Cultural Context of Knowledge
"The word violence demands an intervention. The word bias asks for a workshop." This season has been organized around one relationship — knowledge and power. Who decides what counts. Whose voice the institutions treat as the default. This episode names what that relationship looks like when it lands on a six-year-old. Most accounts of the hidden curriculum stop at unfairness. This one names what those accounts imply but rarely say plainly — the hidden curriculum is what knowledge and power look like when they reach a child's body. And it is not just unfair. It is documented developmental harm. Measurable. Clinical. Decades-long. The episode opens with two six-year-olds in adjacent kindergarten classrooms, both behaving like six-year-olds. One gets a redirect. One gets a referral. From there it walks the deliberate choice — made by Erhabor Ighodaro, Greg Wiggan, and Stephanie Jones — to call what schools do to many children of color by its accurate name. Violence. Once that frame is on the table, every remaining episode of Season 2 — the AI gatekeeper, the standards-writing room, the assessment instrument — inherits it. In this episode: · Why two scholars chose the word violence — and why a third built a research program around defending the choice · What the trauma research actually documents about repeated misrecognition · Adultification — the perception of Black boys (Goff) and Black girls (Epstein, Blake, González) as older, more culpable, less in need of protection · Why the misrecognition-tax frame is too gentle for what is being described · A concrete educator practice that makes the pattern visible inside one week Chapters 00:00 Cold open — two six-year-olds 01:30 Where this episode sits — turning the season inside 02:30 The choice of a word — Ighodaro, Wiggan, Jones 04:30 Pause and reflect — how the word violence sits in your body 05:15 What the harm looks like — disengagement, anxiety, a flattening of curiosity 07:00 Fanon, psychological homelessness, and why "tax" is too gentle 09:00 Adultification — the mechanism 10:30 Cultural context check — why so little has changed 12:00 Do this this week 13:30 Landing line Listen next S2 E5 — The Backlash: Why Newly Legitimate Knowledge Gets Targeted. The legislative pressure that makes this episode's developmental-harm framing politically combustible. 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 #CurriculumViolence #Adultification #EducationalEquity
25 episodios
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