Cultural Context of Knowledge
The research did not discover this. It arrived, generations late, at a door the families had been standing behind the whole time. Part two turns from the schools communities built to the harm those schools were built to hold their children against. The official school in this era was designed to take something specific: a Mexican child's Spanish, traded for shame; a Native child's language and kinship, named a danger; a Black child's sense of worth, taught through underfunding; an Asian child's belonging, made conditional on the politics of the year. This is the misrecognition tax, written into the curriculum, and the banking model of education at its furthest end. Against that theft, the community sent back a teacher. This is the heart of the season told in one life: Lucy Craft Laney, who built Haines from a borrowed room, and Mary McLeod Bethune, who learned from her and built a school of her own. One builder making another. The inheritance moving hand to hand. What does it cost a community when a school is built to tax the passage of knowledge from one generation to the next? In this episode: * What the segregated and assimilationist school was built to take, named as a pattern across communities * Paulo Freire's banking model and the misrecognition tax, shown in lived experience * The teacher as the community's answer: Laney and Bethune, Idar and Villegas de Magnón, the elders, the older children who taught in secret * The inheritance tax as a cost that compounds across generations, and where Season 3 goes next Chapters: 00:00 Where part two picks up 00:34 What the building was built to take 01:56 The teacher the community sent back 06:09 The tax that compounds 08:21 Do this this week 08:51 What comes next Draws on Paulo Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed and the lives of Lucy Craft Laney and Mary McLeod Bethune. Sets up the next episode, where the harm these schools did begins to be named out loud. Listen next: Season 3, Episode 4. Missed part one? Go back to "What Families Knew, and What They Built." The full list of the schools and builders honored across both parts is on the show's website. The Cultural Context of Knowledge is a narrative podcast with Dr. Donald Easton-Brooks on how culture, power, and institutions shape what counts as knowledge, and what that means for learners, classrooms, and the U.S. education system. Follow on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or Amazon Music. Learn more at donaldeastonbrooks.com. #CulturalContextOfKnowledge #TheInheritanceTax #EthnicMatching #CulturallyResponsiveTeaching #HistoryOfEducation
28 Folgen
Kommentare
0Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert
Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Cultural Context of Knowledge-Community!