Rethinking “I’m Sorry”: Teaching Authentic Apology and Forgiveness in Schools

Rethinking “I’m Sorry”: Teaching Authentic Apology and Forgiveness in Schools

Summary for Educators

Source: Suzanne Freedman, What We Get Wrong About Teaching Kids to Apologize and Forgive, Greater Good Magazine (April 2026)


The Big Idea

In classrooms and homes, adults often prompt children to quickly say “I’m sorry” or “I forgive you” after a conflict. While well-intentioned, this common practice may actually undermine emotional development. Suzanne Freedman argues that forced apologies and forgiveness teach compliance—not empathy, accountability, or healing.

True apology and forgiveness are not scripted behaviors; they are complex emotional and moral processes that require time, reflection, and choice. When educators rush these moments, they unintentionally teach students to suppress feelings rather than understand them.


Why Traditional Approaches Fall Short

1. Forced Apologies Encourage Surface-Level Compliance

When students are required to apologize immediately, they often do so without genuine understanding. The result is a ritualized response—words without meaning.

Rather than learning responsibility, students learn:

  • “Say the right thing to move on”
  • “Avoid consequences by complying”

This weakens the development of authentic accountability.


2. Premature Forgiveness Suppresses Emotions

Similarly, asking a child to forgive before they are ready can invalidate their feelings. Children may still feel hurt, angry, or confused—but are taught to ignore those emotions.

Research suggests this leads to emotional suppression, not resilience.


3. Missed Opportunity for Moral Development

Apology and forgiveness are powerful tools for building:

  • Empathy
  • Perspective-taking
  • Emotional regulation

But these skills only develop when children are allowed to process what happened, not bypass it.


What Authentic Apology and Forgiveness Look Like

Freedman emphasizes that both apology and forgiveness must be voluntary and meaningful.

Authentic Apology Includes:

  • Understanding the harm caused
  • Feeling genuine remorse
  • Taking responsibility
  • Making amends

Authentic Forgiveness Includes:

  • Acknowledging hurt
  • Processing emotions over time
  • Choosing—freely—to let go of resentment

Critically, forgiveness is not required and does not mean excusing behavior or reconciling with someone who caused harm.


A Better Approach for Educators

Instead of forcing quick resolutions, educators can guide students through a developmental process:

🔹 1. Validate Emotions First

When conflict occurs, begin with acknowledgment:

  • “I can see you’re upset.”
  • “That hurt you.”

Validation communicates that emotions are legitimate and manageable.


🔹 2. Slow Down the Process

Give students time to reflect before expecting apologies or forgiveness. Emotional understanding cannot be rushed.


🔹 3. Teach Emotional Literacy

Help students name and understand feelings:

  • anger
  • disappointment
  • embarrassment

This builds the foundation for empathy and self-awareness.


🔹 4. Emphasize Choice and Agency

Students should learn that:

  • Apologies must be sincere
  • Forgiveness is a personal decision

When children feel ownership, their responses become authentic and meaningful.


🔹 5. Focus on Repair, Not Just Words

Encourage restorative actions:

  • fixing what was broken
  • helping the harmed student
  • rebuilding trust

These actions deepen learning far more than scripted apologies.


Why It Matters for Schools Today

In many classrooms, conflict resolution is treated as a quick behavioral fix. But Freedman’s work highlights a critical shift:

➡️ From compliance → to character development ➡️ From speed → to emotional depth
➡️ From control → to student agency

This aligns closely with restorative practices, which prioritize healing, accountability, and relationship-building over punishment or superficial resolution.

For school leaders, the message is clear: If we want students to develop empathy, resilience, and integrity, we must rethink how we handle everyday conflicts.


Leadership Action Steps

  • Replace “Say you’re sorry” with reflective dialogue
  • Train staff in restorative and emotion-coaching strategies
  • Build time into the school day for conflict resolution
  • Model authentic apology and forgiveness as adults
  • Create classroom norms that value honesty over compliance

Reflective Prompt for School Leaders

When students apologize in your school, are they ending a problem—or beginning to understand it?

Original Article

Source: Suzanne Freedman, What We Get Wrong About Teaching Kids to Apologize and Forgive, Greater Good Magazine (April 2026)

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Prepared with the assistance of AI software

OpenAI. (2026). ChatGPT (5.2) [Large language model]. https://chat.openai.com

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