Anindya Kundu: The boost students need to overcome obstacles
TED Resident Anindya Kundu is reframing our notions of achievement and ability through his sociological research, which suggests all students can succeed if provided the right support systems. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
about inequality and race in education,
to any of my students
students, Mahari,
a bit like an outcast because he's black.
from a community college
of students at NYU are black.
of being an outsider
faculty members of color,
my family's social mobility,
into a nice house,
white neighborhood.
that I didn't smell like curry.
with feeling isolated.
Dr. Angela Duckworth,
this stick-to-itiveness of grit
and passion for long-term goals."
"grit" as a core value.
something more specific
that he mentioned to me.
I also study achievement,
immense obstacles
incarcerated or perhaps undocumented,
with substance abuse
of the grittiest people I've met.
he fell in with the wrong crowd.
he was able to get a master's,
to Staten Island to the Bronx.
by her extended family,
had a heroin addiction.
to go to community college,
to finish her bachelor's.
hear these stories and say,
by the bootstraps."
that helped to influence their agency,
the obstacles that they were facing
given their circumstances.
was actually aimless at first,
took him aside
with the youth program.
and possibilities in the teens.
in taking college-credit courses.
who have been formerly incarcerated.
a master's in social work,
at Columbia about prison reform.
called Vocational Foundation
are what helped her get her GED,
from a very serious kidney failure,
because she was only born with one kidney.
waiting for a successful transplant.
had kept in touch with her,
that allowed her to become accepted
for women in the country,
for her young son.
is that teaching is social
pushing these two in one direction,
mentorship and opportunities,
on their circumstances
like developing a network,
that we have needed from time to time,
as exceptional, but not as exceptions.
to help students in similar situations.
and now even Trump,
"the civil rights issue of our time,"
about the agency that their students have
when they push them,
more relevant to their lives,
reservoirs of grit and character.
with scholarships,
of recommendation.
is what got him this achievement,
his voice along the way,
a little bit shy and awkward,
he will rely a lot on his grit
that first-year law school grind,
to succeed even more.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Anindya Kundu - Sociologist, educator, writerTED Resident Anindya Kundu is reframing our notions of achievement and ability through his sociological research, which suggests all students can succeed if provided the right support systems.
Why you should listen
Anindya Kundu studies the potential of human agency to help people create positive change in their lives. His research involves learning how students can navigate around personal, social and institutional challenges to succeed. Kundu's book Achieving Agency is forthcoming.
At NYU, Kundu has taught the course, "American Dilemmas: Race, Inequality, and the Unfulfilled Promise of Public Education," originally designed by achievement gap scholar, Dr. Pedro Noguera. Kundu was the 2017 recipient of the NYU "Outstanding Doctoral Student Teaching Award." He also teaches high school students storytelling through The Moth in New York City.
Kundu frequently contributes to public discourse on education. His work has appeared in NPR Education, MSNBC and Huffington Post. Kundu says, "There is intellectual talent going uncultivated and unnoticed in our communities. If we remember education is our greatest public responsibility, we can better tackle the social problems that lie ahead, together."
Anindya Kundu | Speaker | TED.com