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Why open a school? To close a prison

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    When I opened Mott Hall
    Bridges Academy in 2010,
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    my goal was simple:
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    open a school to close a prison.
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    Now to some, this was an audacious goal,
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    because our school is located
    in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn --
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    one of the most underserved
    and violent neighborhoods
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    in all of New York City.
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    Like many urban schools
    with high poverty rates,
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    we face numerous challenges,
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    like finding teachers who can empathize
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    with the complexities
    of a disadvantaged community,
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    lack of funding for technology,
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    low parental involvement
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    and neighborhood gangs that recruit
    children as early as fourth grade.
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    So here I was,
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    the founding principal of a middle school
    that was a district public school,
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    and I only had 45 kids to start.
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    Thirty percent of them had special needs.
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    Eighty-six percent of them
    were below grade level
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    in English and in Math.
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    And 100 percent were living
    below the poverty level.
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    If our children are not in our classrooms,
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    how will they learn?
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    And if they're not learning,
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    where would they end up?
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    It was evident when I would
    ask my 13-year-old,
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    "Young man,
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    where do you see yourself in five years?"
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    And his response:
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    "I don't know if I'm gonna
    live that long."
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    Or to have a young woman say to me
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    that she had a lifelong goal
    of working in a fast-food restaurant.
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    To me, this was unacceptable.
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    It was also evident that they had no idea
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    that there was a landscape of opportunity
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    that existed beyond their neighborhood.
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    We call our students "scholars,"
    because they're lifelong learners.
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    And the skills that they learn today
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    will prepare them for college
    and career readiness.
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    I chose the royal colors
    of purple and black,
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    because I want them to be reminded
    that they are descendants of greatness,
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    and that through education,
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    they are future engineers,
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    scientists,
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    entrepreneurs
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    and even leaders who can and will
    take over this world.
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    To date,
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    we have had three graduating classes,
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    at a 98 --
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    (Applause)
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    At a 98 percent graduation rate.
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    This is nearly 200 children,
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    who are now going to some of the most
    competitive high schools
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    in New York City.
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    (Applause)
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    It was a cold day in January
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    when my scholar, Vidal Chastanet,
    met Brandon Stanton,
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    the founder of the popular blog
    "Humans of New York."
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    Brandon shared the story
    of a young man from Brownsville
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    who had witnessed violence firsthand,
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    by witnessing a man
    being thrown off of a roof.
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    Yet he can still
    be influenced by a principal
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    who had opened up a school
    that believes in all children.
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    Vidal embodies the story of so many
    of our underprivileged children
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    who are struggling to survive,
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    which is why we must
    make education a priority.
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    Brandon's post created a global sensation
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    that touched the lives of millions.
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    This resulted in 1.4 million
    dollars being raised
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    for our scholars to attend field trips
    to colleges and universities,
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    [Sommerstein programs],
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    as well as college scholarships.
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    You need to understand
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    that when 200 young people
    from Brownsville visited Harvard,
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    they now understood
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    that a college of their choice
    was a real possibility,
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    and the impossibilities
    that had been imposed upon them
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    by a disadvantaged community
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    were replaced by hope and purpose.
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    The revolution in education
    is happening in our schools,
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    with adults who provide love,
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    structure,
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    support
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    and knowledge.
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    These are the things
    that inspire children.
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    But it is not an easy task.
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    And there are high demands
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    within an education system
    that is not perfect.
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    But I have a dynamic group of educators
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    who collaborate as a team to determine
    what is the best curriculum.
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    They take time beyond their school day,
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    and come in on weekends
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    and even use their own money
    to often provide resources,
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    when we do not have it.
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    And as the principal,
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    I have to inspect what I expect.
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    So I show up in classes
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    and I conduct observations
    to give feedback,
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    because I want my teachers
    to be just as successful
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    as the name Mott Hall Bridges Academy.
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    And I give them access to me
    every single day,
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    which is why they all have
    my personal cell number,
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    including my scholars
    and those who graduated --
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    which is probably why I get
    phone calls and text messages
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    at three o'clock in the morning.
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    (Laughter)
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    But we are all connected to succeed,
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    and good leaders do this.
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    Tomorrow's future is sitting
    in our classrooms.
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    And they are our responsibility.
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    That means everyone in here,
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    and those who are watching the screen.
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    We must believe in their brilliance,
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    and remind them by teaching them
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    that there indeed is power in education.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why open a school? To close a prison
Speaker:
Nadia Lopez
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
07:10

English subtitles

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