This is a complicated moment to be teaching young people. Boys are being shaped by a media culture that previous generations did not have to navigate, and girls are absorbing the same culture from the other side of it.
We help schools meet this with something better than the standard responses, and with the evidence to show it is working.
The boys arriving in Year 7 today have grown up on a media diet that previous generations did not have to navigate. The algorithms shaping their feeds are designed to hold attention, and one of the things that holds attention reliably is content that tells boys the world is rigged against them.
By the time the ideology reaches the classroom, it does not feel imposed to the boy holding it. It feels earned. Teachers across the country are seeing the result.
Schools are not careless about this. The standard responses are good-faith attempts to address what is happening. The trouble is that each one tends to deepen the problem it is trying to solve, because of how the ideology is constructed and how boys experience it.
Girls sitting in the same lessons, on the same buses, in the same group chats, are absorbing the same culture. When this kind of content becomes ambient, girls do not always experience it as ideology. They experience it as the way the world is, and they make small adjustments to fit it. Those adjustments add up.
Girls speak up less. They take up less space. They start to question their own judgement.
Deepfakes, image-based abuse, and the gradual normalisation of female bodies as objects of commentary.
The social cost of resistance becomes high enough that quiet accommodation feels like the easier choice.
Three different ways for schools to work with us, depending on what fits your timetable, your budget and the kind of intervention your students need. Each one is designed against the same framework, and each one can be combined with the others over time.
Hands-on, interactive sessions delivered in your school, by facilitators who have the credibility to hold the room. Single workshops or series of four. Designed to fit a normal lesson period, or compressed into a drop down day if that works better for you.
Explore workshops → 02Three to seven days away from school, working through something genuinely difficult in proper terrain. Boys come back with a reference point they did not have before, and the algorithm has nothing to compete with that. Our highest-impact work.
Explore adventures → 03For schools who want to deliver the framework themselves, or who want to supplement what we deliver. Individual session packs, audit tools, trackers and frameworks, available to buy as you need them rather than in one big bundle.
Explore resources →Most programmes in this space are aimed at boys, or at girls, but rarely at both. We think that is a mistake. The same culture is shaping both groups, often in the same lessons, and a school that builds confident, clear-voiced girls is also building the peer culture that boys will eventually have to meet. Doing one without the other always leaves something missing.
Identity work, leadership, enterprise, combat sports, expeditions, role models. Practical workshops that help boys build something on the inside that the outside cannot easily knock down.
Voice work, body autonomy, digital safety, personal safety, peer dialogue. Sessions that protect what girls are quietly losing, and that rebuild the solidarity the manosphere actively undermines.
Boys tend to thrive when their environment offers four things: a trusted adult who knows them, genuine challenge, a peer group where status is earned through character, and credible men worth following. When those things are missing, the manosphere is very good at filling the gap, because it offers a counterfeit version of all four at once. Our work is to help schools build the genuine article.
A trusted adult sees this boy clearly, takes his experience seriously, and holds a genuine belief in what he can become.
Boys can become invisible inside busy pastoral systems that know their behaviour record but not who they are. The manosphere then offers the only relationship that feels personal.
A named adult for every at-risk boy. Pastoral relationships that function in practice, not only on paper. Reviewed every term. Genuine.
His environment makes real demands of him. The standard is high and it is held. He is taken through difficulty, not managed around it.
Schools sometimes lower expectations in the name of inclusion, or design programmes around managed risk. The manosphere, by contrast, offers a demanding code that asks something of boys.
Programmes built around genuine difficulty. Physical, intellectual and moral challenge that is held consistently, not softened the moment it produces discomfort.
There is a peer group available where status is earned through character, effort and accountability, rather than dominance and contempt.
Boys who privately want to step away from the ideology often find they have nowhere to step into. The pull is social, not intellectual, and adult intervention alone rarely shifts that.
Deliberately built peer cultures, through sport, shared challenge and meaningful work. High-status environments that are accessible to the boys most at risk, not only the boys already engaged.
Credible men in his life, adult and peer, who show him what is possible and hold him to it. Present, consistent, demanding, and genuine.
An algorithm fills the vacuum. When the only compelling male voices in a boy's life are online, the pipeline has no real competition.
Male practitioners who embody clear values and hold boys to them. Older peer models inside the school. Pastoral leads who connect particular boys to particular men.
Young people change when they do something, not when they listen to something. Our sessions are practical, scenario-led and active. Students leave having taken part in the work, and the research on what actually shifts attitudes is consistent on this.
Everything we say is grounded in named research. NASUWT, Ulster University, UCL, the Department for Education's updated RSHE guidance. Our four conditions framework is closely aligned with the policy that becomes mandatory in 2025, and we are happy to show our working.
Every workshop we deliver generates impact data. Schools see what shifted, who needs follow-up, and whether the work justified the spend. Programmes that cannot show their impact are programmes that should not really be running, and we hold ourselves to that.
Human / Kind is built around a network of facilitators drawn from a wider range of backgrounds than most school programmes work with. Educators, coaches, entrepreneurs, ex-military, mental health practitioners. People who have done some of the work they teach.
What they share is straightforward. They have credibility with adolescents, they are comfortable with the conversation, and they have no interest in performing.
Our facilitators have lived experience of the things they talk about. The combat sports coach who runs the gym. The entrepreneur who has built the business. The mentor who has spent years working with young people that other programmes had given up on. Adolescents read credibility quickly, and our facilitators do not have to fake it.
The young people in your school are not all the same, and our facilitator network is intentionally diverse across class, ethnicity, professional background and life experience. Different boys connect with different men, and we match the facilitator to the cohort rather than running a one-size-fits-all approach.
Every facilitator goes through our induction on the framework, the radicalisation diagnostic, and the calling-in approach we use rather than calling out. Sessions are observed, debriefed, and quality-controlled. The standard is the standard, regardless of who is in the room.
Annual teacher surveys from 2023 to 2026, tracking the year-on-year increase in sexist abuse against female teachers.
Taking Boys Seriously, a longitudinal study of relational education across thousands of boys over five years.
2024 study mapping how social media algorithms amplify misogynistic content to adolescent users within five days.
Updated RSHE guidance, mandatory from 2025, which maps closely to our four conditions framework.
Lost Boys: State of the Nation, the comprehensive 2025 report on male educational disenfranchisement.
Prevent referral data documenting the rise of incel and mixed/unstable/unclear ideology cases from education settings.
Tell us a little about your school and what you are seeing. We will come back to you honestly about whether what we do is the right fit, and where we would suggest starting if it is.