u003ch2u003eEpisode Notes:u003c/h2u003e u003cpu003eu003cspan style=u0022font-weight: bold;u0022u003eDr. Bettina Loveu003c/spanu003e is an educator who teaches, writes, researches, and advocates at the intersection of racism, education, and abolition. She is the author of the book u003cemu003eWe Want To Do More Than Survive: Abolitionist Teaching and the Pursuit of Educational Freedomu003c/emu003e.u0026nbsp;u003cbru003eu003cbru003eDr. Love joins the show to discuss what abolitionist teaching means to her and the work of the u003ca href=u0022https://abolitionistteachingnetwork.org/u0022 rel=u0022noopeneru0022u003eAbolitionist Teaching Networku003c/au003e, whose mission is u0022to develop and support those in the struggle for educational liberation by utilizing the intellectual work and direct action of Abolitionists in many forms.u0022 She also shares what inspired her to write her new book “u003cspan style=u0022font-style: italic;u0022u003ePunished for Dreaming.u003c/spanu003e”u003cbru003eu003cbru003eDr. Love and host Shayna Terrell discuss the education reform movement and what it will take to truly achieve educational equity. They also consider what education reparations could look like and how we can advocate for them.u0026nbsp;u003cbru003eu003cbru003eFinally, she shares how hip-hop can be implemented into education and how schools can be more inclusive of diverse populations.u0026nbsp;u003c/pu003e