Cultural Context of Knowledge

The Backlash: Anti-CRT Laws and Classroom Censorship (S2 E5)

10 min · 24 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio The Backlash: Anti-CRT Laws and Classroom Censorship (S2 E5)

Descripción

"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

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24 episodios

episode Season 3 Trailer: Ethnic Matching: What Forty Years of Research Already Knows artwork

Season 3 Trailer: Ethnic Matching: What Forty Years of Research Already Knows

Season 3 of The Cultural Context of Knowledge takes up ethnic matching: the research that asks what happens to students, especially Black, Latino, and Indigenous students, when the teacher in front of them shares aspects of their cultural background. Twelve episodes. One through-line. Forty years of evidence on how matched and unmatched classrooms produce different outcomes, why the teaching workforce is shaped the way it is, what districts have tried, what worked, and what the gifted and talented identification gap looks like when you trace it back to who is teaching. In this trailer: • What ethnic matching means in the research, and what it does not mean • Why the 2009 findings on Black students and Black teachers expanded, and the caveats that came with that expansion • The four arcs of the season: foundation, structure, contested terrain, and what comes next • What Donna Ford and I are working on for the gifted and talented episode • What I am asking of you before Episode 1 Chapters: 00:00  What forty years of research has shaped 00:45  Where this season sits 01:20  What this season is 02:00  What this season is not 02:30  What I am asking of you Listen next: Season 2 Episode 10, "Will Education Pivot With It? Designing for the World That Already Exists." The finale that set up this season. The Cultural Context of Knowledge is hosted by Dr. Donald Easton-Brooks, professor and author of Ethnic Matching: Academic Success of Students of Color. #EthnicMatching #CulturalContextOfKnowledge

29 de may de 20263 min
episode Will Education Pivot With It?: Designing for the World That Already Exists (S2 E10) artwork

Will Education Pivot With It?: Designing for the World That Already Exists (S2 E10)

"The pivot the season has been asking about is not waiting on a new theory. It is waiting on the workforce." We opened this season with a question. The demographic pivot has already happened. Will education pivot with it? After nine episodes describing the architecture (institutions, laws, the hidden curriculum, AI, standards-setting, assessment), the season closes by returning to the classroom we walked into in Episode 1. Same building. Same children. Same teacher. The classroom has not changed. We have. This finale synthesizes the season's argument and names the lever the next season takes up. The accountability framework is real. Culturally responsive education has been built by Gloria Ladson-Billings, Geneva Gay, and Django Paris for thirty years. Co-designed AI, community-included standards-setting, and accountable assessment are all doable. But every one of those institutional moves depends on having people in the conversation who can do the work. People who carry the cultural knowledge the institution has historically had to be specifically prompted to remember. The most concentrated, most measurable, most studied, and most under-acted-on place where that work happens is the front of the classroom. The teacher is part of the curriculum. The body of research on this is the most extensive equity finding U.S. education has produced in the last sixty years. The teaching profession is roughly 80% white; the student population is just over half non-white. The pivot is not waiting on a new theory. It is waiting on the workforce. That is what Season 3 takes up. In this episode: *  What we now know about the classroom we walked into in Episode 1 that we did not know nine episodes ago * The three accountability moves the season has named: AI co-design (E7), inclusive standards-setting (E8), accountable assessment (E9) * The same logic underneath all three: the people who live with the decision should be the people making the decision * The lever the season has been pointing at: the teacher at the front of the classroom * Why the workforce gap (~80% white teaching force, just over half non-white students) is the accumulated result of policy choices, not a fact of nature * Concrete practices for educators, parents, community members, school leaders and policymakers, and people considering a career in teaching * The bridge into Season 3: twelve episodes on ethnic matching, teachers of color, and the body of research that has been quietly building this case for sixty years Chapters 00:00   Cold open: returning to the question 01:30   Where this episode sits: the finale 02:30   Returning to the classroom from Episode 1 04:30   What we now know about that classroom 06:00   Pause and reflect: the institution operating as designed 06:45   What redesign requires: the three accountability moves 09:00   The same logic underneath all three 10:30   The lever the season has been pointing at 13:00   The workforce gap 14:00   Cultural context check: the pivot is waiting on the workforce 15:30   Do this this week: five audiences 17:30   Landing line and bridge to Season 3 Listen next S2 E1: Knowledge, Power, and the U.S. Demographic Pivot. The classroom this finale returns to. Listening to E1 after the finale is its own listening experience. The same classroom, seen differently. 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. #CulturalContextOfKnowledge  #EducationPodcast  #SeasonFinale  #KnowledgeAndPower  #EducationalEquity

27 de may de 202615 min
episode When Assessment Becomes Gatekeeping: An Instrument That Was Never Calibrated Against You (S2 E9) artwork

When Assessment Becomes Gatekeeping: An Instrument That Was Never Calibrated Against You (S2 E9)

"A number issued by an instrument that was never calibrated against you is not a verdict. It is the instrument telling on itself." Two students take the same standardized reading test. Question fourteen is about a regatta, a sailing race. The first student has been to the harbor every summer of her life. The second has never seen a regatta. They both finish the test. The test reports the first student as a stronger reader than the second. What the test measured was not reading comprehension. It was access to a particular cultural setting. But the score that gets entered into the record does not say that. The score says reading comprehension. And the score will follow the second student into every conversation about her academic potential for years to come. This episode names the standardized test as the closing instrument of the legitimacy machine. It is the place where the question of whose knowledge counts produces a measurable verdict on a specific child. The episode also names a relationship that often goes unstated: curriculum and assessment are a pair. The curriculum says what should be taught; the test says what gets rewarded; and what gets tested becomes what gets taught. Then it asks what an accountable assessment system would actually look like, drawing on Culturally Responsive Practices and on the early performance-assessment and assessment-sovereignty work that already exists. The deeper move that closes the episode: a score that systematically misreads a group of children is a defect of the instrument, not a property of the children. Accountable assessment cannot exist without accountable curriculum. The two have to be redesigned together. In this episode: * What a standardized test actually is, and why "calibrated against a population" is the phrase that explains the harm * Cultural mismatch in test items * Why the standardized test is the closing instrument of the legitimacy machine. It is the place where the institution converts judgment into a number, and the number into a trajectory Curriculum and assessment as a pair. Why what gets tested defines what gets taught, and why accountable assessment cannot exist without accountable curriculum * What accountable assessment would actually require: co-designed instruments, multiple modes of demonstrating knowledge, honest reporting of what the test cannot measure * The deeper accountability move: treating systematic mismeasurement as a defect of the instrument, the way we already do for thermometers and blood-pressure cuffs * Concrete practices for educators, parents, learners, and the people who design or commission these tests Chapters 00:00   Cold open: two students, the regatta 02:00   The reveal: what the test actually measured 03:00   Where this episode sits in Season 2 04:15   Curriculum and assessment, paired 05:45   What standardized assessment actually does 08:00   Pause and reflect: your own test scores 09:00   Assessment as verdict, not measurement 10:30   Cultural mismatch and stereotype threat 12:00   Who pays for the mismeasurement 13:30   Cultural context check: credibility as the durability problem 15:00   What accountability could look like 17:00   The deeper accountability move: the instrument, not the children 18:00   Do this this week 19:30   Landing line Listen next S2 E8: Curriculum as Compromise. The standards-setting upstream that defines what the test is allowed to measure. This episode names the curriculum/assessment pair explicitly and argues the two have to be redesigned together. 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. #CulturalContextOfKnowledge  #EducationPodcast  #StandardizedTesting  #EducationalEquity  #KnowledgeAndPower

20 de may de 202618 min
episode How State Standards Get Written: Curriculum as Compromise (S2 E8) artwork

How State Standards Get Written: Curriculum as Compromise (S2 E8)

"A document written in a meeting you have never seen still walks into your child's classroom every morning." Imagine a state standards committee. About twenty people at a long table. Most are educators or administrators, some are content specialists, at least one represents a major textbook publisher. There is rarely a current classroom teacher who isn't also a department chair. There is even more rarely a learner. And the families of the children whose histories will or will not be written into the document do not enter the meeting in any direct way at all. What that meeting decides will shape what every public-school child in the state learns for the next ten years. It will shape what their textbooks contain, what their tests measure, what their teachers are trained to deliver. It will shape, in short, what counts as knowledge for a generation of children whose families were not in the meeting. This episode names the standards document as the most concentrated place in U.S. public education where decisions about other people's children get made by people who do not have to live with the consequences. Then it asks what an accountable standards process would actually look like, drawing on the culturally responsive education tradition (Ladson-Billings, Gay, Paris) and the early work on Indigenous curriculum sovereignty. In this episode: ·       What state standards actually are, and why they govern almost everything downstream ·       The frame of curriculum as compromise, and the difference between a strong, a thin, and a quietly-lost compromise ·       Who is at the table when standards get written, and the structural pressure of textbook publishing on what makes it in ·       Why the cost of a thin compromise falls on the children whose families were not in the meeting ·       What an accountable standards process could look like — community elders, classroom teachers, and learners as voting members of the committee ·       Concrete practices for educators, parents, community members, and learners Chapters 00:00   Cold open: the meeting 01:30   What is being decided 02:30   Where this episode sits in Season 2 03:45   What state standards actually are 06:00   Pause and reflect: did you ever hear the word "standards" 06:45   Curriculum as compromise 08:30   Standards revisions in plain view 09:30   Who is at the table, and who is paying for who is not 11:30   Cultural context check- laundered into a fact 13:00   What accountability could look like 15:00   Moving the cost 15:30   Do this this week 17:30   Landing line Listen next S2 E7: AI as the New Gatekeeper. The episode this one inherits from, the cost-asymmetry argument applied to AI, now traced to the standards meeting upstream of the AI's training data. About the show The Cultural Context of Knowledge is a narrative podcast hosted by Dr. Donald Easton-Brooks [https://www.donaldeastonbrooks.com], 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. #CulturalContextOfKnowledge  #EducationPodcast  #CurriculumMatters  #EducationPolicy  #KnowledgeAndPower

13 de may de 202617 min
episode AI as the New Gatekeeper: Whose Knowledge the Model Was Built to See (S2 E7) artwork

AI as the New Gatekeeper: Whose Knowledge the Model Was Built to See (S2 E7)

"A model that fills a silence with itself has not answered. It has spoken over you." Two high-school seniors. Same model. Same kind of paper. One asks about jazz. One asks about her grandmother's healing tradition. Both get fluent, structured, authoritative answers. Both get solid grades. But only one of them got a paper grounded in a tradition the world had recorded. The other got a paper quietly invented around a tradition the model had not been given to know. Last episode named the developmental harm of the hidden curriculum. This episode follows the same harm into the newest gatekeeper between learners and what they are trying to know, and then asks what an accountable response would look like. The mechanism is called confabulation, and it is not random. It is patterned. The model confabulates most reliably about exactly the kinds of knowledge that were already underrepresented in the written record. The episode draws on the culturally responsive teaching tradition (Ladson-Billings, Gay, Paris) and Indigenous data sovereignty (CARE Principles) to argue that accountable AI is built with the active participation of the communities whose knowledge it claims to summarize — and that real accountability means moving the cost of the model's mistakes from the powerless to the powerful. In this episode: ·       What confabulation actually is, and why "hallucination" is the wrong word for it ·       Why the model confabulates most reliably about non-dominant traditions ·       The asymmetric harm, who pays for the model's confidence ·       What culturally responsive AI accountability would actually require; drawing on Ladson-Billings, Gay, Paris, and the CARE Principles for Indigenous data governance ·       Why real accountability means moving the cost of being wrong from the powerless to the powerful ·       Concrete practices for learners, educators, and the people who build, deploy, or fund AI systems Chapters 00:00   Cold open — two students, same model, two outcomes 02:00   The reveal — what the model actually returned 03:00   Where this episode sits — stepping into the new space 04:00   The choice of a question 05:30   Pause and reflect — your own deep knowledge 06:15   What confabulation actually is 08:30   Who pays — the asymmetric harm 10:00   Cultural context check — confabulation as a power relationship 11:30   What accountability could look like — culturally responsive AI 13:30   Moving the cost — from the powerless to the powerful 14:15   Do this this week 16:00   Landing line Listen next S2 E6 — The Hidden Curriculum: When Researchers Chose the Word Violence. The developmental-harm frame this episode inherits and applies to AI. 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. #CulturalContextOfKnowledge  #EducationPodcast  #AIInEducation  #DigitalEquity  #KnowledgeAndPower #AI

6 de may de 202617 min