A few weeks ago I was surprised to receive this email from a teacher at the elementary school that I attended, PS 205, in the New York City borough of Queens:
"Dear Mr. Roth,
I am a teacher at The Alexander Graham Bell School, PS 205 in Bayside, NY.
This is my 29th year teaching at this school and it is still an amazing school where children acquire the skills to blossom as adults!
It is my understanding that you are a graduate of this school.
We are holding a Career Day on Friday, March 6, 2026.
It would be wonderful if you could participate in some way, whether in person, zoom pre-recorded video or by another method.
As a Nobel Prize winner, this would be very inspiring for our students.
Please let me know if you would like to be part of this awesome event."
After some further correspondence, I sent a video greeting of a bit over a minute. Here's the transcript:
Transcript:
"Hi PS 205! I hear that you’re having career day today.
Mr Blum asked me to say a few words about how my career began to take shape when I was a student at PS 205, way back before your parents were born. I was a PS 205 student from 1957 to 1962, and it was in those years that I started to think about becoming a scientist.
In 1957, when I started school, the Sputnik satellite was launched by Russia, and in 1961 the first American astronaut, Allan Shepherd, rocketed into space. So science was in the news. My big brother Ted (who was also a PS 205 student, four years older than me) was excited by the idea of becoming a scientist, and that made me excited too. And pretty soon I was entering the school’s annual science fairs, with demonstrations of scientific things.
When I grew up I did become a scientist, a social scientist. I’m an economist, which allows me to study how we humans coordinate and cooperate and compete with each other, in ways that have made us, on average, live longer and healthier lives. In fact one of the things I have worked on is to help doctors organize how more people can get kidney transplants if they need them, which helps them live longer and healthier lives.
Science can be a lot of fun. In 2012 I won the Nobel Prize in Economics, which means I got to go to a big celebration of science and literature in Sweden, which almost everyone in that country watches on television. It’s sort of like their Super Bowl.
I can only imagine the things that you will do as you grow up. It will be an adventure."