The speakers at the Afternoon of Conversation covered wide ground at the 2015 Aspen Ideas Festival. On education, innovation, and race, the speakers struck a chord not only by relating to the human experience, but also by pushing contrarian views.
Below, read highlights of some of the key moments across these common themes:
On Education
Sue Desmond-Hellmann, CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, spoke of individual teachers’ incredible leverage:
The single most important variable in any classroom is the teacher. – @SueDHellmann #AspenIdeas pic.twitter.com/sQSFdV1PJ7
— Aspen Ideas Festival (@aspenideas) July 1, 2015
Valerie Jarrett, President Barack Obama’s senior advisor, made the dollars and cents case for early childhood education:
Every $1 we spend on early childhood education saves us $7 down the line. – @vj44 #aspenideas pic.twitter.com/KjMSvXkcWs
— Aspen Ideas Festival (@aspenideas) July 1, 2015
Innovation
Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, spoke of our reluctance as a culture to push for radical innovation:
What is it about our society that we are talked out of our interesting weird ideas? – @peterthiel #AspenIdeas pic.twitter.com/v9t2Fmw6BT
— Aspen Ideas Festival (@aspenideas) July 1, 2015
Desmond-Hellmann also explained what drives companies to abdicate their innovative DNA:
Even the best companies are at risk of the ABCs:
Arrogance
Bureaucracy
Complacency
- @SueDHellmann quoting @WarrenBuffett. #aspenideas
— Aspen Ideas Festival (@aspenideas) July 1, 2015
Race
Elizabeth Alexander, writer and Yale University professor, talked about how being multicultural equates to being American:
What is Americanness? It's many things. Multiculturalism is dynamic, but it is who we are. – @ProfessorEA #AspenIdeas pic.twitter.com/TBr3YUeDTc
— Aspen Ideas Festival (@aspenideas) July 1, 2015
Carly Bad Heart Bull, a Philanthropy Fellow with the Bush Foundation, illuminated how indigenous populations are overlooked in discussions of race:
Remember to include our indigenous people. When you look at disparities indigenous people are at the bottom-Carly Bad Heart Bull #AspenIdeas
— Aspen Ideas Festival (@aspenideas) July 1, 2015
The ideas discussed throughout the afternoon varied from the accepted to the controversial, but all held the common note of seeking to better the human experience.
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