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Description

What if generational tension in the workforce isn't a problem to solve but a resource we're failing to use well?

In this episode of The Independent School Moonshot Podcast, we sit down with Megan Gerhardtprofessor at Miami University and co-author of Gentelligence, to unpack why so many leaders misunderstand generational dynamics at work.

Rather than framing schools as battlegrounds between Boomers, Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z, Megan invites listeners to rethink age and experience as forms of diversity that can strengthen culture, innovation, and trust.

Through research, stories, and practical examples from classrooms and organizations, she offers a clear framework for leaders who want to move past stereotypes and build intergenerational teams that actually work.

For independent school leaders facing retention challenges, shifting workforce expectations, and rapid change, this conversation offers both clarity and hope.

What You'll Learn from Megan Gerhardt:

  1. Generational conflict is often misdiagnosed: What looks like entitlement, resistance, or disengagement is usually a mismatch in expectations, not a character flaw tied to age.
  2. Needs are shared; norms are different: Across generations, people want respect, purpose, growth, and autonomy. What differs is how each generation learned to pursue those needs.
  3. Stereotypes shut down opportunity: Treating generations as monoliths blocks trust, innovation, and honest conversation inside schools.
  4. Trust enables learning in both directions: Psychological safety allows older and younger educators to ask for help, share ideas, and contribute fully without fear of judgment.
  5. The best solutions are co-created: When leaders invite multiple generations into problem-solving, schools get better outcomes than any single perspective could produce.