• OTS L4 - Mentorship as Resistance
    2026/03/04

    Mentorship is not charity. It is not a side role. It is resistance.

    In Lesson 4 of Off The Syllabus, Dev and Ms. Kam unpack how mentorship becomes a transformative force in the lives of young people, especially within systems that were not built with them in mind. This episode explores mentorship as advocacy, protection, identity affirmation, and strategic disruption.

    When institutions fall short, mentors often fill the gap. They provide access, model possibility, challenge limiting narratives, and help young people see themselves beyond the labels placed on them.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • What mentorship as resistance really means

    • The difference between guidance and true advocacy

    • How proximity builds trust and accountability

    • The danger of saviorism in youth work

    • Why representation and lived experience matter

    • How mentors help youth navigate systems without losing themselves

    • The role of community in sustaining young leaders

    Grounded in youth development practice and lived experience, this conversation challenges educators, coaches, community leaders, and professionals to rethink what it means to show up consistently for young people.

    Mentorship is not about being the hero. It is about being present, being accountable, and being willing to disrupt barriers.

    If you work with youth in any capacity, this episode is for you.

    Subscribe for more conversations on youth development, culturally responsive practice, leadership, and liberatory education.

    #MentorshipAsResistance #YouthDevelopment #OffTheSyllabus #EducationalLeadership #CommunityLeadership #LiberatoryEducation #BlackExcellence #LeadershipDevelopment

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    1 時間 20 分
  • OTS L3 - Parents as Power Brokers
    2026/02/25

    What if parents weren’t just participants in education, but power brokers shaping policy, culture, and outcomes for young people?

    In this episode of Off The Syllabus, Dev and Ms. Kam unpack the often overlooked truth that parents, guardians, and caregivers are the most influential advocates in a child’s educational journey. From lived experience to community-based practice, this conversation reframes parenting as a learned skill, a leadership role, and a collective responsibility rooted in love, strategy, and power.

    This lesson explores how parents move mountains for their children, often behind the scenes and without recognition, while navigating systems that were never designed to center their voices.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Why parenting is a learned practice, not an instinct

    • What it really means to say “it takes a village”

    • Parents as policy shapers, advocates, and protectors of potential

    • How schools and organizations can move beyond performative family engagement

    • The importance of co-parenting, communication, and trust

    • How Parent Cafés and community-centered models build real capacity

    • Why Black fathers and male role models matter in youth development spaces

    • How ego, power, and accountability show up in parenting and leadership

    Drawing on community work in Rochester, NY, youth development practice, and frameworks like dual-capacity building introduced by Karen Mapp, this episode challenges educators, organizations, and families to rethink how power flows in education and who gets to shape the experience.

    This conversation is for parents, educators, youth workers, community leaders, and anyone invested in building systems that support the whole child, not just academic outcomes.

    If you’ve ever been the parent advocating in the shadows, the mentor filling in the gaps, or the village member showing up without being asked, this episode is for you.

    Class is in session.

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    1 時間 24 分
  • OTS L2 - Hip-Hop Pedagogy & Healing Spaces
    2026/02/18

    What if hip hop isn’t a distraction from learning, but one of the most powerful educational tools we already have?

    In Lesson 2 of Off The Syllabus, Dev and Kam break down hip hop as pedagogy and explore how culture, identity, and expression create healing-centered learning spaces for young people. This episode challenges the idea that academic success requires young people to silence parts of themselves and instead reframes hip hop as intellectual capital, community practice, and liberation work.

    Grounded in lived experience, youth development practice, and the scholarship of educators like Christopher Emdin, Gloria Ladson-Billings, and Bettina Love, this lesson explores how hip hop shows up in classrooms, community programs, leadership spaces, and everyday interactions.

    In this episode, we unpack:

    • What hip hop pedagogy actually means beyond music

    • How ciphers, language, rhythm, and storytelling foster engagement

    • Why youth culture is often mislabeled as anti-intellectual

    • The connection between identity, joy, and learning

    • How educators and practitioners can build healing spaces without forcing code-switching

    • Why hip hop is a global, cross-cultural force that shapes how we learn

    From spoken word and freestyle to sneakers, slang, and shared experiences, this conversation shows how learning becomes deeper when young people are allowed to be whole.

    Whether you are an educator, youth worker, parent, community leader, or creative, this episode invites you to rethink what learning looks like when culture leads.

    Class is in session.

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    1 時間 30 分
  • OTS L1 - Literacy is Liberation
    2026/02/11

    What if literacy isn’t just about reading and writing, but about power, agency, and self-determination?

    In this first lesson of Off The Syllabus, Dev-ski and Ms.Kam explore the true meaning of literacy through a culturally responsive and historically grounded lens. Drawing from Dr. Gholdy Muhammad’s Cultivating Genius, stories of enslaved Africans who risked their lives to learn, and real-life experiences in youth development, this episode reframes literacy as a pathway to liberation.

    We unpack:

    • The hidden history of Black literacy and underground schools

    • Why literacy has always been tied to freedom and resistance

    • How emotional, political, and digital literacy shape young leaders today

    • The role of educators, parents, and mentors in cultivating agency

    • A powerful youth-led advocacy moment that shows literacy in action

    From Susie King Taylor to modern-day student organizers, this conversation bridges past and present to show how language, knowledge, and critical thinking empower young people to name their world and reimagine it.

    Whether you are an educator, youth worker, parent, caregiver, or community leader, this episode challenges you to think beyond traditional education and build spaces where brilliance is recognized, nurtured, and protected.

    Class is in session.

    #TheLDCommuniversity #LiteracyIsLiberation #BlackEducation #CulturallyResponsiveTeaching #YouthDevelopment #LiberatedDreams #OffTheSyllabus #EducationalEquity #CommunityLeadership

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    1 時間 26 分
  • OTS.5 - Orientation to Black Liberation Studies
    2026/02/04

    Off the Syllabus: The Liberated Dreams Podcast

    Welcome to Off the Syllabus: The Liberated Dreams Podcast, where education goes beyond the classroom and learning is rooted in lived experience. This episode serves as a new student orientation to the podcast... who we are, why this space exists, and what it truly means to be off the syllabus.

    Hosts Dev and Kam break down their journeys in youth development, education, and leadership while unpacking the real work of developing young people inside systems that weren’t built with them in mind. From high expectations and accountability to emotional intelligence, classroom chaos, and hilarious real-life school stories, this episode lays the foundation for the conversations ahead.

    You’ll hear:

    Why Off the Syllabus is more than a title

    How nontraditional education builds future leaders

    The role emotional intelligence plays in youth behavior and adult decision-making

    What working with Gen Z and Gen Alpha actually looks like

    How Dev and Kam balance structure, spontaneity, and growth

    This is education, culture, humor, and truth... without the lesson plan.

    Tap in, drop a comment, and let us know:

    What does off the syllabus mean to you?

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    1 時間 16 分
  • OTS Trailer: Enrollment Open: Black Liberation Studies
    2026/01/07

    Enrollment is open. Class is in session.

    Black Liberation Studies is a reimagined college-level course housed within OTS Liberated Dreams Communiversity, where education is not confined to a syllabus but rooted in truth, culture, and collective freedom. This experience invites educators, parents, leaders, and changemakers into a learning space that treats lived experience as literature and liberation as both theory and practice.

    Hosted by Kamrin, aka Miss Kam, and Dev, this pod course moves beyond traditional pedagogy to challenge systems, elevate youth voice, and center intergenerational wisdom. Each episode functions as a lecture, a dialogue, and a cultural cypher, exploring mental wellness, education reform, leadership development, and community transformation with rigor and care.

    This is learning as elevation.

    This is education as liberation.

    Welcome to Liberated Dreams Communiversity, where your syllabus is always remixed and the future is being shaped in real time.

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    3 分