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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
Monday Apr 06, 2026
Monday Apr 06, 2026
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.

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