Andres Idarraga’s and the prison-to-school pipeline


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dre dare tedxThere will always be those people who feel nobody should get out of prison, or that they should not get parole, or not get opportunities like an education.  Andres Idarraga is someone who got out on parole.  He began educating himself while at the A.C.I. using his own money and ingenuity.

After his release, Andres spent the next seven years earning degrees from Brown and Yale. In a recent TedX Talk at Moses Brown he explains his journey up from and out of poverty, yet why that isn’t enough; why he felt the need to start Transcending Through Education Foundation (TTEF) and support other folks, inside prison and recently released, who also want to pursue a Prison-to-School pipeline.

In full disclosure, Andres is a friend of mine and co-founder of TTEF.  Our friendship has spanned almost two decades, inside and out of prison, fueled by the power of inspiration.  Along with Noah Kilroy, we started this foundation with our own time, effort, and money.  The donations we seek are to stabilize and expand what we do.

When people talk about economic development, education, homelessness, and unemployment, they could easily add in the problem of reclaiming a major lost community resource: people.  Criminalizing Rhode Island residents, beyond the punishment of a crime, is weighing down the state as a whole.

Many of the people being punished by the criminal justice system are, like I once was, broken and hopeless.  As trite as it may sound, but “Hope” is a rare commodity in many places- especially prison- yet Hope is what TTEF creates.  We can’t help everyone that wants an education, nor will an education ensure a job, a home, or happiness.  Hope is just fuel for the journey.

Post-Script to TEDx PVD


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Several hundred people (including professionals, academics and students) gathered at the Rhode Island School of Design’s Metcalfe Auditorium and witnessed the first-ever TEDx Providence event in the Ocean State on April 15. But at the end of the day, what does it really mean? One day after the historic event, I asked myself that very question and here’s one person’s take on that very question.

HOME TO INTELLIGENT CIVL DIALOGUE CALLING FOR ACTION & KNOWN THE WORLD OVER

Providence (and Rhode Island) is becoming home to a number of events which serve three distinct purposes–

  1. Coalescing positive elements (and by elements I mean people, who have created pockets of positive ecosystems here). Being positive in a place where cynicism has ruled the roost for so many years takes a lot of energy, time and commitment. Positive individuals NEED to have outlets to be around similarly positive people to gain support, recharge their psychic batteries and share their ideas and thoughts on improving our local community, and the world as a whole;
  2. Having events which engage and welcome our student community is extremely important as we look for more of them to stay here upon graduation; and
  3. TEDx Providence is now part of a growing list of exciting events which attract not only locals but which are also attracting individuals from around the world to come to Rhode Island (e.g., A Better World by Design, BIF Summit on Collaborative Innovation, MakerFaireRI, Social Venture Partners-Rhode Island SEEED Summit, our state’s eight film festivals, the Newport Jazz and Folk Festivals, Bryant University’s World Trade Day, etc.) to learn, network and dream big! Why is that important? Engaging with the world means just that, but first starts with welcoming individuals here. Not to sell them on our locale, but rather to show them them the talent that resides here and how we can help them achieve great success with our talent pool (and vice versa); that is the very essence of what engagement means.
Kipp Bradford

ACKNOWLEDGING, HIGHLIGHTING AND LEVERAGING OUR WORLD CLASS TALENT IS ESSENTIAL

If you look at who presented at the inaugural TEDx Providence event…..I mean look at them–their life experiences, professional achievements and the impact they have had on the community….I can assure you of this–any community in the WORLD would love to have these individuals residing and working there. They represent the tip of the iceberg, but what sort of talent resides here! Professors who are great mentors; entrepreneurs who have contributed beyond the launch of their own ventures and work far beyond our borders; new arrivals to the state; new ideas being implemented that other communities around the world can learn from; and artists who exemplify innovation!

So, continue to watch out for such activities right here in your own backyard and get engaged!

Tedx Conference Comes to Providence on April 15

TedxProvidence co-founders, Tino Chow (left) and Peter Haas (right).

Tedx is coming to Providence on April 15. I recently met with one of its co-founders, Peter Haas, to discuss the upcoming event.

What is TEDX?

TEDx is an independently organized TED style event operated under a license from TED.  According to TED:

“TEDx was created in the spirit of TED’s mission, “ideas worth spreading.” The program is designed to give communities, organizations and individuals the opportunity to stimulate dialogue through TED-like experiences at the local level.  At TEDx events, a screening of TEDTalks videos — or a combination of live presenters and TEDTalks videos — sparks deep conversation and connections. TEDx events are fully planned and coordinated independently, on a community-by-community basis.”

What impact will having TEDXProvidence have? What do you hope to achieve by bringing it here?

The first TEDXProvidence event is scheduled for April 15, 2012 and has been sold-out for weeks. Providence already has a few fantastic ideas conferences, such as: Business Innovation Factory’s Summit on Collaboration (now in its 8th season; aka, BIF-8), the Brown and RISD student-led conference on socially conscious design, A Better World by Design (celebrating it’s 5th year in 2012), and the recently sold-out SEEED, a national summit on building and strengthening social enterprise ecosystems and communities; and TEDXProvidence will allow us to explore in depth the great work that is going on, specifically, in this city. TEDxProvidence aims to highlight the fantastic and inspirational stories coming out of Providence. We want to be the local ideas festival for the city, and builds on our city’s reputation as a global leader for being able to coalesce student and professional populations in order to both celebrate and create real change.

Like all of the other conferences previously mentioned, TEDXProvidence plans on serving as a platform for bringing students, academics and professionals from the private and public sectors together.

Please check out our web site, www.tedxprovidence.com. And follow us on Twitter at @TEDxProvidence or through our Twitter hashtag to follow the stream of dialogue coming out of the upcoming conference at #tedxpvd.

Who are the other players involved in TEDXProvidence?

The organizers are myself, Tino Chow, Caroline Mailloux, and Catherine Laine. We have a number of volunteers. We’ve gotten a lot of the support from our community from local food trucks (e.g., Fancheezical, Rocket Fine Streetfood and Mijos Tacos); Twobolt our printing sponsor; Providence Monthly our advertising sponsor; and VideoZ Corporate Film & Video Productions is doing our filming.

How did you get involved in the TED Movement?

I am a TED Senior Fellow, so I have been going to TED for several years on that fellowship. TED fellows have specific projects they are doing to make the world a better place. For example, my senior fellowship project has been training masons how to build earthquake resistant construction in Haiti. To date we’ve trained over 4000 masons.