How to build your confidence and spark it in others Brittany Packnett

So when I was a little girl,

a book sat on the coffee table
in our living room,

just steps from our front door.

And the living room is a first impression.

Ours had white carpet

and a curio of my mother’s
most treasured collectibles.

That room represented the sacrifices
of generations gone by

who, by poverty or by policy,

couldn’t afford a curio of collectibles

let alone a middle class house
to put them in.

That room had to stay perfect.

But I would risk messing up
that perfect room every day

just to see that book.

On the cover sat a woman
named Septima Clark.

She sat in perfect profile
with her face raised to the sky.

She had perfect salt-and-pepper cornrows

platted down the sides of her head,

and pride and wisdom
just emanated from her dark skin.

Septima Clark was an activist
and an educator,

a woman after whom I’d eventually
model my own career.

But more than all the words
she ever spoke,

that single portrait of Septima Clark,

it defined confidence for me

before I ever even knew the word.

It may sound simple,

but confidence is something
that we underestimate the importance of.

We treat it like a nice-to-have
instead of a must-have.

We place value on knowledge and resources

above what we deem to be
the soft skill of confidence.

But by most measures,
we have more knowledge

and more resources now
than at any other point in history,

and still injustice abounds
and challenges persist.

If knowledge and resources
were all that we needed,

we wouldn’t still be here.

And I believe that confidence
is one of the main things

missing from the equation.

I’m completely obsessed with confidence.

It’s been the most important
journey of my life,

a journey that,
to be honest, I’m still on.

Confidence is the necessary spark
before everything that follows.

Confidence is the difference
between being inspired

and actually getting started,

between trying and doing until it’s done.

Confidence helps us keep going
even when we failed.

The name of the book on that coffee table
was “I Dream A World,”

and today I dream a world
where revolutionary confidence

helps bring about our
most ambitious dreams into reality.

That’s exactly the kind of world
that I wanted to create in my classroom

when I was a teacher,

like a Willy Wonka world
of pure imagination,

but make it scholarly.

All of my students were black or brown.

All of them were growing up
in a low-income circumstance.

Some of them were immigrants,
some of them were disabled,

but all of them were the very last people

this world invites to be confident.

That’s why it was so important
that my classroom be a place

where my students could build
the muscle of confidence,

where they could learn to face each day
with the confidence you need

to redesign the world
in the image of your own dreams.

After all, what are academic skills
without the confidence to use those skills

to go out and change the world.

Now is when I should tell you about
two of my students, Jamal and Regina.

Now, I’ve changed their names,
but their stories remain the same.

Jamal was brilliant, but unfocused.

He would squirm in his chair
during independent work,

and he would never stay still
for more than three or four minutes.

Students like Jamal
can perplex brand new teachers

because they’re not quite sure
how to support young people like him.

I took a direct approach.

I negotiated with Jamal.

If he could give me focused work,

then he could do it
from anywhere in the classroom,

from our classroom rug,
from behind my desk,

from inside his classroom locker,
which turned out to be his favorite place.

Jamal’s least favorite
subject was writing,

and he never wanted to read
what he had written out loud in class,

but we were still making progress.

One day, I decided to host
a mock 2008 presidential election

in my classroom.

My third graders had to research
and write a stump speech

for their chosen candidate:

Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton
or John McCain.

The heavy favorites were obvious,

but one student chose John McCain.

It was Jamal.

Jamal finally decided to read something
that he had written out loud in class,

and sure enough, Jamal stunned
all of us with his brilliance.

Just like Jamal’s dad,
John McCain was a veteran,

and just like Jamal’s dad protected him,

Jamal believed that John McCain
would protect the entire country.

And he wasn’t my candidate of choice,
but it didn’t matter,

because the entire class
erupted into applause,

a standing ovation
for our brave friend Jamal

who finally showed up
as his most confident self

for the first time that year.

And then there was Regina.

Regina was equally
as brilliant, but active.

She’d inevitably finish her work early,

and then she’d get on about the business
of distracting other students.

(Laughter)

Walking, talking,

passing those notes
that teachers hate but kids love.

You look like you passed a lot of them.

(Laughter)

Despite my high ideals for our classroom,

I would too often default
to my baser instincts,

and I would choose
compliance over confidence.

Regina was a glitch in my intended system.

A good teacher can correct misbehavior

but still remain a student’s champion.

But on one day in particular,

I just plain old chose control.

I snapped,

and my approach
didn’t communicate to Regina

that she was being a distraction.

My approach communicated to Regina
that she herself was a distraction.

I watched the light go out from her eyes,

and that light sparked joy
in our classroom.

I had just extinguished it.

The entire class became irritable,

and we didn’t recover
for the rest of the day.

I think about the day often,

and I have literally prayed
that I did not do irreparable harm,

because as a woman who used to be
a little girl just like Regina,

I know that I could have started
the process of killing her confidence

forever.

A lack of confidence
pulls us down from the bottom

and weighs us down from the top,

crushing us between a flurry
of can’ts, won’ts and impossibles.

Without confidence, we get stuck,

and when we get stuck,
we can’t even get started.

Instead of getting mired
in what can get in our way,

confidence invites us
to perform with certainty.

We all operate a little differently
when we’re sure we can win

versus if we just hope we will.

Now, this can be a helpful check.

If you don’t have enough confidence,

it could be because you need
to readjust your goal.

If you have too much confidence,

it could be because
you’re not rooted in something real.

Not everyone lacks confidence.

We make it easier in this society
for some people to gain confidence

because they fit our preferred
archetype of leadership.

We reward confidence in some people

and we punish confidence in others,

and all the while far too many people

are walking around
every single day without it.

For some of us,

confidence is a revolutionary choice,

and it would be our greatest shame

to see our best ideas go unrealized

and our brightest dreams go unreached

all because we lacked
the engine of confidence.

That’s not a risk I’m willing to take.

So how do we crack the code on confidence?

In my estimation,
it takes at least three things:

permission, community and curiosity.

Permission births confidence,

community nurtures it

and curiosity affirms it.

In education, we’ve got a saying,

that you can’t be what you can’t see.

When I was a little girl,
I couldn’t show confidence

until someone showed me.

My family used to do everything together,

including the mundane things,
like buying a new car,

and every time we did this,

I’d watch my parents
put on the exact same performance.

We’d enter the dealership,

and my dad would sit

while my mom shopped.

When my mom found a car that she liked,

they’d go in and meet with the dealer,

and inevitably, every time
the dealer would turn his attention

and his body to my dad,

assuming that he
controlled the purse strings

and therefore this negotiation.

“Rev. Packnett,” they’d say,
“how do we get you into this car today?”

My dad would inevitably
respond the same way.

He’d slowly and silently
gesture toward my mother

and then put his hands
right back in his lap.

It might have been the complete shock

of negotiating finances
with a black woman in the ’80s,

but whatever it was,

I’d watch my mother
work these car dealers over

until they were basically
giving the car away for free.

(Laughter)

She would never crack a smile.

She would never be afraid to walk away.

I know my mom just thought
she was getting a good deal on a minivan,

but what she was actually doing

was giving me permission
to defy expectations

and to show up confidently in my skill
no matter who doubts me.

Confidence needs permission to exist

and community is the safest place
to try confidence on.

I traveled to Kenya this year
to learn about women’s empowerment

among Maasai women.

There I met a group of young women

called Team Lioness,

among Kenya’s first all-female
community ranger groups.

These eight brave young women
were making history

in just their teenage years,

and I asked Purity, the most verbose
young ranger among them,

“Do you ever get scared?”

I swear to you, I want to tattoo
her response all over my entire body.

She said, “Of course I do,

but I call on my sisters.

They remind me that we
will be better than these men

and that we will not fail.”

Purity’s confidence to chase down
lions and catch poachers,

it didn’t come from her athletic ability
or even just her faith.

Her confidence was
propped up by sisterhood,

by community.

What she was basically saying
was that if I am ever in doubt,

I need you to be there

to restore my hope

and to rebuild my certainty.

In community, I can find my confidence

and your curiosity can affirm it.

Early in my career,
I led a large-scale event

that did not go exactly as planned.

I’m lying to you. It was terrible.

And when I debriefed the event
with my manager,

I just knew that she
was going to run down the list

of every mistake I had ever made,

probably from birth.

But instead, she opened with a question:

What was your intention?

I was surprised but relieved.

She knew that I was already
beating myself up,

and that question invited me
to learn from my own mistakes

instead of damage
my already fragile confidence.

Curiosity invites people
to be in charge of their own learning.

That exchange, it helped me
approach my next project

with the expectation of success.

Permission, community, curiosity:

all of these are the things that we
will need to breed the confidence

that we’ll absolutely need
to solve our greatest challenges

and to build the world we dream,

a world where inequity is ended
and where justice is real,

a world where we can be free
on the outside and free on the inside

because we know that none of us are free
until all of us are free.

A world that isn’t
intimidated by confidence

when it shows up as a woman

or in black skin

or in anything other than
our preferred archetypes of leadership.

A world that knows
that that kind of confidence

is exactly the key we need
to unlock the future that we want.

I have enough confidence
to believe that that world

will indeed come to pass,

and that we are the ones to make it so.

Thank you so much.

(Applause)

所以当我还是个小女孩的时候,我们客厅

的咖啡桌上放着一本书

离我们的前门只有几步之遥。

客厅是第一印象。

我们家铺着白色的地毯

,还有我母亲
最珍贵的收藏品的古玩。

那个房间代表
了几代

人的牺牲,他们因为贫困或政策

而买不起收藏品,

更不用说中产阶级的
房子了。

那个房间必须保持完美。

但我会冒着

每天为了看那本书而把那个完美的房间弄乱的风险。

封面上坐着
一位名叫赛普蒂玛·克拉克的女人。

她坐在完美的轮廓
上,脸朝天。

她的头两侧有着完美的椒盐玉米穗

,骄傲和智慧
刚刚从她黝黑的皮肤中散发出来。

塞普蒂玛·克拉克是一位活动家
和教育家

,她是我最终
塑造自己职业生涯的榜样。

但比
她曾经说过的所有话

,塞普蒂玛·克拉克的那幅肖像,

在我认识这个词之前,它就为我定义了自信。

这听起来很简单,


我们低估了信心的重要性。

我们把它当作一个不错的东西
而不是必备品。

我们将知识和资源的价值

置于我们认为
的信心软技能之上。

但从大多数衡量标准来看,
我们现在比历史上任何时候都拥有更多的知识

和更多的资源

但不公正现象仍然比比皆是
,挑战依然存在。

如果
我们只需要知识和资源,

我们就不会还在这里。

我相信信心
是等式中缺少的主要内容之一

我完全沉迷于自信。


是我生命中最重要

的旅程,
说实话,我还在继续。

信心
是接下来发生的一切之前的必要火花。

信心是
受到启发

和真正开始

之间的区别,是尝试和做直到完成之间的区别。

即使我们失败了,信心也会帮助我们继续前进。

那张咖啡桌上的书的名字
是“我梦想一个世界”

,今天我梦想着一个
革命性的信心

有助于将我们
最雄心勃勃的梦想变为现实的世界。


正是我当老师时想在课堂上创造的那种世界

就像一个纯想象的威利旺卡
世界,

但要让它变得学术化。

我所有的学生都是黑色或棕色的。

他们都是
在低收入环境中长大的。

他们中的一些人是移民,
其中一些人是残疾人,

但他们都是

这个世界最不希望有自信的人。

这就是为什么
让我的教室成为

我的学生可以
建立自信肌肉的地方如此重要,

在那里他们可以学会以
你需要的信心面对每一天,你需要

按照自己的梦想重新设计世界。

毕竟,
没有信心利用这些

技能走出去改变世界,什么是学术技能。

现在是我应该告诉你
我的两个学生 Jamal 和 Regina 的时候了。

现在,我改变了他们的名字,
但他们的故事保持不变。

贾马尔才华横溢,但注意力不集中。 独立工作时,

他会在椅子上蠕动,

而且他的静止时间永远不会
超过三四分钟。

像贾马尔这样的学生会让
新老师感到困惑,

因为他们不太清楚
如何支持像他这样的年轻人。

我采取了直接的方法。

我与贾马尔谈判。

如果他能给我专注的工作,

那么他可以
在教室的任何地方,

在我们的教室地毯上,
从我的桌子后面,

从他的教室储物柜里做
,结果证明这是他最喜欢的地方。

贾马尔最不喜欢的
科目是写作

,他从不想读
他在课堂上大声写出来的东西,

但我们仍在进步。

有一天,我决定在我的教室里举办
一场模拟 2008 年总统选举

我的三年级学生必须

为他们选择的候选人:

巴拉克·奥巴马、希拉里·克林顿
或约翰·麦凯恩研究并写一篇竞选演讲。

最受欢迎的人是显而易见的,

但一名学生选择了约翰麦凯恩。

是贾马尔。

贾马尔终于决定读一读
他在课堂上大声写出来的东西

,果然,贾马尔
用他的才华震惊了我们所有人。

就像贾马尔的父亲一样,
约翰麦凯恩是一名退伍军人

,就像贾马尔的父亲保护他一样,

贾马尔相信约翰麦凯恩
会保护整个国家。

他不是我选择的候选人,
但这没关系,

因为全班都
爆发出掌声,

为我们勇敢的朋友贾马尔起立鼓掌,

他终于

在那一年第一次以最自信的自己出现。

然后是里贾纳。

里贾纳
同样出色,但也很活跃。

她不可避免地会提前完成她的工作,

然后她会
继续忙于分散其他学生的注意力。

(笑声)

走路,说话,

传递
那些老师讨厌但孩子们喜欢的笔记。

你看起来好像通过了很多。

(笑声)

尽管我对我们的课堂抱有很高的理想,但

我经常会
默认我的基本本能

,我会选择
顺从而不是自信。

Regina 是我预期系统中的一个小故障。

一个好老师可以纠正错误的行为,

但仍然是学生的冠军。

但特别是有一天,

我只是平原老选择了控制。

我厉声喝道,但

我的做法
并没有让 Regina

知道她是在分散注意力。

我的方法告诉里贾纳
,她自己是个分心的人。

我看着她眼中的光芒熄灭了

,那光芒
在我们的教室里激起了欢乐。

我刚刚熄灭了它。

全班都变得烦躁

,我们
一整天都没有恢复。

我经常想起这一天

,我真的
祈祷我没有造成无法弥补的伤害,

因为作为一个
像雷吉娜一样曾经是小女孩的女人,

我知道我本可以开始永远
摧毁她的信心的过程

缺乏信心
会把我们从底部拉下来,

从顶部压下来,把

我们压在
一堆不能做的事情、不会做的事情和不可能的事情之间。

没有信心,我们就会陷入困境

,当我们陷入困境时,
我们甚至无法开始。 信心

不会让我们陷入困境,而是会

邀请我们
确定地执行。

当我们确信我们能赢

与我们只是希望我们能赢时,我们的运作方式都会有所不同。

现在,这可能是一个有用的检查。

如果你没有足够的信心,

那可能是因为你需要
重新调整你的目标。

如果你有太多的自信,

那可能是因为
你没有扎根于真实的事物。

不是每个人都缺乏信心。

我们让一些人在这个社会中更
容易获得信心,

因为他们符合我们首选
的领导原型。

我们奖励对某些人的信心

,我们惩罚对其他人的信心,而一直以来,有

太多的人

每天都在没有信心的情况下四处走动。

对于我们中的一些人来说,

信心是一种革命性的选择,

如果

我们最好的想法没有实现

,我们最光明的梦想也

因为
缺乏信心的引擎而没有实现,那将是我们最大的耻辱。

这不是我愿意承担的风险。

那么我们如何破解信心的密码呢?

据我估计,
这至少需要三件事:

许可、社区和好奇心。

许可产生信心,

社区培养它

,好奇心肯定它。

在教育中,我们有一句话

,你不能成为你看不到的东西。

当我还是个小女孩的时候,在有人向我
展示之前,我无法表现出自信

我的家人过去常常一起做任何事情,

包括平凡的事情,
比如买一辆新车

,每次我们这样做时,

我都会看着我的父母
做出完全相同的表演。

我们会进入经销

店,我爸爸会

坐在我妈妈购物的时候。

当我妈妈找到一辆她喜欢的车时,

他们会进去和经销商见面,

而且不可避免地,
每次经销商都会把注意力

和身体转向我爸爸,

假设他
控制着钱包

,因此这次谈判 .

“帕克尼特牧师,”他们会说,
“今天我们怎么让你上这辆车?”

我父亲不可避免地
会以同样的方式回应。

他会慢慢地、默默地
朝我妈妈做个手势

,然后
把手放回腿上。

这可能

是 80 年代与一位黑人女性谈判财务时的彻底震惊,

但不管是什么,

我都会看着我母亲为
这些汽车经销商工作,

直到他们基本上
免费赠送汽车。

(笑声)

她永远不会笑出声来。

她永远不会害怕走开。

我知道我妈妈只是认为
她在小型货车上得到了一笔好交易,

但她实际上正在做的

是允许我
无视期望

并自信地展示我的技能,
无论谁怀疑我。

信心需要获得许可才能存在,

而社区是尝试信心的最安全的地方

今年我前往肯尼亚
,了解马赛妇女赋予妇女权力

的情况。

在那里,我遇到了一群名叫狮队的年轻女性,她们

是肯尼亚第一批全女性
社区护林员团体。

这八位勇敢的年轻女性

在她们十几岁的时候就创造了历史

,我问她们中最啰嗦的
年轻游侠普瑞蒂,

“你害怕吗?”

我向你发誓,我想把
她的反应纹在我的整个身体上。

她说:“我当然知道,

但我会拜访我的姐妹们。

她们提醒我,我们
会比这些人更好

,我们不会失败。”

Purity追捕
狮子和抓捕偷猎者的信心

,不是来自她的运动能力
,甚至不是她的信仰。

她的信心得到
了姐妹情谊

和社区的支持。

她基本上
是在说,如果我有任何疑问,

我需要你在

那里恢复我的希望

并重建我的确定性。

在社区中,我可以找到我的信心,

而您的好奇心可以肯定它。

在我职业生涯的早期,
我领导了一场

没有完全按计划进行的大型活动。

我在骗你。 太可怕了。

当我向
我的经理汇报这件事时,

我只知道
她会列出

我曾经犯过的每一个错误,

可能从出生开始。

但相反,她以一个问题开头:

你的意图是什么?

我很惊讶,但也松了一口气。

她知道我已经
在自责了

,这个问题邀请我
从自己的错误中吸取教训,

而不是损害
我已经脆弱的信心。

好奇心邀请
人们负责自己的学习。

那次交流,它帮助我带着成功的期望来
接近我的下一个项目

许可、社区、好奇心:

所有这些都是我们
需要培养信心的东西

,我们绝对
需要解决我们最大的挑战

并建立我们梦想

的世界,一个终结不平等
、实现正义的世界 ,

一个我们可以
在外部自由和内部自由的世界,

因为我们知道在我们所有人都自由
之前,我们都没有自由。

当它以女性

或黑皮肤


我们喜欢的领导原型以外的任何东西出现时,它不会被自信吓倒。

一个
知道这种信心的世界

正是我们
开启我们想要的未来所需的关键。

我有足够的
信心相信那个世界

确实会实现,

而我们是做到这一点的人。

太感谢了。

(掌声)