Cultural Context of Knowledge
“Ethnic matching did not begin as a research variable. It began as a lived reality.” Season 3 opens. Dr. Donald Easton-Brooks names the season — The Inheritance Tax: Where Ethnic Matching Became — and walks listeners into the history before the history. Long before the research field had a term for it, Black, Native, Latino, and Asian communities in the U.S. were already practicing what scholars would later call ethnic matching. Teaching was reconstruction work, survival, defense, recognition. Communities knew what mattered before any study measured it. This season traces a 130-year practice across four communities and asks what schools owe the inheritance they have been interrupting. The Inheritance Tax is what students, families, and educators have been paying every time that knowledge gets erased, dismissed, or treated as less legitimate than the institution's own. In this episode: • The season's central argument: ethnic matching is not a 1980s research invention. It is a 130-year practice that survived every policy regime designed to erase it. • Why the research field arrived late to a conversation Black, Native, Latino, and Asian communities had been having for generations. • Four parallel histories, named without being collapsed into one story. • The inheritance — what communities pass down inside education beyond content. • The tax — what students carry when institutions interrupt that inheritance. • Where the season is headed: through Brown's shadow, through the qualitative and quantitative waves, to the finale. Chapters: 00:00 — Welcome and the season named 02:30 — What the field now calls it 04:45 — Four communities, one national question 09:00 — As a practice of recognition 11:15 — The word inheritance, and the word tax 14:30 — Where the season is headed 16:00 — A pattern this podcast has returned to 17:45 — Landing line Listen next: S2 E4 — Who Gets to Teach It? Representation and the Long Shadow of Brown v. Board. Pairs with: S2 E10 — Will Education Pivot With It? The finale that opened the question this season answers. Episode companions, reflection prompts, scholars named on-air, and the work behind the work: podcast.donaldeastonbrooks.com The Cultural Context of Knowledge is a single-narrator podcast on how culture, history, institutions, and power shape what counts as knowledge — and what that means for learners, classrooms, and the U.S. education system. Hosted by Dr. Donald Easton-Brooks. #CulturalContextOfKnowledge #EthnicMatching #EducationResearch #TeacherDiversity #EducationalEquity
28 episodios
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