Cultural Context of Knowledge
"A history that cannot be told does not disappear. It waits for someone to find the words." When marginalized knowledge finally wins a place in the curriculum, something else happens at the same time. It gets targeted. This episode traces a pattern — dismissal, absorption, restriction — the predictable way dominant knowledge systems respond when histories from the margin enter the classroom. The Reconstruction-era rollback of Black education supplies the historical template. The laws passed across more than twenty U.S. states since 2020 supply the current case. What is actually being restricted? Not the mention of difficult histories — the analytical frameworks that help students connect past to present. Take the analysis out of history, and what remains is trivia. In this episode: • Why restriction arrives only after dismissal and absorption have failed • The post-Reconstruction template for narrowing what can be taught • What a chilling effect actually looks like inside a classroom • Why laws target analysis more often than they target content • A concrete practice for educators navigating restrictive policy Chapters 00:00 Cold open — the teacher, the classroom, the narrowing 01:30 Where this episode sits in Season 2 02:45 The last time this happened — Reconstruction rollback 04:45 The three-move response — dismissal, absorption, restriction 06:50 What the research says — the chilling effect 08:40 Why newly legitimate knowledge gets targeted 10:30 Do this this week 11:45 Landing line Listen next S2 E4 — Who Gets to Teach It? Representation and the Long Shadow of Brown v. Board. The workforce story that sets up this one. About the show The Cultural Context of Knowledge is a narrative podcast hosted by Dr. Donald Easton-Brooks, exploring how culture, history, institutions, and power shape what counts as knowledge — and what that means for learners, classrooms, and the U.S. education system. Hashtags #CulturalContextOfKnowledge #EducationPodcast #EducationalEquity #CurriculumMatters #HistoryMatters
24 episodios
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