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Obama Details Updated
Elementary and Secondary Education Act Blueprint
March 15, 2010
U.S. President Barack Obama says he is bringing Congress an ambitious
overhaul of the country's education system.
US President Barack
Obama delivers the weekly radio address, 13 Mar 2010
In his weekly internet and radio address Saturday, Mr. Obama says his
plan will help ensure all students graduate high school ready for
"college and a career."
The plan will be a major overhaul to the education plan of his
predecessor, George W. Bush. Mr. Bush's program, called No Child Left
Behind, has been controversial because it relies heavily on standardized
testing and penalizes schools that do not meet national standards.
Mr. Obama says his plan will decentralize education reform. He said the
federal government will set a "high bar," but that local schools and
districts will have "flexibility" in how they reach it.
He says he will present his plan to Congress on Monday.
Remarks of
President Barack Obama As Prepared for Delivery Weekly Address March 13,
2010
Lost
in the news of the week was a headline that ought to be a source of
concern for every American. It said, “Many Nations Passing U.S. in
Education.” Now, debates in Washington tend to be consumed with the
politics of the moment: who’s up in the daily polls; whose party stands
to gain in November. But what matters to you – what matters to our
country – is not what happens in the next election, but what we do to
lift up the next generation. And the fact is, there are few issues that
speak more directly to our long term success as a nation than issues
concerning the education we provide to our children.
Our prosperity in the 20th century was fueled by an education system
that helped grow the middle class and unleash the talents of our people
more fully and widely than at any time in our history. We built schools
and focused on the teaching of math and science. We helped a generation
of veterans go to college through the GI Bill. We led the globe in
producing college graduates, and in turn we led in producing
ground-breaking technologies and scientific discoveries that lifted
living standards and set us apart as the world’s engine of innovation.
Of course, other nations recognize this, and are looking to gain an edge
in the global marketplace by investing in better schools, supporting
teachers, and committing to clear standards that will produce graduates
with more skills. Our competitors understand that the nation that
out-educates us today will out-compete us tomorrow. Yet, too often we
have failed to make inroads in reforming and strengthening our public
education system – the debate mired in worn arguments hurled across
entrenched divides.
As a result, over the last few decades, we’ve lost ground. One
assessment shows American fifteen year olds no longer even near the top
in math and science when compared to their peers around the world. As
referenced in the news report I mentioned, we’ve now fallen behind most
wealthy countries in our high school graduation rates. And while we once
led the world in the proportion of college graduates we produced, today
we no longer do.
Not only does that risk our leadership as a nation, it consigns millions
of Americans to a lesser future. For we know that the level of education
a person attains is increasingly a prerequisite for success and a
predictor of the income that person will earn throughout his or her
life. Beyond the economic statistics is a less tangible but no less
painful reality: unless we take action – unless we step up – there are
countless children who will never realize their full talent and
potential.
I don’t accept that future for them. And I don’t accept that future for
the United States of America. That’s why we’re engaged in a historic
effort to redeem and improve our public schools: to raise the
expectations for our students and for ourselves, to recognize and reward
excellence, to improve performance in troubled schools, and to give our
kids and our country the best chance to succeed in a changing world.
Under the leadership of an outstanding Education Secretary, Arne Duncan,
we launched a Race to the Top, through which states compete for funding
by committing to reform and raising standards, by rewarding good
teaching, by supporting the development of better assessments to measure
results, and by emphasizing math and science to help prepare children
for college and careers.
And on Monday, my administration will send to Congress our blueprint for
an updated Elementary and Secondary Education Act to overhaul No Child
Left Behind. What this plan recognizes is that while the federal
government can play a leading role in encouraging the reforms and high
standards we need, the impetus for that change will come from states,
and from local schools and school districts. So, yes, we set a high bar
– but we also provide educators the flexibility to reach it.
Under these guidelines, schools that achieve excellence or show real
progress will be rewarded, and local districts will be encouraged to
commit to change in schools that are clearly letting their students
down. For the majority of schools that fall in between – schools that do
well but could do better – we will encourage continuous improvement to
help keep our young people on track for a bright future: prepared for
the jobs of the 21st century. And because the most important factor in a
child’s success is the person standing at the front of the classroom, we
will better prepare teachers, support teachers, and encourage teachers
to stay in the field. In short, we’ll treat the people who educate our
sons and daughters like the professionals they are.
Through this plan we are setting an ambitious goal: all students should
graduate from high school prepared for college and a career – no matter
who you are or where you come from. Achieving this goal will be
difficult. It will take time. And it will require the skills, talents,
and dedication of many: principals, teachers, parents, students. But
this effort is essential for our children and for our country. And while
there will always be those cynics who claim it can’t be done, at our
best, we know that America has always risen to the challenges that we’ve
faced. This challenge is no different.
As a nation, we are engaged in many important endeavors: improving the
economy, reforming the health care system, encouraging innovation in
energy and other growth industries of the 21st century. But our success
in these efforts – and our success in the future as a people – will
ultimately depend on what happens long before an entrepreneur opens his
doors, or a nurse walks the rounds, or a scientist steps into her
laboratory. Our future is determined each and every day, when our
children enter the classroom, ready to learn and brimming with promise.
It’s that promise we must help them fulfill. Thank you. |