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Home » How America’s Public Schools Keep Kids In Poverty: Kandice Sumner (Transcript)

How America’s Public Schools Keep Kids In Poverty: Kandice Sumner (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Kandice Sumner’s talk titled “How America’s Public Schools Keep Kids In Poverty” at TED conference.

In this TED talk, Kandice Sumner highlights the deep disparities in the American public education system, particularly affecting children of color from impoverished neighborhoods. She shares her personal journey, having benefited from a desegregation program that exposed her to resources and opportunities unavailable in her community’s underfunded schools.

Sumner observes that while her own education was enriched, her peers without such opportunities suffered from a lack of access to quality educational tools and facilities. She discusses the systemic issues in public education, linking them to historical inequalities and arguing that current discrepancies in school resources perpetuate poverty among minority children.

Sumner criticizes the reliance on property taxes for school funding, which favors wealthy areas and leaves poorer districts under-resourced. She urges a collective effort to reform public education, emphasizing the need for equitable distribution of resources and community involvement. Finally, Sumner calls for a shift in perspective to view quality education as a right for all children, not a privilege for a few.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

I want to talk to you about my kids. Now, I know everyone thinks that their kid is the most fantastic, the most beautiful kid that ever lived, but mine really are. I have 696 kids, and they are the most intelligent, inventive, innovative, brilliant, and powerful kids that you’ll ever meet. Any student I’d have the honor of teaching in my classroom is my kid.

However, because their real parents aren’t rich, and I argue because they are mostly of color, they will seldom get to see in themselves the awesomeness that I see in them, because what I see in them is myself. Or what would have been myself.

Early Life and Education

I am the daughter of two hard-working, college-educated African-American parents who chose careers as public servants. My father, a minister. My mother, an educator. Wealth was never the primary ambition in our house. Because of this lack of wealth, we lived in a neighborhood that lacked wealth, and henceforth, a school system that lacked wealth.

Luckily, however, we struck the educational jackpot in a voluntary desegregation program that bused inner-city kids, black and brown, out to suburban schools, rich and white. At five years old, I had to take an hour-long bus ride to a faraway place to get a better education.

At five years old, I thought everyone had a life just like mine. I thought everyone went to school and were the only ones using the brown crayons to color in their family portraits, while everyone else was using the peach-colored ones. At five years old, I thought everyone was just like me.

Realizations and Inequalities

But as I got older, I started noticing things, like how come my neighborhood friends don’t have to wake up at five o’clock in the morning and go to a school that’s an hour away? How come I’m learning to play the violin while my neighborhood friends don’t even have a music class? Why were my neighborhood friends learning and reading material that I had done two to three years prior?

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You see, as I got older, I started to have this unlawful feeling in my belly, like I was doing something that I wasn’t supposed to be doing, taking something that wasn’t mine, receiving a gift, but with someone else’s name on it.

All these amazing things that I was being exposed to and experiencing, I felt I wasn’t really supposed to have. I wasn’t supposed to have a library, fully-equipped athletic facilities, or safe fields to play in. I wasn’t supposed to have theater departments with seasonal plays and concerts, digital, visual, performing arts. I wasn’t supposed to have fully-resourced biology or chemistry labs, school buses that brought me door to door, freshly prepared school lunches, or even air conditioning.

These are things my kids don’t get. You see, as I got older, while I was grateful for this amazing opportunity that I was being given, there was this ever-present pang of, “But what about everyone else?” There are thousands of other kids just like me who deserve this too. Why doesn’t everyone get this?

Educational Disparities

Why is a high-quality education only exclusive to the rich? It was like I had some sort of survivor’s remorse. All of my neighborhood friends were experiencing an educational train wreck that I was saved from through a bus ride. I was like an educational Moses screaming, “Let my people go to high-quality schools!”

I’d seen firsthand how the other half was being treated and educated. I’d seen the educational promised land, and I could not for the life of me justify the disparity. I now teach in the very same school system from which I sought refuge. I know firsthand the tools that were given to me as a student, and now as a teacher, I don’t have access to those same tools to give to my students.

There have been countless nights when I’ve cried in frustration, anger, and sorrow because I can’t teach my kids the way that I was taught, because I don’t have access to the same resources or tools that were used to teach me. My kids deserve so much better. We sit and we keep banging our heads against this term, achievement gap, achievement gap. Isn’t it really that hard to understand why these kids perform well and these kids don’t?

Rethinking the Paradigm

I mean, really. I think we’ve got it all wrong. I think we, as Gloria Ladson-Billings says, should flip our paradigm and our language and call it what it really is. It’s not an achievement gap. It’s an education debt for all of the foregone schooling resources that were never invested in the education of the black and brown child over time.

A little-known secret in American history is that the only American institution created specifically for people of color is the American slave trade.