In Defense of Educational Boredom
The mind that never experiences "boredom" cannot hear its own voice. The consciousness that never encounters emptiness has no space in which to expand.
What if the very "boredom" that modern educators rush to eliminate is actually the condition most necessary for genuine learning? The Romans understood this apparent emptiness as otium—contemplative leisure that serves as the wellspring of thought—but contemporary education, obsessed with measurable engagement, has declared war on the silence that classical thinkers recognized as essential for wisdom.
By boredom, I mean more than mere disengagement or restlessness. I'm describing a state of mind characterized by freedom from external stimulation, a pause that can serve as a catalyst for creativity, reflection, and the pursuit of more meaningful activity. The Romans called this otium, a classical term denoting contemplative leisure, the time and space to reflect, think, and create.
By boredom, I mean more than mere disengagement or restlessness. I'm describing a state of mind characterized by freedom from external stimulation, a pause that can serve as a catalyst for creativity, reflection, and the pursuit of more meaningful activity.
In classrooms that still resist the relentless pace of our hyperconnected world, some educators are beginning to see boredom not as a failure, but as a condition for something deeper. They understand that the pause or gap between external stimuli is where reflection and creativity emerge.
This kind of boredom—true otium—stands in direct opposition to our digital economy's assumptions. Attention is the coin of the realm. Every platform, every app, every device is designed to optimize engagement. The rhythm of online life has become as instinctive as breathing: Scroll, swipe, click—repeat. The time between stimulus and response is now so compressed that interiority, the slow, private unfolding of thought, has little room to emerge.
This compression of mental space represents more than a technological shift; it reflects a fundamental reimagining of what learning looks like. When every moment must be productive and every pause filled, we lose something essential about how the mind actually works. The assumption that constant engagement equals effective learning—or living—has colonized our classrooms, leaving little room for the kind of deep thinking that emerges not from stimulation, but from its absence.
If this compression of mental space has colonized our classrooms, how do we reclaim the territory? The answer lies not in innovation but in recovery—returning to educational traditions that understood what we've forgotten. It may seem counterintuitive to advocate for boredom in education, even the way I'm defining it. After all, schools should be institutions of intentional purpose. Yet it's precisely in the space between the purposeless and the purposeful that some of the most transformative learning occurs.
Classical education, often dismissed as “rigid” or overly “traditional,” actually offers a compelling alternative model. Its emphasis on deep reading, Socratic dialogue, and the pursuit of truth, beauty, and goodness is rooted in practices that require not just instructional time, but contemplative time. Classical education understood contemplative time not as the secularized "mindfulness" popular today, but as periods of genuine quiet reflection and mental stillness that inspire deep contemplation. It is no accident that some of the greatest thinkers in the Western tradition—Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas—spoke of contemplation as the highest form of intellectual life.
Today, many educators working within this tradition are beginning to argue that boredom is not a bug but a feature. They're wondering whether schools should actively protect boredom as an antidote to our cultural obsession with measurable productivity. The question isn't whether we can afford to waste time on unstructured thinking, but whether we can afford not to.
The wisdom of embracing such emptiness is not new. Aldous Huxley understood this when he created Bernard Marx, the misfit of his perfectly stimulated Brave New World. Bernard's discomfort with the endless entertainment, the soma holidays, the constant sensory bombardment that keeps everyone contentedly distracted, marks him as almost primitively human. His yearning for solitude, for time to think without chemical enhancement or electronic distraction, appears pathological in a society that has eliminated all sources of genuine reflection. Yet Bernard’s “malfunction” is precisely what makes him capable of authentic thought.
Similarly, Ray Bradbury gave us Clarisse McClellan, the sixteen-year-old in Fahrenheit 451 who possessed what Guy Montag recognized as "the wisdom of an adult from a previous century." While her peers raced through their lives at breakneck speed, Clarisse walked slowly, noticed dew on morning grass, asked uncomfortable questions, and—most dangerously—thought for herself. Her preference for conversation over the wall-to-wall television screens, her delight in rain rather than virtual reality, marked her as deeply subversive in a world that had weaponized entertainment against contemplation.
These literary misfits reveal something crucial about authentic education: it must cultivate precisely the capacity for solitude and reflection that their societies—and increasingly ours—work to eliminate. Both characters embody what we have lost in our flight from boredom: the capacity for genuine interiority. Bernard Marx and Clarisse McClellan remind us that constant stimulation doesn't produce deeper thinking; it prevents it. The mind that never experiences silence cannot hear its own voice. The consciousness that never encounters emptiness has no space in which to expand. They embody what classical education aimed to produce: minds capable of genuine interiority.
This understanding helps explain why the classical model of education proves so enduring despite repeated attempts to modernize it beyond recognition. The trivium and quadrivium weren't simply subjects to be mastered; they were designed as intellectual disciplines that required patience, repetition, and sustained attention. When a student spends hours parsing Latin sentences or working through geometric proofs, when she memorizes lengthy passages of poetry or traces the arguments of ancient philosophers, she isn't just acquiring information. She is developing what the medievals called habitus—intellectual habits that can only be cultivated through extended practice and reflection.
The classical emphasis on memorization, often criticized as mindless rote learning, actually serves a deeper purpose. When students commit texts to memory, they create internal libraries that can be accessed in moments of quiet reflection. The mind furnished with poetry, philosophy, and sacred texts never experiences true emptiness; it always has material for contemplation. More importantly, the slow work of memorization itself—the repetition, the gradual internalization, the patient attention to language—creates space for thoughts to develop organically.
Similarly, the classical practice of keeping commonplace books encourages students to collect and reflect on meaningful passages, creating personal anthologies of wisdom that can sustain them through periods of solitude. These aren't mere academic exercises but training for a lifetime of thoughtful engagement with ideas. The student who learns to value such practices is prepared for what T.S. Eliot called "the intersection of the timeless with time"—those moments when patient reflection suddenly crystallizes into insight.
In practice, this means protecting unstructured time in our curricula—moments when students can pursue a thought without predetermined outcomes, when they can sit with a difficult text without rushing toward comprehension, when silence becomes not a void to be filled but a space for reflection to unfold. It means resisting the urge to fill every pedagogical pause with activity, every moment of quiet with stimulation.
The loss of such practices helps explain our contemporary anxiety about silence and solitude. We have trained ourselves to equate mental emptiness with intellectual failure, quiet with wasted time. But the great contemplatives understood that emptiness is not the absence of content. It is the precondition for genuine content to emerge. The mind that cannot bear to be alone with itself will never discover what it actually thinks, as opposed to what it has been told to think.
This distinction becomes crucial when we consider what we mean by authentic learning. The acquisition of information is not the same as the development of wisdom. The ability to retrieve facts is not equivalent to the capacity for judgment. The student who can immediately access any piece of information through a device may paradoxically know less than the student who has spent long hours in patient reflection on a single text. Speed of access can become a substitute for depth of understanding.
Perhaps this is why figures like Bernard Marx and Clarisse McClellan appear so subversive in their respective worlds—and increasingly in ours. They represent the radical proposition that human consciousness needs time and space to develop authentically. They suggest that the most important questions cannot be answered quickly, that the most valuable insights emerge not from efficient information processing but from sustained attention to mystery.
The classical tradition recognized this truth and built it into the very structure of education. The long apprenticeship in grammar, the patient progression through increasingly complex texts, the expectation that students would return again and again to fundamental questions—all of this assumed that genuine learning required time, repetition, and above all, the willingness to sit with difficulty rather than rushing toward easy answers.
What hangs in the balance is not merely pedagogical preference but the very possibility of producing human beings capable of independent thought. When we eliminate contemplative emptiness from education, we risk graduating students who can process information efficiently but cannot think originally—who mistake the retrieval of facts for the possession of wisdom.
In our current moment, when every pause threatens to be filled with notifications and entertainment, the classical model offers not just an alternative pedagogy but a form of cultural resistance. To insist on silence, to protect periods of unstructured thought, to value reflection as much as productivity—these become almost revolutionary acts. The defense of educational boredom is ultimately the defense of human consciousness itself.
Michael S. Rose, a leader in the classical education movement, is author of The Art of Being Human, Ugly As Sin and other books. His articles have appeared in dozens of publications including The Wall Street Journal, Epoch Times, New York Newsday, National Review, and The Dallas Morning News.
What an insightful comment on boredom is! You have captured the essence of what we seem to have lost. Yet boredom can force one to experiment. My six year old daughter copied a graphic artist we knew who produced hundreds of copies of one picture in her own way. This led to a lifelong interest in art. Then, bored with art, she turned to music. Now she has a rich life of interests based on fleeing boredom.
Oh, so many roads to choose from.
What a thought-provoking post. I learned only in my 60s that I have am mildly ADHD. I've made it this far, so it's more interesting than anything. As a graduate student, before my knees passed their use-by date, I found long runs extremely conducive to solving complex calculus problems. Today I'm a hot-yoga aficionado. The intense exertion in a 100 degree room is one of the few places that my mind actually stops flitting.
A second reflection. I recall a priest talking about starting a monastery in NYC. They had the privilege of a visit by Mother (now Saint) Teresa. The monastery focused on providing food, shelter and kindness to the homeless. The priest spoke with Mother Teresa of the lack of time they had for their mission. She advised them to be sure to pray a Holy Hour before the Blessed Sacrament every day. No exceptions. He objected that they already did so, yet still remained overstretched. Her reply? Well, then, try praying two Holy Hours each day!
Finally, and perhaps most germane to CCR, I wonder how your reflections, Michael, might relate to Iain McGilchrist's work on the true (not the silly-but-widely-believed) right-brain/left-brain differences. He contends that our right brains apprehend and sort through the enormity of our experience, while the left brain specializes in using simplified models (created through right-brain observation (essentially subroutines or maps). [I deeply apologize to Prof. McGilchrist for making a hash of his work...]
Perhaps your "boredom" is somehow involved in sorting through and identifying patterns in our right brain's apprehension. These we later "turn into" useful maps embedded in our left brains.