Business A.M
No Result
View All Result
Monday, June 15, 2026
  • Login
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Finance
  • Comments
  • Companies
  • Commodities
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Subscribe
Business A.M
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Finance
  • Comments
  • Companies
  • Commodities
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Business A.M
No Result
View All Result
Home Comments

Empty classrooms, full hearts A behavioural look at leadership and life value

by Joshua Awesome
June 15, 2026
in Comments
Empty classrooms

Children’s Day in Nigeria is supposed to be a day of colour — uniforms, parades, prizes, the noise of young people being celebrated simply for existing. This year, that noise was drowned out by a different sound: the silence of empty classrooms in Oyo State, where armed men stormed three schools, seized dozens of pupils and teachers, and left a community to grieve the killing of one of those teachers days later. A video has since circulated of another teacher, a gun to her head, forced to relay her captors’ demands to the world.

 

As a trauma-informed learning design and behavioural science practitioner, I want to resist the urge to simply express outrage and move on — because outrage without analysis changes nothing. What happened in Oyo is not just a security failure. It is a leadership failure, a values failure, and a profound rupture in the psychological contract between a society and its children. And it has lessons for every leader, in every sector, who claims to care about the people under their charge.

 

Leadership is a safety architecture, not care rhetoric

Behavioural science has long established that psychological safety is the precondition for learning, performance, and growth. A child cannot absorb a lesson if part of their brain is scanning the exits. An employee cannot innovate if they’re bracing for the next round of layoffs announced by tweet. Leadership, at its core, is the design of conditions under which people can be present — fully, without armour.

 

When we talk about “leadership” in Nigeria right now, the conversation cannot stop at condemning attackers. It must extend to the leaders — political, institutional, community — whose job it was to anticipate risk and build redundancy into the system. Reports indicate that intelligence about heightened threats existed before some of these attacks. A leader’s first duty is not charisma or vision-casting; it is the unglamorous, often invisible work of risk mapping, early-warning systems, and follow-through. Safety is not a department. It is a leadership output.

 

Value of life is demonstrated, not declared

Every institution — a school, a company, a government — communicates what it actually values through where its resources go, not through its mission statements. A school that cannot afford a perimeter fence but can afford a new administrative block is making a statement about priorities, whether or not anyone says it out loud.

 

For those of us in coaching and behavioural work, this matters because the people we coach — executives, parents, teachers — are watching these signals constantly, often subconsciously. Trust, motivation, and loyalty are not built by slogans about “our greatest asset is our people.” They are built by what gets funded, what gets inspected, and what gets fixed before it becomes a tragedy. Leaders who want to be trusted must audit their actions against their stated values with brutal honesty.

 

Trauma doesn’t end when headlines move on

For the children who were taken — and even those who weren’t, but who now sit in classrooms wondering if they’re next — the psychological aftermath will outlast the news cycle by years. Trauma is not linear, and it does not respect timelines. A current event can reopen something from years past, especially when it involves children, school, and the loss of safety in a place that should be protected.

 

Trauma-informed leadership means building systems — in schools, in workplaces, in families — that anticipate this long tail: ongoing access to counselling, predictable routines that rebuild a sense of control, and adults who are themselves supported enough to hold space for children’s fear without transmitting their own.

 

What this asks of us

Grief alone is not a strategy, but neither is numbness. The middle ground is engaged, sober action — at whatever scale we can manage.

 

Four calls to action for leaders, coaches, and citizens

 

  1. Audit your ‘duty of care’ gap. Whether you run a school, a business, or a household, identify one area where your stated values and your actual safeguards don’t match — and fix it this month, not “eventually.”
  2. Normalise psychological first-aid conversations. Don’t wait for a crisis to teach the people you lead — staff, students, children — how to name fear, regulate distress, and ask for help. Build this into routine, not just emergency response.
  3. Support organisations doing the unglamorous safety work. Groups working on school safety infrastructure, community protection, and trauma recovery in affected regions need resources and advocacy far more than they need sympathy. Direct attention and funds there.
  4. Hold leadership accountable to follow-through, not just statements. When officials promise rescue, investigation, or reform, track it publicly. Accountability is a behavioural intervention — it changes what leaders prioritise the next time.

 

Children’s Day should be a celebration of futures. Right now, in parts of Nigeria, it is a reminder of how fragile those futures are when leadership treats safety as an afterthought. The work of rebuilding that safety — psychological and physical — belongs to all of us who claim to lead anyone, anywhere.

 

  • business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessamlive.com
Joshua Awesome
Joshua Awesome

Dr. Joshua Awesome is a Coaching Psychologist/Executive and Business Performance Coach who has supported over 100,000 professionals across Africa and the globe. He can be reached via: joshua@africainmind.org

Previous Post

AI won’t change what we value. It will expose what we value most.

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

How UNESCO got it wrong in Africa

May 30, 2017

CBN to issue N1.5bn loan for youth led agric expansion in Plateau

July 29, 2025

Glo, Dangote, Airtel, 7 others prequalified to bid for 9Mobile acquisition

November 20, 2017
NGX taps tech advancements to drive N4.63tr capital growth in H1

Insurance-fuelled rally pushes NGX to record high

August 8, 2025

6 MLB teams that could use upgrades at the trade deadline

Top NFL Draft picks react to their Madden NFL 16 ratings

Paul Pierce said there was ‘no way’ he could play for Lakers

Arian Foster agrees to buy books for a fan after he asked on Twitter

AI

AI won’t change what we value. It will expose what we value most.

June 15, 2026
African

Geopolitics: U.S.–Iran talks matter for African aviation

June 15, 2026
planning

Are you planning for the second half of the year?

June 15, 2026
Nigeria

Celebration vs. warning signal in Nigeria’s capital importation surge

June 15, 2026

Popular News

  • How UNESCO got it wrong in Africa

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • CBN to issue N1.5bn loan for youth led agric expansion in Plateau

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Glo, Dangote, Airtel, 7 others prequalified to bid for 9Mobile acquisition

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Insurance-fuelled rally pushes NGX to record high

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Igbobi alumni raise over N1bn in one week as private capital fills education gap

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Currently Playing

CNN on Nigeria Aviation

CNN on Nigeria Aviation

Business AM TV

Edeme Kelikume Interview With Business AM TV

Business AM TV

Business A M 2021 Mutual Funds Outlook And Award Promo Video

Business AM TV

Recent News

AI

AI won’t change what we value. It will expose what we value most.

June 15, 2026
African

Geopolitics: U.S.–Iran talks matter for African aviation

June 15, 2026

Categories

  • Frontpage
  • Analyst Insight
  • Business AM TV
  • Comments
  • Commodities
  • Finance
  • Markets
  • Technology
  • The Business Traveller & Hospitality
  • World Business & Economy

Site Navigation

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy & Policy
Business A.M

BusinessAMLive (businessamlive.com) is a leading online business news and information platform focused on providing timely, insightful and comprehensive coverage of economic, financial, and business developments in Nigeria, Africa and around the world.

© 2026 Business A.M

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Finance
  • Comments
  • Companies
  • Commodities
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© 2026 Business A.M