WEBVTT 00:00:00.825 --> 00:00:04.672 My first job out of college was as an academic researcher 00:00:04.672 --> 00:00:08.440 at one of the largest juvenile detention centers in the country. 00:00:09.024 --> 00:00:10.513 And every day I would drive to this building 00:00:10.513 --> 00:00:12.178 on the West Side of Chicago, 00:00:12.178 --> 00:00:14.427 go through the security checkpoint 00:00:14.427 --> 00:00:19.419 and walk down these brown, brick hallways as I made my way down to the basement 00:00:19.419 --> 00:00:21.352 to observe the intake process. 00:00:21.947 --> 00:00:25.289 The kids coming in were about 10 to 16 years old, 00:00:25.289 --> 00:00:27.430 usually always black and brown, 00:00:27.430 --> 00:00:31.193 most likely from the same impoverished South and West Sides of Chicago. 00:00:31.761 --> 00:00:34.942 They should've been in fifth to 10th grade, 00:00:34.942 --> 00:00:37.374 but instead they were here for weeks on end 00:00:37.374 --> 00:00:39.508 waiting trial for various crimes. 00:00:40.146 --> 00:00:44.602 Some of them came back to the facility 14 times before their 15th birthday. 00:00:45.668 --> 00:00:48.789 And as I sat there on the other side of the glass from them, 00:00:48.789 --> 00:00:51.291 idealistic with a college degree, 00:00:51.291 --> 00:00:52.796 I wondered to myself, 00:00:52.796 --> 00:00:56.998 why didn't schools do something more to prevent this from happening? 00:00:58.324 --> 00:00:59.817 It's been about 10 years since then; 00:00:59.817 --> 00:01:03.278 I still think about how some kids get tracked towards college 00:01:03.278 --> 00:01:05.971 and others towards detention, 00:01:05.971 --> 00:01:09.844 but I no longer think about schools' abilities to solve these things. 00:01:10.429 --> 00:01:13.981 You see, I've learned that so much of this problem is systemic 00:01:13.981 --> 00:01:18.522 that often our school system perpetuates the social divide. 00:01:19.075 --> 00:01:21.773 It makes worse what it's supposed to fix. 00:01:22.362 --> 00:01:24.029 That's as a crazy or controversial 00:01:24.029 --> 00:01:26.638 as saying that our health care system isn't preventative 00:01:26.638 --> 00:01:29.763 but somehow profits off of keeping us sick ... 00:01:29.763 --> 00:01:30.612 oops. 00:01:30.612 --> 00:01:31.891 (Laughter) 00:01:32.159 --> 00:01:34.857 I truly do believe though that kids can achieve great things 00:01:34.857 --> 00:01:36.309 despite the odds against them, 00:01:36.309 --> 00:01:38.887 and in fact, my own research shows that. 00:01:39.487 --> 00:01:43.399 But if we're serious about helping more kids from across the board 00:01:43.399 --> 00:01:46.362 to achieve and make it in this world, 00:01:46.362 --> 00:01:49.558 we're going to have to realize that out gaps in student outcomes 00:01:49.558 --> 00:01:53.965 are not so much about achievement as much as they are about opportunity. 00:01:55.054 --> 00:01:57.587 A 2019 EdBuild report showed 00:01:57.587 --> 00:02:02.187 that majority-white districts received about 23 billion dollars more 00:02:02.187 --> 00:02:04.322 in annual funding than non-white districts, 00:02:04.706 --> 00:02:06.773 even though they serve about the same number of students. 00:02:07.807 --> 00:02:10.780 Lower resource schools are dealing with lower quality equipment, 00:02:10.780 --> 00:02:12.363 obsolete technology 00:02:12.363 --> 00:02:13.612 and paying teachers way less. 00:02:14.260 --> 00:02:15.819 Here in New York, 00:02:15.819 --> 00:02:17.892 those are also the schools most likely to serve 00:02:17.892 --> 00:02:20.141 the one in 10 elementary school students 00:02:20.141 --> 00:02:23.711 who will most likely have to sleep in a homeless shelter tonight. 00:02:24.866 --> 00:02:27.577 The student, parent and teacher are dealing with a lot. 00:02:28.706 --> 00:02:32.141 Sometimes places are misplacing the blame back on them. 00:02:32.850 --> 00:02:36.195 In Atlanta, we saw that teachers felt desperate enough 00:02:36.195 --> 00:02:39.663 to have to help their students cheat on standardized tests 00:02:39.663 --> 00:02:41.083 that would impact their funding. 00:02:41.630 --> 00:02:44.380 Eight of them went to jail for that in 2015 00:02:44.380 --> 00:02:48.000 with some sentences as high as 20 years, 00:02:48.000 --> 00:02:51.186 which is more than what many states give for second-degree murder. 00:02:52.582 --> 00:02:53.618 The thing is though, 00:02:53.618 --> 00:02:55.275 in places like Tulsa, 00:02:55.275 --> 00:02:57.233 teachers pay has been so bad 00:02:57.233 --> 00:02:59.183 that these people have had to go to food pantries 00:02:59.183 --> 00:03:01.687 or soup kitchens just to feed themselves. 00:03:02.596 --> 00:03:07.485 The same system will criminalize a parent who will use a relative's address 00:03:07.485 --> 00:03:10.428 to send their child to a better school, 00:03:10.428 --> 00:03:13.210 but for who knows how long authorities have turned a blind eye 00:03:13.210 --> 00:03:15.290 to those who can bribe their way 00:03:15.290 --> 00:03:18.634 onto the most elite and beautiful college campueses. 00:03:20.085 --> 00:03:22.762 And a lot of this feels pretty heavy to be saying -- 00:03:22.762 --> 00:03:24.483 and maybe to be hearing -- 00:03:24.483 --> 00:03:28.615 and since there's nothing quite like economics talk to lighten the mood -- 00:03:28.615 --> 00:03:31.177 that's right, right? 00:03:31.177 --> 00:03:33.541 Let me tell you about some of the costs 00:03:33.541 --> 00:03:35.239 when we fail to tap into our students' potential. 00:03:36.020 --> 00:03:38.990 A McKinsey study showed that if in 1998 00:03:38.990 --> 00:03:42.174 we could've closed our long-standing student achievement gaps 00:03:42.174 --> 00:03:44.313 between students of different ethnic backgrounds 00:03:44.313 --> 00:03:47.012 or students of different income levels, 00:03:47.012 --> 00:03:49.779 by 2008, our GDP -- 00:03:49.779 --> 00:03:51.596 our untapped economic gains -- 00:03:51.596 --> 00:03:54.449 could have gone up by more than 500 billion dollars. 00:03:55.177 --> 00:03:57.612 Those same gaps in 2008, 00:03:57.612 --> 00:04:01.694 between our students here in the US and those across the world, 00:04:01.694 --> 00:04:03.456 may have deprived our economy 00:04:03.456 --> 00:04:08.236 of up to 2.3 trillion dollars of economic output. 00:04:09.653 --> 00:04:12.262 But beyond economics, numbers and figures, 00:04:12.262 --> 00:04:14.929 I think there's a simpler reason that this matters; 00:04:14.929 --> 00:04:17.637 a simpler reason for fixing our system 00:04:17.637 --> 00:04:19.880 is that in a true democracy, 00:04:19.880 --> 00:04:22.429 like the one we pride ourselves on having, 00:04:22.429 --> 00:04:24.431 and sometimes rightfully so, 00:04:24.431 --> 00:04:26.605 a child's future should not be predetermined 00:04:26.605 --> 00:04:28.678 by the circumstances of their birth. 00:04:29.098 --> 00:04:34.480 A public education system should not create a wider bottom and more narrow top. 00:04:35.242 --> 00:04:36.657 Some of us can sometimes think 00:04:36.657 --> 00:04:39.384 that these things aren't that close to home, 00:04:39.384 --> 00:04:41.554 but they are if we broaden our view, 00:04:41.554 --> 00:04:44.346 because a leaky faucet in our kitchen, 00:04:44.346 --> 00:04:46.834 broken radiator in our hallway, 00:04:46.834 --> 00:04:50.593 those parts of the house that we always say we're going to get to next week, 00:04:50.593 --> 00:04:52.425 they're devaluing our whole property. 00:04:53.507 --> 00:04:58.259 Instead of constantly looking away to solutions like privitization 00:04:58.259 --> 00:05:01.131 or the charter school movement to solve our problems, 00:05:01.131 --> 00:05:03.978 why don't we take a deeper look at public education, 00:05:03.978 --> 00:05:05.683 try to take more pride in it 00:05:05.683 --> 00:05:09.505 and maybe use it to solve some of our social problems. 00:05:10.373 --> 00:05:14.681 Why don't we try to reclaim the promise of public education 00:05:14.681 --> 00:05:17.980 and remember that it's our greatest collective responsibility? 00:05:19.225 --> 00:05:21.859 Luckily some of our communities are doing just that. 00:05:22.760 --> 00:05:27.642 The huge teacher strikes in the spring of 2019 in Denver and LA -- 00:05:27.642 --> 00:05:30.580 they were successful because of community support 00:05:30.580 --> 00:05:32.824 for things like smaller class sizes 00:05:32.824 --> 00:05:35.892 and getting things into schools like more counselors 00:05:35.892 --> 00:05:37.328 in addition to teacher pay. 00:05:38.029 --> 00:05:39.927 And sometimes for the student, 00:05:39.927 --> 00:05:43.251 innovation is just daring to implement common sense. 00:05:44.196 --> 00:05:45.465 In Baltimore a few years ago, 00:05:45.465 --> 00:05:48.293 they enacted a free breakfast and lunch program, 00:05:48.293 --> 00:05:50.604 taking away the stigma of poverty and hunger 00:05:50.604 --> 00:05:52.023 for some students 00:05:52.023 --> 00:05:55.471 but increasing achievement in attendance for many others. 00:05:56.309 --> 00:05:57.222 And in Memphis, 00:05:57.222 --> 00:06:00.941 the university is recruiting local, passionate high school students 00:06:00.941 --> 00:06:04.117 and giving them scholarships to go teach in the inner city 00:06:04.117 --> 00:06:06.544 without the burden of college debt. 00:06:07.216 --> 00:06:08.517 And north of here in the Bronx, 00:06:08.517 --> 00:06:10.823 I recently researched these partnerships being built 00:06:10.823 --> 00:06:14.534 between high schools, community colleges and local businesses 00:06:14.534 --> 00:06:18.837 who are creating internships in finance, health care and technology 00:06:18.837 --> 00:06:21.999 for students without "silver spoon" connections 00:06:22.055 --> 00:06:23.719 to gain important skills 00:06:23.719 --> 00:06:26.014 and contribute to the communities that they come from. 00:06:27.770 --> 00:06:31.716 So today I don't necessarily have the same questions about education 00:06:31.716 --> 00:06:36.127 that I did when I was an idealistic, perhaps naïve college grad 00:06:36.127 --> 00:06:38.067 working in a detention center basement. 00:06:38.677 --> 00:06:42.432 It's not, can schools save more of our students, 00:06:42.432 --> 00:06:44.191 because I think we have the answer to that, 00:06:44.191 --> 00:06:46.192 and it's yes they can if we save our schools first. 00:06:46.192 --> 00:06:53.250 We can start by caring about the education of other people's children ... 00:06:53.250 --> 00:06:56.485 and I'm saying that as someone who doesn't have kids yet, 00:06:56.485 --> 00:06:59.800 but wants to worry a little bit less about the future for when I do. 00:07:01.284 --> 00:07:03.749 Cultivating as much talent as possible, 00:07:03.749 --> 00:07:06.634 getting as many girls as we can from all over 00:07:06.634 --> 00:07:08.684 into science and engineering, 00:07:08.684 --> 00:07:12.514 and as many boys as we can into teaching -- 00:07:12.514 --> 00:07:14.737 those are investments for our future. 00:07:15.669 --> 00:07:19.020 Our students are like our most valuable resource, 00:07:19.020 --> 00:07:20.863 and when you put it that way, 00:07:20.863 --> 00:07:24.440 our teachers are like our modern-day diamond and gold miners, 00:07:24.440 --> 00:07:25.898 hoping to help make them shine. 00:07:26.611 --> 00:07:28.661 Let's contribute our voices, 00:07:28.661 --> 00:07:30.997 our votes and our support 00:07:30.997 --> 00:07:33.490 to giving them the resources that they will need 00:07:33.725 --> 00:07:35.972 not just to survive, 00:07:35.972 --> 00:07:37.467 but hopefully thrive, 00:07:37.467 --> 00:07:39.639 allowing all of us to do so as well. 00:07:40.209 --> 00:07:41.149 Thank you. 00:07:41.338 --> 00:07:44.856 (Applause and cheers)