Who Gets to Love Learning?
Episode Summary
In this episode, we move from a single moment to a pattern that’s harder to ignore.
What began as a conversation about a child not liking school expands into a broader question about the emotional experience of learning across classrooms, schools, and systems.
Candace reflects on recurring moments — preservice teachers describing students as “behind,” classrooms driven by pacing over presence, and college students navigating learning environments that feel disconnected from relationships and meaning. Together, Candace and Amy explore how the language of urgency, remediation, and compliance shapes not just what students learn, but how learning feels.
Drawing on research around motivation, emotional safety, and culturally responsive practice, the conversation examines whether joy is being treated as an extra — or whether it is a condition necessary for meaningful learning.
The episode moves into a deeper tension:
If joy depends on autonomy, belonging, relevance, and safety… are those conditions equally available to all learners?
We close by asking what it means if they are not.
Key Question:
If joy is a condition for deep learning, who actually has access to it?
Topics Discussed
* Joy as a condition for learning, not a reward
* The language of “behind,” urgency, and remediation
* Emotional safety and relationships in learning environments
* Scripted curriculum, pacing pressures, and system constraints
* The difference between compliance and engagement
* Education debt vs. achievement gaps
* Joy, identity, and access across race, class, and power
* Learning as human, relational, and nonlinear
Readings & Resources Mentioned
Practitioner & Teaching Perspectives
* Gholdy Muhammad Work on culturally and historically responsive education and joy as sustained fulfillment
* https://education.uic.edu/profiles/muhammad-gholnecsar/
* bell hooks Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom
* https://academictrap.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/bell-hooks-teaching-to-transgress.pdf
Research Sources Referenced during the episode:
* Edward Deci & Richard Ryan Self-Determination Theory (autonomy, competence, connection)
* https://selfdeterminationtheory.org/SDT/documents/2000_RyanDeci_SDT.pdf
* Daniel J. Siegel Brain development, relationships, and emotional safety in learning
* Peter Gray Learning, autonomy, and the impact of control on motivation
* https://drdansiegel.com/relationship-science-and-being-human/
Foundational Research & Further Reading
* Gloria Ladson-Billings From achievement gap to education debt
* https://thrive.arizona.edu/sites/default/files/From%20the%20Achievement%20Gap%20to%20the%20Education%20Debt_Understanding%20Achievement%20in%20US%20Schools.pdf
* Bettina Love We Want to Do More Than Survive
* https://www.beacon.org/We-Want-to-Do-More-Than-Survive-P1446.aspx
* Jal Mehta Deep learning and system design
* https://jfforg-prod-new.s3.amazonaws.com/media/documents/The-Why-What-Where-How-121415.pdf
Parents: Ask your child not just what they learned, but how learning felt that day. Notice what brings energy — and what drains it.
Educators: Reflect on your classroom environment: Where do students experience autonomy, belonging, and relevance? Where might compliance be mistaken for engagement?
If joy is sustained fulfillment, then we have to ask:
Which students are being sustained by school — and which are being depleted by it?
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