alone.
We work within structures
that shape how much of us is expressed.
So perhaps the real question is not:
“Why are people behaving this way?”
But:
“What is the system encouraging them to become?”
Final Line
In the end,
Change the system…
and you don’t have to force change in people.
Explore Social Math
This reflection connects with ideas from the book:
Social Math
Where mathematical concepts like selection, conditions, trust, dignity, decisions, interaction, leadership, ownership, and system design are explored through real-life human behaviour.
A space where numbers are not just calculated -
but experienced.
Read the e-book:
https://amzn.in/d/0dsAWM7d�
- Rakesh Kushwaha
Founder, Mathivation Research Lab
Exploring Behaviour • Education • Social Math
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0003-3408-306X
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19296185

Very true sir. You have expressed everything remarkably.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your kind words. 🙏🏻
DeleteI’m glad the reflection resonated with you.
These thoughts come from observing real experiences around us -
and it means a lot when they connect with readers like you.
Grateful for your encouragement.