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.
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