• A Chain of Excellence
    Jun 26 2026

    Dr. Matthew Oware

    Professor

    I Got Something to Say: Gender, Race, and Social Consciousness in Rap Music

    https://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9783319904535


    “Seeing Black excellence in the classroom changed what I believed was possible for my own life.”

    In this episode, sociologist and University of Richmond professor Matthew Oware reflects on his journey from Chicago’s South Side to higher education. Inspired by the Black professors he encountered as a first-generation college student, Dr. Oware shares how representation, mentorship, and affirmation helped him overcome imposter syndrome and find his calling as an educator. He discusses the importance of Black educators as role models who expand students’ sense of possibility and continue a legacy of excellence across generations.


    “I see myself as one link in a chain of Black educators who inspire others to dream bigger.”

    Dr. Oware offers a thoughtful look at the current state of Black education, highlighting both progress and persistent gaps in college attainment. He also explores his groundbreaking research on hip-hop, race, identity, and culture, using rap music as a gateway to teach complex sociological concepts. Through his scholarship, teaching, and mentorship, Dr. Oware demonstrates how Black educators help students connect their lived experiences to academic success while building pathways for future generations to thrive.

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    29 Min.
  • Rebuilding the Village
    Jun 17 2026

    Black educators help students see what’s possible.

    In this episode, Philadelphia second-grade teacher Jael Ferguson shares her nontraditional journey into education, leaving a toxic office job to pursue her calling through a teacher residency program. Inspired by mentors and the Black educators who poured into her along the way, Jael reflects on the importance of representation, leadership, and creating classrooms where students feel seen, supported, and empowered to dream beyond their circumstances.


    We have to rebuild the village.

    Jael discusses the challenges of teaching during and after COVID-19, the importance of strong family partnerships, and why community-centered education is essential for student success. From helping struggling readers and English language learners find confidence to celebrating every win with joy and intention, she believes that praise, exposure, and high expectations can transform lives. Grounded in mentorship, service, and a commitment to meeting students where they are, Jael’s story is a powerful reminder that lasting impact happens when educators, families, and communities work together.


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    40 Min.
  • Bridge Builders
    Jun 3 2026

    "Broader change requires influencing policy and systems to reach thousands."

    This conviction sits at the heart of Claton Lewis's career. As Assistant Director for Career Readiness at Morgan State University, Claton traces a journey from Trinidad and Tobago through entrepreneurship and into higher education, shaped by family legacy and key mentors who modeled what intentional, community-driven teaching looks like. He speaks candidly about the systemic and structural challenges Black educators face and why real transformation demands reshaping the systems that govern what students learn, how they're valued, and what futures they can imagine.


    "The state of Black education is ultimately a reflection of the quality of education in Black homes."

    With this grounding belief, Claton offers a perspective that is both clear-eyed about historical injustice and filled with genuine hope. He highlights the resilience and achievements of Black students and educators at HBCUs, the growing opportunity created by technology and AI, and the irreplaceable role of family and community as a student's first educators. Claton also opens up about sustaining joy in emotionally demanding work through intentional boundaries, positive relationships, and centering student strengths. Claton ends with a reflection on legacy, the power of mentorship, and a deep gratitude for the opportunity to amplify Black excellence and hope within the community.


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    34 Min.
  • Sky's the Limit
    Apr 15 2026

    In this episode, we welcome Charles Small, a flight instructor from Richmond, Virginia — and a Black Educators Matter first. Not only is Charles our first aviation instructor featured on the podcast, but he is also the son and brother of two previous podcast guests, making this a true family affair. His journey into aviation began with a single tour of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in 10th grade, where one encounter changed the trajectory of his life. What followed was years of grinding, working multiple jobs, playing rugby, and even fighting professionally, all to fund the $130,000 path to becoming a certified flight instructor.


    Charles is passionate about what his presence in the cockpit means for the next generation. In a field dominated by a "boys' club" culture where Black instructors are rare, he understands that visibility is everything. His call to action is encouraging other professional pilots to return to their communities and speak to students directly, showing them that aviation is within reach. His teaching philosophy is rooted in safety, patience, and letting students grow through the process. And while the skies may not yet be equal, Charles Small is doing his part to make sure more Black students look up and see themselves there.


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    35 Min.
  • Readiness
    Apr 8 2026

    “My joy is my responsibility”

    Roosevelt Smith

    Student Manager; Program Director


    “So I like to say, I went to college and I never came out,”

    In this episode, we sit down with Roosevelt Smith, a student manager and program director at York College in Queens, New York, whose career has been built on one core belief: students deserve to be ready for the opportunities waiting for them. From co-founding a mentoring program as a college student to managing wraparound support services, Roosevelt has spent his career closing the gaps that keep Black students from reaching their full potential.


    “A future where students are ready.”

    Roosevelt pulls no punches when assessing the state of Black education, calling for an "acceleration mandate" to address deep readiness gaps in academics, financial literacy, and goal-setting. Through mentorship, personal mission statements, and intentional storytelling, he is equipping students with the tools to seize every opportunity in front of them. He speaks on the intentional practice of scheduling rest, how he cultivates joy, and what he hopes his legacy as an educator will be.


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    39 Min.
  • Education Through Community
    Apr 1 2026

    "I think that's really what education is about, you know, providing opportunity."

    Dr. Jonathan Quash

    Executive Director, Music Educator


    "I just happened to really believe in the power of the arts and how the arts can help transform a person's life. "

    In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Jonathan Quash, University Executive Director for the Black Male Initiative at CUNY, whose roots in Jamaica, Queens shaped a lifelong belief that education is a communal responsibility. From the church pews to the Cub Scouts to the classroom, Dr. Quash was surrounded by Black educators who modeled the "lift as we climb" philosophy, and he has spent his career doing exactly that. As a music educator and administrator, he has faced doubt and resistance at every turn, only to respond by creating his own stages and opportunities for students to shine.


    "I think the challenge right now for us in education and in Black America is finding real leadership and making sure we follow that because that's the hard part."

    Dr. Quash is sounding the alarm on the current state of Black education, where funding is being cut, Black history is being removed from curricula, and culturally focused programs are quietly being rebranded out of existence. But his vision for the future is clear: education must evolve to meet students where they are, equipping them with financial literacy, life skills, and mentorship from day one. For Dr. Quash, Black educators are not just teachers — they are lifelines.


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    38 Min.
  • Authenticity
    Mar 25 2026

    I didn't want to become an assistant, to be honest with you. It's people that just see something in me…

    Keshia Smith

    Assistant Principal


    And so we as educators, it might not necessarily be by a book… but it is where we did what we had to do and we figured it out. And I think that's the beauty of us, is we're going to figure it out.

    In this episode, we sit down with Keshia Smith, an assistant principal from North Carolina whose journey into education was God-given, God-ordered and God-directed. As a preacher's kid, Keshia moved constantly and found herself in a system that was quick to label her before it understood her — diagnosed with ADHD long before anyone recognized she was academically gifted. It wasn't until her third grade teacher said "let's test her" that the full picture emerged. She blew it out. What carried her through wasn't just talent, but an incredible curiosity and a refusal to stop until she figured things out — a quality she brings to her work with students every single day.


    My joy is seeing kids that I've touched succeed, and I have seen many kids.

    Her road to the classroom was winding, but once she arrived, her impact was undeniable. Students who weren't even on her roster would linger in the hallways just to be near her space — and Keshia would pull them right in, email their teachers, and hold them to the same standard as everyone else. Her classroom was a place where kids felt seen, held accountable, and welcomed all at once. As she puts it, "I'm just Keshia" — no pedestals, no performance, just genuine care. That authenticity is ultimately what led her principal to spend four years convincing her to step into administration, and it remains the cornerstone of her legacy today.


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    34 Min.
  • HBCU Walking Billboard
    Mar 18 2026

    “I think that there was a catalyst moment in my life, and so, life took me into education, but if I had been paying attention, I would have known that this is where I was supposed to be all along.”

    Ms. Shanelle Smith

    Principal

    https://www.hbcuwalkingbillboard.org/


    “My new message became y'all can accomplish a whole lot more together than apart.”

    In this powerful episode, we sit down with Principal Shanelle Smith of Lincoln College Preparatory Academy — her very own alma mater — to explore the profound impact Black educators have on their students and communities. Shanelle opens up about her unexpected path into education, from navigating personal loss after her mother's passing to discovering a deep passion for working with underserved youth. She reflects on what she calls the "learning behind the learning" — the cultural wisdom, code-switching skills, and sense of belonging that Black teachers uniquely provide, and why their presence in schools remains as vital as ever.


    “I think that in order to really break down the state of education in Black America, we got to look at it in America as a whole.”

    Shanelle also shares the inspiring story behind her nonprofit, HBCU Walking Billboard, which started with something as simple as wearing an HBCU shirt and grew into a full 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to bringing awareness of historically Black colleges and universities to Kansas City. From scholarships and college tours to annual send-off celebrations, the initiative reflects Shanelle's belief that students deserve to see every door that is open to them. As she puts it, her life's work is about liberation — giving students the tools, the pride, and the pathways to chart their own futures.


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    24 Min.