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I started Teach for America now 25 years ago. And as you may know Teach for America recruits
top recent college grads, young professionals, people we believe are the US's most promising
future leaders and ask them to commit two years to teach in high need urban and rural
communities. The big idea is really to generate a growing force of leaders who not only have
an immediate impact during the two years they initially commit but who end up working throughout
their lives from inside of education, from outside of it, at every level of policy to
effect the fundamental kind of systemic changes necessary to ultimately insure that all kids
in our country fulfill their true potential.
And I was thinking about nothing but trying to get bigger and better in the US when it
must have been about eight or nine years ago there was something in the water. I started
hearing from social entrepreneurs, 13 people in a year's time from India to Lebanon to
Chile to the next place who were just absolutely determine to bring this model to their context.
To call upon India's most promising future leaders. Ask them to commit two years to teaching
their highest need communities, invest in their development as a long term force for
change. So that's how Teach for All came about. We're now seven years in. There are 33 and
growing independent social enterprises really in every region of the world who are working
to essentially cultivate the leadership capacity necessary to ultimately ensure again that
all kids have the chance to fulfill their true potential.
Cultivating Leadership: Recruitment, Selection, and Development
This year Teach for India had 13,000 people competing for about 500 spots. Teach for Pakistan
had more than 1,000 people competing for 40 spots. And EnseƱa por Columbia had 2,400
folks competing for about 50 or 60 spots. So aggressive recruitment on college campuses,
surrounding these programs with an aura of status and prestige. And at the same time
asking folks to commit two years because for the most talented recent college grads, the
people who have the most other career options who are under enormous pressure from their
families and from society at large to use their education to get on these career tracks
that make a lot of money, et cetera. It's just everyone else is asking them to commit
two years and these are folks with an inclination to want to make a difference.
They want to do this but they're under so much pressure that they can't commit a whole
lifetime to it. So asking them for two years at the start enables these programs to pull
in truly some of the most highly sought after young leaders in their countries. Each of
these programs has a very intensive selection process. And they're looking for leadership
characteristics. For people who have taken on big challenges, have persevered in the
face of obstacles to reach big goals. People who can influence and motivate others, who
are strong problem solvers. People who will work with a lot of respect and humility. So
very intensive, not only recruitment processes, but then selection processes.