Around the Institute

The 3 Big Ideas from the 2015 Afternoon of Conversation at the Aspen Ideas Festival

July 1, 2015  • Allen Gannett, Guest Blogger

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:

Valerie Jarrett, President Barack Obama’s senior advisor, made the dollars and cents case for early childhood education: 

Innovation

Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, spoke of our reluctance as a culture to push for radical innovation:

Desmond-Hellmann also explained what drives companies to abdicate their innovative DNA:

Race

Elizabeth Alexander, writer and Yale University professor, talked about how being multicultural equates to being American:

Carly Bad Heart Bull, a Philanthropy Fellow with the Bush Foundation, illuminated how indigenous populations are overlooked in discussions of race:

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. 

Data and analytics provided by TrackMaven