ÒOn a Complete and Competitive American EducationÓ
Remarks of President Obama
To the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
Washington Marriott Metro Center
Washington, D.C.
March 10, 2009
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. (Applause.) Si se puede.
AUDIENCE: Si se puede! Si se puede! Si se puede!
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you so much. Please,
everybody have a seat. Thank you for the wonderful introduction, David. And
thank you for the great work that you are doing each and every day. And I
appreciate such a warm welcome. Some of you I've gotten a chance to know; many
of you I'm meeting for the first time. But the spirit of the U.S. Hispanic
Chamber of Commerce, the desire to create jobs and provide opportunity to
people who sometimes have been left out -- that's exactly what this
administration is about. That's the essence of the American Dream. And so I'm
very proud to have a chance to speak with all of you.
You know, every so often, throughout our history, a
generation of Americans bears the responsibility of seeing this country through
difficult times and protecting the dream of its founding for posterity. This is
a responsibility that's fallen to our generation. Meeting it will require
steering our nation's economy through a crisis unlike anything that we have
seen in our time.
In the short term, that means jump-starting job creation and
restarting lending, and restoring confidence in our markets and our financial
system. But it also means taking steps that not only advance our recovery, but
lay the foundation for lasting, shared prosperity.
I know there's some who believe we can only handle one
challenge at a time. And they forget that Lincoln helped lay down the
transcontinental railroad and passed the Homestead Act and created the National
Academy of Sciences in the midst of civil war. Likewise, President Roosevelt
didn't have the luxury of choosing between ending a depression and fighting a
war; he had to do both. President Kennedy didn't have the luxury of choosing
between civil rights and sending us to the moon. And we don't have the luxury
of choosing between getting our economy moving now and rebuilding it over the
long term.
America will not remain true to its highest ideals -- and
America's place as a global economic leader will be put at risk -- unless we
not only bring down the crushing cost of health care and transform the way we
use energy, but also if we do -- if we don't do a far better job than we've
been doing of educating our sons and daughters; unless we give them the
knowledge and skills they need in this new and changing world.
For we know that economic progress and educational
achievement have always gone hand in hand in America. The land-grant colleges and
public high schools transformed the economy of an industrializing nation. The
GI Bill generated a middle class that made America's economy unrivaled in the
20th century. Investments in math and science under President Eisenhower gave
new opportunities to young scientists and engineers all across the country. It
made possible somebody like a Sergei Brin to attend graduate school and found
an upstart company called Google that would forever change our world.
The source of America's prosperity has never been merely how
ably we accumulate wealth, but how well we educate our people. This has never
been more true than it is today. In a 21st-century world where jobs can be
shipped wherever there's an Internet connection, where a child born in Dallas
is now competing with a child in New Delhi, where your best job qualification
is not what you do, but what you know -- education is no longer just a pathway
to opportunity and success, it's a prerequisite for success.
That's why workers without a four-year degree have borne the
brunt of recent layoffs, Latinos most of all. That's why, of the 30 fastest
growing occupations in America, half require a Bachelor's degree or more. By
2016, four out of every 10 new jobs will require at least some advanced
education or training.
So let there be no doubt: The future belongs to the nation
that best educates its citizens -- and my fellow Americans, we have everything
we need to be that nation. We have the best universities, the most renowned
scholars. We have innovative principals and passionate teachers and gifted
students, and we have parents whose only priority is their child's education.
We have a legacy of excellence, and an unwavering belief that our children
should climb higher than we did.
And yet, despite resources that are unmatched anywhere in
the world, we've let our grades slip, our schools crumble, our teacher quality
fall short, and other nations outpace us. Let me give you a few statistics. In
8th grade math, we've fallen to 9th place. Singapore's middle-schoolers
outperform ours three to one. Just a third of our 13- and 14-year-olds can read
as well as they should. And year after year, a stubborn gap persists between
how well white students are doing compared to their African American and Latino
classmates. The relative decline of American education is untenable for our
economy, it's unsustainable for our democracy, it's unacceptable for our
children -- and we can't afford to let it continue.
What's at stake is nothing less than the American Dream.
It's what drew my father and so many of your fathers and mothers to our shores
in pursuit of an education. It's what led Linda Brown and Gonzalo and Felicitas
Mendez to bear the standard of all who were attending separate and unequal
schools. It's what has led generations of Americans to take on that extra job,
to sacrifice the small pleasures, to scrimp and save wherever they can, in
hopes of putting away enough, just enough, to give their child the education
that they never had. It's that most American of ideas, that with the right
education, a child of any race, any faith, any station, can overcome whatever
barriers stand in their way and fulfill their God-given potential. (Applause.)
Of course, we've heard all this year after year after year
after year -- and far too little has changed. Certainly it hasn't changed in
too many overcrowded Latino schools; it hasn't changed in too many inner-city
schools that are seeing dropout rates of over 50 percent. It's not changing not
because we're lacking sound ideas or sensible plans -- in pockets of excellence
across this country, we're seeing what children from all walks of life can and
will achieve when we set high standards, have high expectations, when we do a
good job of preparing them. Instead, it's because politics and ideology have
too often trumped our progress that we're in the situation that we're in.
For decades, Washington has been trapped in the same stale
debates that have paralyzed progress and perpetuated our educational decline.
Too many supporters of my party have resisted the idea of rewarding excellence
in teaching with extra pay, even though we know it can make a difference in the
classroom. Too many in the Republican Party have opposed new investments in
early education, despite compelling evidence of its importance. So what we get
here in Washington is the same old debate about it's more money versus more
reform, vouchers versus the status quo. There's been partisanship and petty
bickering, but little recognition that we need to move beyond the worn fights
of the 20th century if we're going to succeed in the 21st century. (Applause.)
I think you'd all agree that the time for finger-pointing is
over. The time for holding us -- holding ourselves accountable is here. What's
required is not simply new investments, but new reforms. It's time to expect
more from our students. It's time to start rewarding good teachers, stop making
excuses for bad ones. It's time to demand results from government at every
level. It's time to prepare every child, everywhere in America, to out-compete
any worker, anywhere in the world. (Applause.) It's time to give all Americans
a complete and competitive education from the cradle up through a career. We've
accepted failure for far too long. Enough is enough. America's entire education
system must once more be the envy of the world -- and that's exactly what we
intend to do.
That's exactly what the budget I'm submitting to Congress
has begun to achieve. Now, at a time when we've inherited a trillion-dollar
deficit, we will start by doing a little housekeeping, going through our books,
cutting wasteful education programs. My outstanding Secretary of Education,
Arne Duncan, who's here today -- stand up, Arne, so everybody can see you. (Applause.)
I'm assuming you also saw my Secretary of Labor, Hilda Solis. (Applause.) But
Secretary Duncan will use only one test when deciding what ideas to support
with your precious tax dollars: It's not whether an idea is liberal or
conservative, but whether it works. And this will help free up resources for
the first pillar of reforming our schools -- investing in early childhood
initiatives.
This isn't just about keeping an eye on our children, it's
about educating them. Studies show that children in early childhood education
programs are more likely to score higher in reading and math, more likely to
graduate from high school and attend college, more likely to hold a job, and
more likely to earn more in that job. For every dollar we invest in these programs,
we get nearly $10 back in reduced welfare rolls, fewer health care costs, and
less crime. That's why the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act that I signed
into law invests $5 billion in growing Early Head Start and Head Start,
expanding access to quality child care for 150,000 more children from working
families, and doing more for children with special needs. And that's why we are
going to offer 55,000 first-time parents regular visits from trained nurses to
help make sure their children are healthy and prepare them for school and for
life. (Applause.)
Even as we invest in early childhood education, let's raise
the bar for early learning programs that are falling short. Now, today, some
children are enrolled in excellent programs. Some children are enrolled in
mediocre programs. And some are wasting away their most formative years in bad
programs. That includes the one-fourth of all children who are Hispanic, and
who will drive America's workforce of tomorrow, but who are less likely to have
been enrolled in an early childhood education program than anyone else.
That's why I'm issuing a challenge to our states: Develop a
cutting-edge plan to raise the quality of your early learning programs; show us
how you'll work to ensure that children are better prepared for success by the
time they enter kindergarten. If you do, we will support you with an Early
Learning Challenge Grant that I call on Congress to enact. That's how we will
reward quality and incentivize excellence, and make a down payment on the success
of the next generation.
So that's the first pillar of our education reform agenda.
The second, we will end what has become a race to the bottom in our schools and
instead spur a race to the top by encouraging better standards and assessments.
Now, this is an area where we are being outpaced by other nations. It's not
that their kids are any smarter than ours -- it's that they are being smarter
about how to educate their children. They're spending less time teaching things
that don't matter, and more time teaching things that do. They're preparing
their students not only for high school or college, but for a career. We are
not. Our curriculum for 8th graders is two full years behind top performing
countries. That's a prescription for economic decline. And I refuse to accept
that America's children cannot rise to this challenge. They can, and they must,
and they will meet higher standards in our time. (Applause.)
So let's challenge our states -- let's challenge our states
to adopt world-class standards that will bring our curriculums to the 21st
century. Today's system of 50 different sets of benchmarks for academic success
means 4th grade readers in Mississippi are scoring nearly 70 points lower than
students in Wyoming -- and they're getting the same grade. Eight of our states
are setting their standards so low that their students may end up on par with
roughly the bottom 40 percent of the world.
That's inexcusable. That's why I'm calling on states that
are setting their standards far below where they ought to be to stop
low-balling expectations for our kids. The solution to low test scores is not
lowering standards -- it's tougher, clearer standards. (Applause.) Standards
like those in Massachusetts, where 8th graders are -- (applause) -- we have a Massachusetts
contingent here. (Laughter.) In Massachusetts, 8th graders are now tying for
first -- first in the whole world in science. Other forward-thinking states are
moving in the same direction by coming together as part of a consortium. And
more states need to do the same. And I'm calling on our nation's governors and
state education chiefs to develop standards and assessments that don't simply
measure whether students can fill in a bubble on a test, but whether they
possess 21st century skills like problem-solving and critical thinking and
entrepreneurship and creativity.
That is what we'll help them do later this year -- that what
we're going to help them do later this year when we finally make No Child Left
Behind live up to its name by ensuring not only that teachers and principals
get the funding that they need, but that the money is tied to results.
(Applause.) And Arne Duncan will also back up this commitment to higher
standards with a fund to invest in innovation in our school districts.
Of course, raising standards alone will not make much of a
difference unless we provide teachers and principals with the information they
need to make sure students are prepared to meet those standards. And far too
few states have data systems like the one in Florida that keep track of a
student's education from childhood through college. And far too few districts
are emulating the example of Houston and Long Beach, and using data to track
how much progress a student is making and where that student is struggling.
That's a resource that can help us improve student achievement, and tell us
which students had which teachers so we can assess what's working and what's
not. That's why we're making a major investment in this area that we will
cultivate a new culture of accountability in America's schools.
Now, to complete our race to the top requires the third
pillar of reform -- recruiting, preparing, and rewarding outstanding teachers.
From the moment students enter a school, the most important factor in their
success is not the color of their skin or the income of their parents, it's the
person standing at the front of the classroom. That's why our Recovery Act will
ensure that hundreds of thousands of teachers and school personnel are not laid
off -- because those Americans are not only doing jobs they can't afford to
lose, they're rendering a service our nation cannot afford to lose, either.
(Applause.)
America's future depends on its teachers. And so today, I'm
calling on a new generation of Americans to step forward and serve our country
in our classrooms. If you want to make a difference in the life of our nation,
if you want to make the most of your talents and dedication, if you want to
make your mark with a legacy that will endure -- then join the teaching
profession. America needs you. We need you in our suburbs. We need you in our small
towns. We especially need you in our inner cities. We need you in classrooms
all across our country.
And if you do your part, then we'll do ours. That's why
we're taking steps to prepare teachers for their difficult responsibilities,
and encourage them to stay in the profession. That's why we're creating new
pathways to teaching and new incentives to bring teachers to schools where
they're needed most. That's why we support offering extra pay to Americans who
teach math and science to end a teacher shortage in those subjects. It's why
we're building on the promising work being done in places like South Carolina's
Teachers Advancement Program, and making an unprecedented commitment to ensure
that anyone entrusted with educating our children is doing the job as well as
it can be done.
Now, here's what that commitment means: It means treating
teachers like the professionals they are while also holding them more
accountable -- in up to 150 more school districts. New teachers will be
mentored by experienced ones. Good teachers will be rewarded with more money
for improved student achievement, and asked to accept more responsibilities for
lifting up their schools. Teachers throughout a school will benefit from
guidance and support to help them improve.
And just as we've given our teachers all the support they
need to be successful, we need to make sure our students have the teacher they
need to be successful. And that means states and school districts taking steps
to move bad teachers out of the classroom. But let me be clear -- (applause.)
Let me be clear -- the overwhelming number of teachers are doing an outstanding
job under difficult circumstances. My sister is a teacher, so I know how tough
teaching can be. But let me be clear: If a teacher is given a chance or two
chances or three chances but still does not improve, there's no excuse for that
person to continue teaching. I reject a system that rewards failure and
protects a person from its consequences. The stakes are too high. We can afford
nothing but the best when it comes to our children's teachers and the schools
where they teach. (Applause.)
Now, that leads me to the fourth part of America's education
strategy -- promoting innovation and excellence in America's schools. One of
the places where much of that innovation occurs is in our most effective
charter schools. And these are public schools founded by parents, teachers, and
civic or community organizations with broad leeway to innovate -- schools I
supported as a state legislator and a United States senator.
But right now, there are many caps on how many charter
schools are allowed in some states, no matter how well they're preparing our
students. That isn't good for our children, our economy, or our country. Of
course, any expansion of charter schools must not result in the spread of
mediocrity, but in the advancement of excellence. And that will require states
adopting both a rigorous selection and review process to ensure that a charter
school's autonomy is coupled with greater accountability -- as well as a
strategy, like the one in Chicago, to close charter schools that are not
working. Provided this greater accountability, I call on states to reform their
charter rules, and lift caps on the number of allowable charter schools,
wherever such caps are in place.
Now, even as we foster innovation in where our children are
learning, let's also foster innovation in when our children are learning. We
can no longer afford an academic calendar designed for when America was a
nation of farmers who needed their children at home plowing the land at the end
of each day. That calendar may have once made sense, but today it puts us at a
competitive disadvantage. Our children -- listen to this -- our children spend
over a month less in school than children in South Korea -- every year. That's
no way to prepare them for a 21st century economy. That's why I'm calling for
us not only to expand effective after-school programs, but to rethink the
school day to incorporate more time -- whether during the summer or through
expanded-day programs for children who need it. (Applause.)
Now, I know longer school days and school years are not
wildly popular ideas. (Laughter.) Not with Malia and Sasha -- (laughter) -- not
in my family, and probably not in yours. But the challenges of a new century
demand more time in the classroom. If they can do that in South Korea, we can
do it right here in the United States of America.
Of course, no matter how innovative our schools or how
effective our teachers, America cannot succeed unless our students take
responsibility for their own education. That means showing up for school on
time, paying attention in class, seeking out extra tutoring if it's needed,
staying out of trouble. To any student who's watching, I say this: Don't even think
about dropping out of school. Don't even think about it. (Applause.)
As I said a couple of weeks ago, dropping out is quitting on
yourself, it's quitting on your country, and it's not an option -- not anymore.
Not when our high school dropout rate has tripled in the past 30 years. Not
when high school dropouts earn about half as much as college graduates. Not
when Latino students are dropping out faster than just about anyone else. It's
time for all of us, no matter what our backgrounds, to come together and solve
this epidemic.
Stemming the tide of dropouts will require turning around
our low-performing schools. Just 2,000 high schools in cities like Detroit and
Los Angeles and Philadelphia produce over 50 percent of America's dropouts. And
yet there are too few proven strategies to transform these schools. And there
are too few partners to get the job done.
So today, I'm issuing a challenge to educators and
lawmakers, parents and teachers alike: Let us all make turning around our
schools our collective responsibility as Americans. And that will require new
investments in innovative ideas -- that's why my budget invests in developing
new strategies to make sure at-risk students don't give up on their education;
new efforts to give dropouts who want to return to school the help they need to
graduate; and new ways to put those young men and women who have left school
back on a pathway to graduation.
Now, the fifth part of America's education strategy is
providing every American with a quality higher education -- whether it's
college or technical training. Never has a college degree been more important.
Never has it been more expensive. And at a time when so many of our families
are bearing enormous economic burdens, the rising cost of tuition threatens to
shatter dreams. And that's why we will simplify federal college assistance
forms so it doesn't take a Ph.D to apply for financial aid. (Applause.)
That's why we're already taking steps to make college or
technical training affordable. For the first time ever, Pell Grants will not be
subject to the politics of the moment or the whim of the market -- they will be
a commitment that Congress is required to uphold each and every year.
(Applause.) Not only that; because rising costs mean Pell Grants cover less
than half as much tuition as they did 30 years ago, we're raising the maximum
Pell Grant to $5,550 a year and indexing it above inflation. We're also
providing a $2,500-a-year tuition tax credit for students from working
families. And we're modernizing and expanding the Perkins Loan Program to make
sure schools like UNLV don't get a tenth as many Perkins loans as schools like
Harvard.
To help pay for all of this, we're putting students ahead of
lenders by eliminating wasteful student loan subsidies that cost taxpayers
billions each year. All in all, we are making college affordable for 7 million
more students with a sweeping investment in our children's futures and
America's success. And I call on Congress to join me and the American people by
making these investments possible. (Applause.)
This is how we will help meet our responsibility as a nation
to open the doors of college to every American. But it will also be the
responsibility of colleges and universities to control spiraling costs. We
can't just keep on putting more money in and universities and colleges not
doing their part to hold down tuitions. And it's the responsibility of our
students to walk through the doors of opportunity.
In just a single generation, America has fallen from 2nd
place to 11th place in the portion of students completing college. That is
unfortunate, but it's by no means irreversible. With resolve and the right
investments, we can retake the lead once more. And that's why, in my address to
the nation the other week, I called on Americans to commit to at least one year
or more of higher education or career training, with the goal of having the
highest proportion of college graduates in the world by the year 2020. And to
meet that goal, we are investing $2.5 billion to identify and support
innovative initiatives across the country that achieve results in helping
students persist and graduate.
So let's not stop at education with college. Let's recognize
a 21st century reality: Learning doesn't end in our early 20s. Adults of all
ages need opportunities to earn new degrees and new skills -- especially in the
current economic environment. That means working with all our universities and
schools, including community colleges -- a great and undervalued asset -- to
prepare workers for good jobs in high-growth industries; and to improve access
to job training not only for young people who are just starting their careers,
but for older workers who need new skills to change careers. And that's going
to be one of the key tasks that Secretary Solis is involved with, is making
sure that lifelong learning is a reality and a possibility for more Americans.
It's through initiatives like these that we'll see more
Americans earn a college degree, or receive advanced training, and pursue a
successful career. And that's why I'm calling on Congress to work with me to
enact these essential reforms, and to reauthorize the Workforce Reinvestment
Act. That's how we will round out a complete and competitive education in the
United States of America.
So here's the bottom line: Yes, we need more money; yes, we
need more reform; yes, we need to hold ourselves more accountable for every
dollar we spend. But there's one more ingredient I want to talk about. No
government policy will make any difference unless we also hold ourselves more
accountable as parents -- because government, no matter how wise or efficient,
cannot turn off the TV or put away the video games. Teachers, no matter how
dedicated or effective, cannot make sure your child leaves for school on time
and does their homework when they get back at night. These are things only a
parent can do. These are things that our parents must do.
I say this not only as a father, but also as a son. When I
was a child my mother and I lived overseas, and she didn't have the money to
send me to the fancy international school where all the American kids went to
school. So what she did was she supplemented my schooling with lessons from a
correspondence course. And I can still picture her waking me up at 4:30 a.m.,
five days a week, to go over some lessons before I went to school. And whenever
I'd complain and grumble and find some excuse and say, "Awww, I'm
sleepy," she'd patiently repeat to me her most powerful defense. She'd
say, "This is no picnic for me either, buster." (Laughter and
applause.)
And when you're a kid you don't think about the sacrifices
they're making. She had to work; I just had to go to school. But she'd still
wake up every day to make sure I was getting what I needed for my education.
And it's because she did this day after day, week after week, because of all
the other opportunities and breaks that I got along the way, all the sacrifices
that my grandmother and my grandfather made along the way, that I can stand
here today as President of the United States. It's because of the sacrifices --
(applause.) See, I want every child in this country to have the same chance
that my mother gave me, that my teachers gave me, that my college professors
gave me, that America gave me.
You know these stories; you've lived them, as well. All of
you have a similar story to tell. You know, it's -- I want children like Yvonne
Bojorquez to have that chance. Yvonne is a student at Village Academy High
School in California. Now, Village Academy is a 21st century school where
cutting edge technologies are used in the classroom, where college prep and
career training are offered to all who seek it, and where the motto is
"respect, responsibility, and results."
Now, a couple of months ago, Yvonne and her class made a
video talking about the impact that our struggling economy was having on their
lives. And some of them spoke about their parents being laid off, or their
homes facing foreclosure, or their inability to focus on school with everything
that was happening at home. And when it was her turn to speak, Yvonne said:
"We've all been affected by this economic crisis. [We] are all college
bound students; we're all businessmen, and doctors and lawyers and all this
great stuff. And we have all this potential -- but the way things are going,
we're not going to be able to [fulfill it]."
It was heartbreaking that a girl so full of promise was so
full of worry that she and her class titled their video, "Is anybody
listening?" So, today, there's something I want to say to Yvonne and her
class at Village Academy: I am listening. We are listening. America is
listening. (Applause.) And we will not rest until your parents can keep your
jobs -- we will not rest until your parents can keep their jobs and your
families can keep their homes, and you can focus on what you should be focusing
on -- your own education; until you can become the businessmen, doctors, and
lawyers of tomorrow, until you can reach out and grasp your dreams for the
future.
For in the end, Yvonne's dream is a dream shared by all
Americans. It's the founding promise of our nation: That we can make of our
lives what we will; that all things are possible for all people; and that here
in America, our best days lie ahead. I believe that. I truly believe if I do my
part, and you, the American people, do yours, then we will emerge from this
crisis a stronger nation, and pass the dream of our founding on to posterity,
ever safer than before. (Applause.)
Thank you very much. God bless you. God bless the United States of America. Thank you. (Applause.)