Cultural Context of Knowledge
Picture four teachers, in the same country, in the same years before the Civil War. They never meet. They speak four different languages. And without knowing it, each one makes the same decision. In St. Louis, a formerly enslaved Black minister teaches children in a church basement, then on a steamboat, because no one else will. In a Southwest parish, a teacher holds a classroom in Spanish for Mexican children whose land was taken and whose language a new government has called a problem. On the California coast, Chinese families fund a school for the children the public system locked out. And in the Cherokee Nation, teachers educate children in Cherokee, in a nation that prints its own newspaper. Four communities that never compared notes, each reaching the same conclusion under the same pressure. This episode tells those four histories not one after another, but together, the way they actually happened, at the same time. It is the story of ethnic matching long before the research gave it a name. • How one country, in the same decades, ruled four communities' knowledge illegitimate, by anti-literacy law, federal assimilation funding, school exclusion, and language erasure • The schools four communities built in response: parish schools, association language schools, the Cherokee press, and the hidden schools of the enslaved • What ethnic matching actually means, and what it does not: not that only your own can teach you, but that a teacher who shares a child's world carries recognition, expectation, and trust into the room • The Inheritance Tax: the labor, secrecy, property, and lives these communities paid to keep that teacher in front of their children • Why the research, when it finally arrived, was catching up to what communities already knew Timestamps are placeholders for the deep cut (~18-20 min). Update after the audio is cut. 00:00 Open — four teachers, one decision 02:00 Part 1: The country decides whose knowledge counts 06:30 Part 2: The lesson they hid, the school they built 11:00 Part 3: The teacher who already knew them 15:00 Part 4: What it cost to carry it forward 18:00 Do this this week + close Start with Episode 1, "Before the Term," which opens Season 3. Full episode list: donaldeastonbrooks.com/podcasts The Cultural Context of Knowledge is hosted by Dr. Donald Easton-Brooks, examining how culture, history, and power shape what counts as knowledge. #TheCulturalContextOfKnowledge #EthnicMatching #HistoryOfEducation #EducationalEquity #TeacherDiversity In this episodeChaptersListen next
26 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Cultural Context of Knowledge-fællesskabet!