How we can help the "forgotten middle" reach their full potential | Danielle R. Moss

44,058 views ・ 2019-03-14

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
So, I want to talk to you about the forgotten middle.
0
12944
4507
00:18
To me, they are the students, coworkers and plain old regular folks
1
18325
5791
00:24
who are often overlooked
2
24140
2055
00:26
because they're seen as neither exceptional nor problematic.
3
26219
4196
00:31
They're the kids we think we can ignore
4
31267
2897
00:34
because their needs for support don't seem particularly urgent.
5
34188
4659
00:39
They're the coworkers
6
39506
1849
00:41
who actually keep the engines of our organizations running,
7
41379
4237
00:45
but who aren't seen as the innovators who drive excellence.
8
45640
4151
00:50
In many ways, we overlook the folks in the middle
9
50910
3976
00:54
because they don't keep us up awake at night
10
54910
2842
00:57
wondering what crazy thing they're going to come up with next.
11
57776
2955
01:00
(Laughter)
12
60755
1000
01:02
And the truth is that we've come to rely on their complacency
13
62696
5005
01:07
and sense of disconnection
14
67725
2525
01:10
because it makes our work easier.
15
70274
2403
01:14
You see, I know a little bit about the forgotten middle.
16
74077
3452
01:18
As a junior high school student, I hung out in the middle.
17
78578
4321
01:23
For a long time, I had been a good student.
18
83848
2933
01:27
But seventh grade was a game changer.
19
87315
3048
01:31
I spent my days gossiping, passing notes,
20
91045
4540
01:35
generally goofing off with my friends.
21
95609
2467
01:38
I spent my homework time on the phone, reviewing each day's events.
22
98649
5568
01:44
And in many ways, although I was a typical 12-year-old girl,
23
104932
6794
01:51
my ambivalence about my education led to pretty average grades.
24
111750
5784
01:59
Luckily for me, my mother understood something important,
25
119256
5158
02:05
and that was that my location was not my destination.
26
125133
5372
02:11
As a former research librarian and an educator,
27
131625
5174
02:16
my mother knew that I was capable of accomplishing a lot more.
28
136823
4950
02:22
But she also understood
29
142424
2127
02:24
that because I was a young black woman in America,
30
144575
3460
02:28
I might not have opportunities out of the middle
31
148059
3581
02:31
if she wasn't intentional about creating them.
32
151664
3402
02:36
So she moved me to a different school.
33
156149
3245
02:40
She signed me up for leadership activities in my neighborhood.
34
160267
4290
02:45
And she began to talk to me more seriously
35
165220
2952
02:48
about college and career options I could aspire to.
36
168196
4468
02:53
My mother's formula for getting me out of the middle was pretty simple.
37
173609
4953
02:59
She started with high expectations.
38
179117
3428
03:03
She made it her business to figure out how to set me up for success.
39
183109
4849
03:08
She held me accountable
40
188879
3603
03:12
and, along the way, she convinced me that I had the power
41
192506
5554
03:18
to create my own story.
42
198084
2794
03:22
That formula didn't just help me get out of my seventh grade slump --
43
202355
5074
03:27
I used it later on in New York City,
44
207453
2786
03:30
when I was working with kids who had a lot of potential,
45
210263
3190
03:33
but not a lot of opportunities to go to and complete college.
46
213477
4807
03:38
You see, high-performing students
47
218882
2754
03:41
tend to have access to additional resources,
48
221660
3666
03:45
like summer enrichment activities,
49
225350
2783
03:48
internships
50
228157
1523
03:49
and an expansive curriculum
51
229704
2072
03:51
that takes them out of the classroom and into the world
52
231800
4009
03:55
in ways that look great on college applications.
53
235833
3221
03:59
But we're not providing those kinds of opportunities for everyone.
54
239737
4333
04:04
And the result isn't just that some kids miss out.
55
244712
3405
04:08
I think we, as a society, miss out too.
56
248141
2666
04:11
You see, I've got a crazy theory about the folks in the middle.
57
251582
4073
04:16
I think there are some unclaimed winning lottery tickets in the middle.
58
256360
5034
04:22
I think the cure for cancer and the path to world peace
59
262038
4222
04:26
might very well reside there.
60
266284
2237
04:29
Now, as a former middle school teacher,
61
269378
1858
04:31
I'm not saying that magically everyone is suddenly going to become an A student.
62
271260
5237
04:37
But I also believe that most folks in the middle
63
277228
3746
04:40
are capable of a lot more.
64
280998
2150
04:43
And I think people stay in the middle because that's where we relegated them to
65
283665
4515
04:48
and, sometimes, that's just where they're kind of chilling
66
288204
3115
04:51
while they figure things out.
67
291343
2147
04:54
All of our journeys
68
294609
1913
04:56
are made up of a series of rest stops, accelerations, losses and wins.
69
296546
6444
05:03
We have a responsibility to make sure
70
303856
2666
05:06
that one's racial, gender, cultural and socioeconomic identity
71
306546
6769
05:13
is never the reason you didn't have access out of the middle.
72
313339
4593
05:19
So, just as my mother did with me,
73
319030
3230
05:22
I began with high expectations with my young people.
74
322284
4023
05:26
And I started with a question.
75
326815
2056
05:28
I stopped asking kids, "Hey, do you want to go to college?"
76
328895
4103
05:33
I started asking them,
77
333490
1944
05:35
"What college would you like to attend?"
78
335458
2734
05:38
You see, the first question --
79
338855
1573
05:40
(Applause)
80
340452
5192
05:45
The first question leaves a lot of vague possibilities open.
81
345668
4515
05:50
But the second question
82
350585
1841
05:52
says something about what I thought my young people were capable of.
83
352450
4711
05:57
On a basic level,
84
357720
1239
05:58
it assumes that they're going to graduate from high school successfully.
85
358983
4259
06:03
It also assumed
86
363715
1936
06:05
that they would have the kinds of academic records
87
365675
3246
06:08
that could get them college and university admissions.
88
368945
4071
06:13
And I'm proud to say that the high expectations worked.
89
373707
3732
06:18
While black and Latinx students
90
378035
2400
06:20
nationally tend to graduate from college in six years or less,
91
380459
4688
06:25
at a percent of 38,
92
385171
3041
06:28
we were recognized by the College Board
93
388236
2793
06:31
for our ability not to just get kids into college
94
391053
3643
06:34
but to get them through college.
95
394720
2133
06:37
(Applause)
96
397307
6088
06:43
But I also understand that high expectations are great,
97
403419
3834
06:47
but it takes a little bit more than that.
98
407277
1960
06:49
You wouldn't ask a pastry chef to bake a cake without an oven.
99
409650
4210
06:54
And we should not be asking the folks in the middle to make the leap
100
414244
4469
06:58
without providing them with the tools, strategies and support they deserve
101
418737
6181
07:04
to make progress in their lives.
102
424942
2158
07:08
A young woman I had been mentoring for a long time, Nicole,
103
428368
4404
07:12
came to my office one day,
104
432796
2064
07:14
after her guidance counselor looked at her pretty strong transcript
105
434884
5306
07:20
and expressed utter shock and amazement
106
440214
2707
07:22
that she was even interested in going to college.
107
442945
3277
07:26
What the guidance counselor didn't know was that through her community,
108
446952
4792
07:31
Nicole had had access to college prep work,
109
451768
3785
07:35
SAT prep and international travel programs.
110
455577
3884
07:40
Not only was college in her future,
111
460129
3127
07:43
but I'm proud to say that Nicole went on to earn two master's degrees
112
463280
4813
07:48
after graduating from Purdue University.
113
468117
2920
07:51
(Applause)
114
471061
6060
07:57
We also made it our business to hold our young people accountable,
115
477145
5063
08:02
but also to instill a sense of accountability in those young people
116
482232
5480
08:07
to themselves, to each other, to their families and their communities.
117
487736
5756
08:14
We doubled down on asset-based youth development.
118
494117
4095
08:18
We went on leadership retreats
119
498720
2039
08:20
and did high ropes courses and low ropes courses
120
500783
3762
08:24
and tackled life's biggest questions together.
121
504569
4108
08:29
The result was that the kids really bought into the notion
122
509561
3608
08:33
that they were accountable for achieving these college degrees.
123
513193
4828
08:38
It was so gratifying to see the kids calling each other and texting each other
124
518728
5972
08:44
to say, "Hey, why are you late for SAT prep?"
125
524724
3065
08:48
And, "What are you packing for the college tour tomorrow?"
126
528135
3587
08:53
We really worked to kind of make college the thing to do.
127
533019
4179
08:57
We began to create programs on college campuses
128
537734
4585
09:02
and events that allow young people to really visualize themselves
129
542343
4989
09:07
as college students and college graduates.
130
547356
3174
09:11
Me and my staff rocked our own college gear
131
551069
3310
09:14
and had lots of fun, healthy competition about whose school was better than whose.
132
554403
6092
09:21
The kids really bought into it,
133
561355
1992
09:23
and they began to see that something more was possible for their lives.
134
563371
5066
09:28
Not only that -- they could look around at that college-going community
135
568871
4399
09:33
and see kids who came from the same backgrounds
136
573294
2976
09:36
and the same neighborhoods
137
576294
1690
09:38
and who were aspiring to the same things.
138
578008
3142
09:42
That sense of belonging was really key,
139
582046
3571
09:45
and it showed up in a remarkable, beautiful way one day
140
585641
3978
09:49
when we were in the Johannesburg airport, waiting to go through customs
141
589643
4918
09:54
on our way to Botswana for a service learning trip.
142
594585
2909
09:58
I saw a group of kids kind of huddled in a circle.
143
598046
3002
10:01
Usually, with teens, that means something's going on.
144
601752
2683
10:04
(Laughter)
145
604459
1555
10:06
So I kind of walked up behind the kids
146
606363
2286
10:08
to figure out what they were talking about.
147
608673
2420
10:11
They were comparing passport stamps.
148
611711
2835
10:14
(Laughter)
149
614570
1001
10:15
And they were dreaming out loud about all the other countries
150
615595
3871
10:19
they planned to visit in the future.
151
619490
2277
10:22
And seeing these young people from New York City
152
622728
5184
10:27
go on to not just become college students
153
627936
2847
10:30
but to participate in study abroad programs
154
630807
3310
10:34
and to then take jobs around the world
155
634141
2866
10:37
was incredibly gratifying.
156
637031
1840
10:39
When I think of my kids
157
639712
1770
10:41
and all the doctors, lawyers, teachers, social workers,
158
641506
4627
10:46
journalists and artists
159
646157
2055
10:48
who came from our little nook in New York City,
160
648236
3975
10:52
I hate to think of what would have happened
161
652235
2897
10:55
if we hadn't invested in the middle.
162
655156
2400
10:58
Just think about all that their communities and the world
163
658076
3703
11:01
would have missed out on.
164
661803
1667
11:04
This formula for the middle doesn't just work with young people.
165
664673
4271
11:09
It can transform our organizations as well.
166
669724
3270
11:13
We can be more bold
167
673843
2215
11:16
in coming up and articulating a mission that inspires everyone.
168
676082
4737
11:21
We can authentically invite our colleagues to the table
169
681418
4357
11:25
to come up with a strategy to meet the mission.
170
685799
3301
11:30
We can give meaningful feedback to folks along the way,
171
690157
4229
11:35
and -- and sometimes most importantly --
172
695141
3262
11:38
make sure that you're sharing credit for everyone's contributions.
173
698427
5149
11:45
What happened when my staff aimed high for themselves
174
705211
4531
11:49
is that what they were able to do for young people
175
709766
3246
11:53
was pretty transformational.
176
713036
2119
11:55
And it's been so wonderful to look back and see all of my former colleagues
177
715728
5151
12:00
who've gone on to get doctorates
178
720903
2111
12:03
and assume leadership roles in other organizations.
179
723038
4078
12:08
We have what it takes to inspire and uplift the folks in the middle.
180
728585
6133
12:15
We can extend love to the people in the middle.
181
735410
4096
12:20
We can challenge our own biases about who deserves a hand-up, and how.
182
740244
6206
12:27
We can structure our organizations, communities and institutions
183
747982
5154
12:33
in ways that are inclusive and that uphold principles of equity.
184
753160
5007
12:38
Because, in the final analysis, what is often mistaken for a period
185
758720
6492
12:45
is really just a comma.
186
765236
2333
12:48
Thank you.
187
768370
1151
12:49
(Applause)
188
769545
7000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7