Kandice Sumner: How America's public schools keep kids in poverty
Kandice Sumner thinks we've been looking at the "achievement gap" in education all wrong. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
that their kid is the most fantastic,
inventive, innovative,
that you'll ever meet.
in my classroom is my kid.
parents aren't rich
are mostly of color,
my mother, an educator.
ambition in our house.
that lacked wealth,
that lacked wealth.
the educational jackpot
black and brown --
an hour-long bus ride
everyone had a life just like mine.
using the brown crayons
the peach-colored ones.
everyone was just like me.
noticing things, like:
don't have to wake up
don't even have a music class?
learning and reading material
this unlawful feeling in my belly,
that I wasn't supposed to be doing;
that I was being exposed to
fully equipped athletic facilities,
theatre departments
fully resourced biology or chemistry labs,
for this amazing opportunity
of other kids just like me,
only exclusive to the rich?
of survivor's remorse.
were experiencing
was being treated and educated.
justify the disparity.
from which I sought refuge.
that were given to me as a student,
access to those same tools
when I've cried in frustration,
the way that I was taught,
to the same resources or tools
our heads again this term:
and these kids don't?
and call it was it really is.
resources that were never invested
and brown child over time.
created specifically for people of color
for another TED Talk.
was built, bought and paid for
from the slave trade and slave labor.
and prohibited from schooling,
the very institution
educational policy, reform,
to retrofit the design,
and acknowledging:
of American educational history.
the whole slavery thing.
of philanthropic white people,
things were indeed separate,
of Topeka, Kansas in 1954;
is now illegal.
to all of the court cases since then,
promised land for every child
are now more segregated
to desegregate them in the first place.
the Little Rock Nine,
the voice of a child ask,
to cultivate in my kids a love of reading.
from secondhand shops,
called DonorsChoose,
and just make a wish list
were sent to my room piece by piece.
and my kids would exclaim with glee,
these books come from?"
wanted you to have these."
for me when one of my girls,
I figured you bought these books,
are always buying us stuff.
someone I don't even know,
will take care of you
signing out books to take home,
with the exclamation,
"Take out a book and read,"
if the resources were there.
done right by the black and brown child.
How did we get here?"
the right to be surprised
is the new "it" term for the moment.
is directly proportionate
can get a high-quality education
on a macro level.
be decided by property taxes
to benefit from state aid,
having food and resources
city council members --
public education public education,
call it what it really is:
that education is the "great equalizer,"
equal and equitable.
in our democratic education.
of the black and brown child
on the philanthropy of others.
or nephew or neighbor
to adopt an impoverished school
in communication
to do something about it.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kandice Sumner - EducatorKandice Sumner thinks we've been looking at the "achievement gap" in education all wrong.
Why you should listen
Kandice A. Sumner, M.Ed. teaches humanities (a combination of history and English) for the Boston Public Schools and is a Doctoral student in Urban Educational Policy. Sumner created and facilitates a professional development curriculum entitled R.A.C.E. (race, achievement, culture and equity) to engage professionals of all ages on how to conduct courageous critical conversations concerning race for the betterment of today’s youth. As the subject of the documentary film Far From Home, Kandice speaks publicly and consults with organizations on facilitating difficult conversations about race and education.
Born and raised in urban Boston, Kandice graduated from a suburban school system through a voluntary desegregation program (METCO). She then matriculated Spelman College (a historically Black liberal arts college) and graduated Phi Beta Kappa. From being one of a few Blacks in her school to learning at a historically Black college to teaching in the underserved and predominately Black and Latino neighborhoods of Boston, Sumner has spent a lifetime traversing the lines of race, class and gender.
Kandice Sumner | Speaker | TED.com