The boost students need to overcome obstacles Anindya Kundu

So, I teach college students
about inequality and race in education,

and I like to leave my office open
to any of my students

who might just want to see me to chat.

And a few semesters ago,

one of my more cheerful
students, Mahari,

actually came to see me

and mentioned that he was feeling
a bit like an outcast because he’s black.

He had just transferred to NYU
from a community college

on a merit scholarship,

and turns out,

only about five percent
of students at NYU are black.

And so I started to remember

that I know that feeling
of being an outsider

in your own community.

It’s partially what drew me to my work.

At my university,

I’m one of the few
faculty members of color,

and growing up, I experienced
my family’s social mobility,

moving out of apartments
into a nice house,

but in an overwhelmingly
white neighborhood.

I was 12,

and kids would say that were surprised
that I didn’t smell like curry.

(Laughter)

That’s because school is in the morning,

and I had Eggo waffles for breakfast.

(Laughter)

Curry is for dinner.

(Laughter)

So when Mahari was leaving,

I asked him how he was coping
with feeling isolated.

And he said that despite feeling lonely,

he just threw himself at his work,

that he built strategies around his grit

and his desire to be successful.

A mentor of mine is actually
Dr. Angela Duckworth,

the psychologist at UPenn who has defined
this stick-to-itiveness of grit

as being “the perseverance
and passion for long-term goals.”

Angela’s book has become a bestseller,

and schools across the country,

particularly charter schools,

have become interested in citing
“grit” as a core value.

But sometimes grit isn’t enough,

especially in education.

So when Mahari was leaving my office,

I worried that he might need
something more specific

to combat the challenges
that he mentioned to me.

As a sociologist,
I also study achievement,

but from a slightly different perspective.

I research students who have overcome
immense obstacles

related to their background.

Students from low-income,

often single-parent households,

students who have been homeless,
incarcerated or perhaps undocumented,

or some who have struggled
with substance abuse

or lived through violent or sexual trauma.

So let me tell you about two
of the grittiest people I’ve met.

Tyrique was raised by a single mother,

and then after high school,
he fell in with the wrong crowd.

He got arrested for armed robbery.

But in prison, he started to work hard.

He took college credit courses,

so when he got out,
he was able to get a master’s,

and today he’s a manager at a nonprofit.

Vanessa had to move around a lot as a kid,

from the Lower East Side
to Staten Island to the Bronx.

She was raised primarily
by her extended family,

because her own mother
had a heroin addiction.

Yet at 15,

Vanessa had to drop out of school,

and she had a son of her own.

But eventually, she was able
to go to community college,

get her associate’s,

then go to an elite college
to finish her bachelor’s.

So some people might
hear these stories and say,

“Yes, those two definitely have grit.

They basically pulled themselves up
by the bootstraps.”

But that’s an incomplete picture,

because what’s more important

is that they had factors in their lives
that helped to influence their agency,

or their specific capacity

to actually overcome
the obstacles that they were facing

and navigate the system
given their circumstances.

So, allow me to elaborate.

In prison, Tyrique
was actually aimless at first,

as a 22-year-old on Rikers Island.

This is until an older detainee
took him aside

and asked him to help
with the youth program.

And in mentoring youth,

he started to see his own mistakes
and possibilities in the teens.

This is what got him interested
in taking college-credit courses.

And when he got out,

he got a job with Fortune Society,

where many executives are people
who have been formerly incarcerated.

So then he was able to get
a master’s in social work,

and today, he even lectures
at Columbia about prison reform.

And Vanessa …

well, after the birth of her son,

she happened to find a program
called Vocational Foundation

that gave her 20 dollars biweekly,

a MetroCard

and her first experiences with a computer.

These simple resources
are what helped her get her GED,

but then she suffered
from a very serious kidney failure,

which was particularly problematic
because she was only born with one kidney.

She spent 10 years on dialysis
waiting for a successful transplant.

After that,

her mentors at community college
had kept in touch with her,

and so she was able to go,

and they put her in an honors program.

And that’s the pathway
that allowed her to become accepted

to one of the most elite colleges
for women in the country,

and she received her bachelor’s at 36,

setting an incredible example
for her young son.

What these stories primarily indicate
is that teaching is social

and benefits from social scaffolding.

There were factors
pushing these two in one direction,

but through tailored
mentorship and opportunities,

they were able to reflect
on their circumstances

and resist negative influences.

They also learned simple skills
like developing a network,

or asking for help –

things many of us in this room can forget
that we have needed from time to time,

or can take for granted.

And when we think of people like this,

we should only think of them
as exceptional, but not as exceptions.

Thinking of them as exceptions absolves us

of the collective responsibility
to help students in similar situations.

When Presidents Bush, Obama
and now even Trump,

have called education
“the civil rights issue of our time,”

perhaps we should treat it that way.

If schools were able to think
about the agency that their students have

and bring to the table
when they push them,

what students learn can become
more relevant to their lives,

and then they can tap into those internal
reservoirs of grit and character.

So this here –

My student Mahari

got accepted to law school
with scholarships,

and not to brag,

but I did write one of his letters
of recommendation.

(Laughter)

And even though I know hard work
is what got him this achievement,

I’ve seen him find
his voice along the way,

which as someone who’s grown up
a little bit shy and awkward,

I know it takes time and support.

So even though
he will rely a lot on his grit

to get him through
that first-year law school grind,

I’ll be there as a mentor for him,

check in with him from time to time,

maybe take him out to get some curry …

(Laughter)

so that he can keep growing his agency
to succeed even more.

Thank you.

(Applause)

所以,我教大学生
关于教育中的不平等和种族问题,

我喜欢让我的办公室
对任何

只想见我聊天的学生开放。

几个学期前

,我的一个比较开朗的
学生,马哈里,

实际上来看我,

并提到他感觉
有点像一个被抛弃的人,因为他是黑人。


刚从一所社区

大学获得优异奖学金转到纽约大学

,结果发现,纽约大学

只有大约 5%
的学生是黑人。

所以我开始记得

,我知道

在自己的社区中成为局外人的感觉。

这部分是吸引我工作的原因。

在我的大学里,

我是少数
有色人种的教员之一

,在成长过程中,我经历
了家人的社会流动,

从公寓
搬进一所漂亮的房子,

但在一个绝大多数
白人社区。

我 12 岁

,孩子们会说
我闻起来不像咖喱,这让我很惊讶。

(笑声)

那是因为早上放学

,我早餐吃了 Eggo 华夫饼。

(笑声)

咖喱是晚餐。

(笑声)

所以当马哈里离开时,

我问他是如何
应对孤立的。

他说,尽管感到孤独,

但他只是全身心地投入到工作中

,他围绕着自己的勇气

和对成功的渴望制定了策略。

我的一位导师实际上是
安吉拉·达克沃斯博士,

他是宾夕法尼亚大学的心理学家,他将
这种坚韧不拔的毅力

定义为“
对长期目标的坚持和热情”。

安吉拉的书已成为畅销书,

全国各地的学校,

尤其是特许学校,

都对将
“毅力”作为核心价值观感兴趣。

但有时毅力是不够的,

尤其是在教育方面。

所以当马哈里离开我的办公室时,

我担心他可能需要
更具体的东西

来应对
他向我提到的挑战。

作为一名社会学家,
我也研究成就,

但角度略有不同。

我研究那些克服

与他们的背景相关的巨大障碍的学生。

来自低收入家庭(

通常是单亲家庭)的

学生、无家可归、
被监禁或可能没有证件的学生,

或一些曾
与药物滥用作斗争

或经历过暴力或性创伤的学生。

所以让我告诉你
我见过的两个最坚韧的人。

Tyrique 是由一个单身母亲抚养长大的

,高中毕业后,
他误入歧途。

他因持械抢劫被捕。

但在监狱里,他开始努力工作。

他参加了大学学分课程,

所以当他毕业后,
他能够获得硕士学位

,如今他是一家非营利组织的经理。

瓦妮莎小时候不得不经常搬家,

从下东区
到史泰登岛再到布朗克斯。

她主要
由她的大家庭抚养长大,

因为她自己的母亲
有海洛因成瘾。

然而,在 15 岁时,

瓦妮莎不得不辍学,

并且有了自己的儿子。

但最终,她能够
去社区大学,

获得她的同事,

然后去一所精英
大学完成她的学士学位。

所以有些人可能
听到这些故事会说:

“是的,那两个肯定有勇气。

他们基本上是靠着自己的力量把自己拉
起来的。”

但这是一幅不完整的图景,

因为更重要

的是他们的生活中有一些因素
有助于影响他们的能动性,

或者他们有具体的能力


克服他们所面临的障碍

并在
他们所处的环境中驾驭系统。

所以,请允许我详细说明。

在监狱里,Tyrique
起初实际上是漫无目的的,当时他还是

Rikers 岛上的 22 岁少年。

直到一名年长的被拘留者
将他拉到一边,

并要求他帮助
开展青年计划。

而在指导青少年的过程中,

他开始在青少年时期看到自己的错误
和可能性。

这就是让他对
参加大学学分课程感兴趣的原因。

当他出狱后,

他在财富协会找到了一份工作,

那里的许多高管都是
以前被监禁的人。

于是,他获得
了社会工作硕士学位

,今天,他甚至
在哥伦比亚大学讲授监狱改革。

还有 Vanessa ……

嗯,在她儿子出生后,

她碰巧找到了一个名为 Vocational Foundation 的计划,该计划

每两周给她 20 美元,

一张 MetroCard

和她第一次使用电脑。

这些简单的
资源帮助她获得了 GED,

但随后她
患上了非常严重的肾衰竭,

这尤其成问题,
因为她出生时只有一个肾脏。

她花了 10 年时间进行透析,
等待成功的移植手术。

在那之后,

她在社区大学的导师
一直与她保持联系

,所以她能够去

,他们把她安排在一个荣誉项目中。


就是让她被该

国最精英女子大学之一录取的途径

,她在 36 岁时获得了学士学位,为她年幼的儿子

树立了一个令人难以置信的榜样

这些故事主要
表明,教学是社会性的,

并且受益于社会脚手架。

有一些因素
将这两者推向一个方向,

但通过量身定制的
指导和机会,

他们能够
反思自己的情况

并抵制负面影响。

他们还学习了一些简单的技能,
例如开发网络

或寻求帮助——

在座的许多人可能会忘记我们不时需要这些东西

或者认为这些东西是理所当然的。

当我们想到这样的人时,

我们应该只将他们
视为例外,而不是例外。

将它们视为例外可以免除我们

帮助处于类似情况的学生的集体责任。

当布什总统、奥巴马总统
甚至现在的特朗普总统

都将教育称为
“我们时代的民权问题”时,

也许我们应该这样对待它。

如果学校能够
考虑学生所拥有的能动性,


在推动学生时将其带到桌面上,

那么学生所学的东西就会变得
与他们的生活更相关,

然后他们就可以利用这些内在
的勇气和性格的水库。

所以这里——

我的学生马哈里(Mahari)

以奖学金被法学院录取

,不是为了吹牛,

但我确实写了他的
一封推荐信。

(笑声

) 尽管我知道努力工作
是他取得这一成就的原因,但

我看到他
一路上找到了自己的声音

,作为
一个有点害羞和尴尬的人,

我知道这需要时间和支持。

所以即使
他会非常依赖他的勇气

来让他度过
法学院一年级的磨难,

我会作为他的导师在那里,

不时与他联系,

也许带他出去拿一些 咖喱……

(笑声)

这样他就可以继续发展他的代理机构
以取得更大的成功。

谢谢你。

(掌声)