Donovan Livingston was the student speaker at the commencement of the Harvard Graduate School of Education, 2016.
He said:
“Education then, beyond all other devices of human origin,
Is a great equalizer of the conditions of men.” – Horace Mann, 1848.
At the time of his remarks I couldn’t read — couldn’t write.
Any attempt to do so, punishable by death.
For generations we have known of knowledge’s infinite power.
Yet somehow, we’ve never questioned the keeper of the keys —
The guardians of information.
Unfortunately, I’ve seen more dividing and conquering
In this order of operations — a heinous miscalculation of reality.
For some, the only difference between a classroom and a plantation is time.
How many times must we be made to feel like quotas —
Like tokens in coined phrases? —
“Diversity. Inclusion”
There are days I feel like one, like only —
A lonely blossom in a briar patch of broken promises.
But I’ve always been a thorn in the side of injustice.
Disruptive. Talkative. A distraction.
With a passion that transcends the confines of my consciousness —
Beyond your curriculum, beyond your standards.
I stand here, a manifestation of love and pain,
With veins pumping revolution.
I am the strange fruit that grew too ripe for the poplar tree.
I am a DREAM Act, Dream Deferred incarnate.
I am a movement – an amalgam of memories America would care to forget
My past, alone won’t allow me to sit still.
So my body, like the mind
Cannot be contained.
As educators, rather than raising your voices
Over the rustling of our chains,
Take them off. Un-cuff us.
Unencumbered by the lumbering weight
Of poverty and privilege,
Policy and ignorance.
I was in the 7th grade, when Ms. Parker told me,
“Donovan, we can put your excess energy to good use!”
And she introduced me to the sound of my own voice.
She gave me a stage. A platform.
She told me that our stories are ladders
That make it easier for us to touch the stars.
So climb and grab them.
Keep climbing. Grab them.
Spill your emotions in the big dipper and pour out your soul.
Light up the world with your luminous allure.
To educate requires Galileo-like patience.
Today, when I look my students in the eyes, all I see are constellations.
If you take the time to connect the dots,
You can plot the true shape of their genius —
Shining in their darkest hour.
I look each of my students in the eyes,
And see the same light that aligned Orion’s Belt
And the pyramids of Giza.
I see the same twinkle
That guided Harriet to freedom.
I see them. Beneath their masks and mischief,
Exists an authentic frustration;
An enslavement to your standardized assessments.
At the core, none of us were meant to be common.
We were born to be comets,
Darting across space and time —
Leaving our mark as we crash into everything.
A crater is a reminder that something amazing happened here —
An indelible impact that shook up the world.
Are we not astronomers — looking for the next shooting star?
I teach in hopes of turning content, into rocket ships —
Tribulations into telescopes,
So a child can see their potential from right where they stand.
An injustice is telling them they are stars
Without acknowledging night that surrounds them.
Injustice is telling them education is the key
While you continue to change the locks.
Education is no equalizer —
Rather, it is the sleep that precedes the American Dream.
So wake up — wake up! Lift your voices
Until you’ve patched every hole in a child’s broken sky.
Wake up every child so they know of their celestial potential.
I’ve been a Black hole in the classroom for far too long;
Absorbing everything, without allowing my light escape.
But those days are done. I belong among the stars.
And so do you. And so do they.
Together, we can inspire galaxies of greatness
For generations to come.
No, sky is not the limit. It is only the beginning.
Lift off.

Thank you for the transcript. I was moved by his poetry and was planning on transcribing it as a reminder of what education should be, not what it has become.
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#WeWereBornToBeComets
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What a beautiful, eloquent speech! Let’s hope Mr. Livingston does some inspiring work in education. If he truly believes we are “uncommon at the core.” he should escape the tentacles of “reform.” Let’s hope his life experiences do not change him; money, as we know, corrupts.
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Reblogged this on Dern's Discourse and commented:
I shared the video, now the transcript. Truly a great awakening in the realm of education
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Maybe there is hope for Harvard.
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“Harvword”
Words mean naught
Till actions change.
What they’ve sought
Is “rearrange”
What they’ve taught
Is empty word
What we’ve bought
Is just absurd
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“The Harvard Core”
At Harvard’s very core,
None of us is common
At Harvard, we are more
Than simply chicken Raman
Oh, yes, we are the cream
That sits atop the rest
And Harvard lives the dream
To be the very Best
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Has anyone seen the movie Angry Birds? I have never played the game and have no idea about the premise. BUT My husband and I went with our 11 year old son and 18 year old daughter to that movie. We discussed it after and my husband knew my analysis before I said it. The metaphorical meaning to DEFORMERS in education is spot on.
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So, Bill Gates, this great man is a graduate at Harvard. It was a graduation. He was speaking from his knowledge of graduating from school, you see. Since he had teachers who showed valor ignoring the policies you funded, he is a grad. Graduated. He reasonably could now put out a list of recommended books for summer reading in the LA Times. He could could teach a class you could take for credits on education leadership.
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🙂
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No. Gates is a Harvard dropout. But, in 2007 Harvard awarded him an honorary doctorate.
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Is it still an honor to get a doctorate from Harvard?
Who knew?
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“The Key to Success”
Gates dropped out
Which bred success
Little doubt
That dropout’s best
Design a test
That none can pass
And Gates’ success
Is theirs at last!
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🙂
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