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An extension of the mission of its namesake, the Black Teacher Project Podcast is a space where Black educators gather to speak truth, share stories, and imagine new possibilities for liberated learning. Produced by the Black Teacher Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting Black teacher thriving, the podcast brings together classroom teachers and education leaders in candid conversation about the joys and struggles of teaching while Black, navigating systemic barriers, centering wellness, and sustaining hope for the future.
Through reflections on identity and justice and strategies for resilience and thriving, it amplifies the voices of Black teachers who are shaping schools, challenging inequities, and nurturing generations of all students to flourish.
An extension of the mission of its namesake, the Black Teacher Project Podcast is a space where Black educators gather to speak truth, share stories, and imagine new possibilities for liberated learning. Produced by the Black Teacher Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting Black teacher thriving, the podcast brings together classroom teachers and education leaders in candid conversation about the joys and struggles of teaching while Black, navigating systemic barriers, centering wellness, and sustaining hope for the future.
Through reflections on identity and justice and strategies for resilience and thriving, it amplifies the voices of Black teachers who are shaping schools, challenging inequities, and nurturing generations of all students to flourish.
Episodes
7 days ago
7 days ago
What does it really take to move from a pedagogy of compliance to a pedagogy of possibility? In this episode of the Black Teacher Project Podcast, BTP’s Dr. Micia Mosely is joined by renowned teacher educator and Ready4Rigor architect Zaretta Hammond, bestselling author of Culturally Responsive Teaching and the Brain and Rebuilding Students’ Learning Power, and Abdul-Haqq (Hawk) Khalifah of Agency by Design Oakland, a Black educator and lead coach in Oakland Unified, for a grounded conversation on what it means to truly teach for liberation.
Together, they unpack a critical gap in many classrooms: while relationships and cultural awareness matter, they are not enough. Their conversation centers the often overlooked work of building students’ information processing skills and learning power, shifting instruction from surface engagement to deep cognitive development.
This episode is both a mirror and a roadmap. It affirms what many Black teachers already know intuitively while offering language, tools, and clarity to strengthen practice. As three Black educators reflect on what it looks like to move beyond performative strategies into intentional instructional decision-making, they name how systems train teachers into compliance, prioritizing control over curiosity. They also explore what becomes possible when teachers cultivate learning partnerships, slow down instruction, and coach students to think, struggle, and make meaning independently, inviting educators to move beyond managing classrooms toward building communities of learners where students do the thinking and own their learning.
Wednesday Mar 04, 2026
Wednesday Mar 04, 2026
What does it mean to teach toward liberation in a moment shaped by fear, standardization, and political pressure? In this episode of the Black Teacher Project Podcast, BTP’s Dr. Micia Mosely is joined by educators JaVaughn Hardaway and Dr. Cecelia Gillam for a reflective conversation on literacy, STEM, and centering humanity in classrooms never designed for Black thriving.
From Indianapolis to New Orleans, the educators name the realities Black teachers face today: rigid pacing guides, narrowing curriculum, high-stakes testing, and systems that value compliance over connection. They challenge the idea that literacy is limited to phonics or test scores, expanding it to include critical consciousness, identity development, and the ability to read the world as well as the word. In STEM, they uplift teaching grounded in real-world relevance, curiosity, and joy, where students learn how to think, question, and imagine.
The conversation affirms Black teachers as “good troublemakers” who understand when and how to disrupt harmful systems. Community, cohort learning, and wellness emerge as essential, reminding us that caring for oneself is inseparable from caring for students. Looking ahead, they draw on freedom dreams to imagine schools where learning is not reduced to points or labor preparation, multiple literacies are honored, and all children, especially Black and Brown ones, experience robust, joyful education.
Saturday Jan 31, 2026
Saturday Jan 31, 2026
What does it mean to teach Black history in a moment marked by backlash, erasure, and renewed struggle? And what does the 100-year journey of Black History Month ask of educators today? In this episode of the Black Teacher Project Podcast, Dr. Micia Mosely, Founder and Executive Director of BTP, is joined by Dr. Jarvis R. Givens, professor of Education and African American Studies at Harvard University, for a deeply grounded conversation recorded during the centennial of Negro History Week. Together, they reflect on the legacy of Carter G. Woodson and the long history of Black history being treated as contraband, contested, and actively suppressed in schools.
Drawing from his scholarship, including Fugitive Pedagogy: Carter G. Woodson and the Art of Black Teaching (2021), School Clothes: A Collective Memoir of Black Student Witness (2023), and American Grammar: Race, Education, and the Building of a Nation (2025), Givens shares concrete historical examples of Black teachers navigating hostility, confiscation, and surveillance while continuing to teach truthfully. He also discusses his forthcoming book, I’ll Make Me a World: The 100-Year Journey of Black History Month (2026), which traces how Black educators, families, and communities sustained this tradition across generations.
Throughout the conversation, Givens names Black teachers as memory workers, institution builders, and world-makers who have always taught toward collective freedom, even in schools never designed for Black thriving. This episode invites listeners to understand Black History Month as a living inheritance and teaching as a responsibility that reaches far beyond the classroom.
Friday Oct 24, 2025
Friday Oct 24, 2025
“Fear has overtaken everything.” Across the country, diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) work is under siege. In this episode of the Black Teacher Project Podcast, hosts Dr. Cecelia Gillam, Dr. Lena Hamilton, Dr. LaTesa Brown, and Lisa Harton gather to name the chilling effects of political backlash on schools, teachers, and communities.
From Georgia to Indiana, North Carolina to Louisiana, the educators share firsthand how fear and censorship are reshaping classrooms. They describe teachers self-censoring lessons before laws are even passed, DEI committees being rebranded or dissolved, and families of color withdrawing children from school out of fear of deportation or surveillance. Programs supporting students, from summer food access to mental health services, are being cut in the same wave that targets DEI.
And yet, amidst the fear, these Black teachers also remind us of what is possible. In New Orleans, leaders still fight the good fight to ensure equity and belonging. Across states, teachers resist silencing by speaking truth and holding space for their students’ humanity. The podcast becomes a mirror of what resilience looks like in practice: honesty, courage, and a refusal to let political forces strip away purpose.
This episode is an invitation to listen deeply to the voices of Black educators who know both the stakes and the possibilities. It affirms that the fight for inclusive schools is not just about protecting words like DEI. It is about ensuring that all students, especially those historically marginalized, are seen, valued, and given the chance to thrive.
Saturday Sep 27, 2025
Saturday Sep 27, 2025
“When we speak truth, we are called antagonistic. When we excel, we are told it is not enough.” In this episode of the Black Teacher Project Podcast, four Black women educators name the barriers they face and reclaim their power through community, wellness, and unapologetic excellence.
Hosts Dr. Cecelia Gillam, Dr. Lena Hamilton, Dr. LaTesa Brown, and Lisa Harton lay bare the lived reality of being Black women in the classroom and beyond. They share stories of being labeled “antagonistic” for speaking truth, of carrying the heaviest loads while watching peers get accolades, and of having advanced degrees and experience dismissed in hiring processes.
But this is not just a story of exhaustion. It is also a story of brilliance, resistance, and joy. The educators ground themselves in the Black Teacher Project’s pillar of wellness, reminding us that self-care is not selfish but essential. They model what it looks like to center Black identity, to stay in your lane without shrinking, and to claim space without apology.
Listeners will hear truth spoken with clarity and love: Black women teachers are more than the stereotypes assigned to us. They are Black teachers whose excellence is already reshaping schools, lifting up students, and creating pathways for all students to thrive.
Friday Sep 05, 2025
Friday Sep 05, 2025
“I am both hopeful and fearful.” These words echo the tension that defines much of what it means to teach while Black in today’s schools. In this opening conversation of the Black Teacher Project Podcast, educators Dr. Cecelia Gillam, Dr. Lena Hamilton, and Lisa Harton share candid reflections on the joys, burdens, and unshakable calling of their work.
Together, they lift up what it means to teach in institutions that too often silence critical thought while drawing strength from ancestral wisdom and the brilliance of their students. From the erosion of teacher autonomy to the push to standardize and privatize, the educators name the systemic barriers stacked against Black teachers and students. And yet, they also remind us of the deep reservoirs of hope that live in every classroom where children’s genius is affirmed and nurtured.
This episode is not only a diagnosis of the challenges facing public education but also a love letter to community. The hosts affirm that Black educators are not alone, and that sustaining joy and resilience requires finding your people, remembering your purpose, and caring for yourself as you pour into others.
For Black teachers seeking affirmation, allies seeking to listen deeply, and communities seeking to imagine what’s possible, this conversation is both sobering and life-giving. It’s a reminder that while obstacles remain, collective power, connection, and purpose can and will chart a new path for all students.
