Anindya Kundu: The "opportunity gap" in US public education -- and how to close it
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.
was as an academic researcher
detention centers in the country.
to this building
as I made my way down to the basement
were about 10 to 16 years old,
South and West Sides of Chicago.
in fifth to tenth grade,
for weeks on end
14 times before their 15th birthday.
of the glass from them,
to prevent this from happening?
get tracked towards college
abilities to solve these things.
of this problem is systemic
perpetuates the social divide.
isn't preventative
off of keeping us sick ...
that kids can achieve great things
more kids from across the board
that our gaps in student outcomes
as much as they are about opportunity.
receive about 23 billion dollars more
about the same number of students.
with lower quality equipment,
most likely to serve
in a homeless shelter tonight.
are dealing with a lot.
the blame back on them.
felt desperate enough
cheat on standardized tests
to jail for that in 2015
give for second-degree murder.
to go to food pantries
who will use a relative's address
authorities have turned a blind eye
college campuses.
pretty heavy to be saying --
economics talk to lighten the mood --
into our students' potential.
student achievement gaps
of different ethnic backgrounds
by more than 500 billion dollars.
and those across the world,
of economic output.
that this matters,
ourselves on having --
should not be predetermined
create a wider bottom and more narrow top.
aren't that close to home,
say we're going to get to next week,
to solutions like privatization
to solve our problems,
at public education,
some of our social problems.
the promise of public education
our greatest collective responsibility?
are doing just that.
in the spring of 2019 in Denver and LA --
because of community support
like more counselors
to implement common sense.
and lunch program,
of poverty and hunger
in attendance for many others.
local, passionate high school students
to go teach in the inner city
these partnerships being built
community colleges and local businesses
in finance, health care and technology
"silver spoon" connections
that they come from.
the same questions about education
perhaps naïve college grad
save more of our students?
we have the answer to that --
if we save our schools first.
of other people's children ...
as someone who doesn't have kids yet
about the future when I do.
as we can from all over
into teaching --
our most valuable resource,
diamond and gold miners,
that they will need
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