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counselors aiding in peer mediation and conflict resolution and offering
classes on parenting skills. Ms. Isaacson noted the school
administration keeps a visible and proactive presence among the
students; she described a program that helps children set and attain
goals and a program called ``Adopt-a-Cop,'' which involves local police
having lunch with students and discussing safety awareness. She
expressed pride in the school staff and their interaction with the
community to foster discipline and safety.]
The President. Last week, I went up to Worcester, Massachusetts and
released there this handbook that Secretary Riley and Attorney General
Reno did for all the schools on trying to identify children that have
problems and trying to prevent things from happening before they go too
far. But I tried to emphasize to them that the schools--still, schools
are basically the safest places in the country for our kids. But when
something goes wrong, it can be terribly tragic.
But I think it's important that the American people know that most
schools have people like you in them and other people who are really
working hard to do their part to help the children grow up in a safe,
secure environment so they can learn. And I know Secretary Riley--he
mentioned the character education program--he's been promoting that and
worked hard for it ever since we've been here, and I thank him.
What about the teachers? It's about time we heard--[inaudible]----
[First grade teacher Martha Bell noted that teachers look at the
challenges each individual student brings to the classroom and, also,
how to communicate with the parents. She stressed the need to convince
middle and high school students that teaching is a rewarding career and
urged funding for those who can't afford to attend higher education.]
The President. What's the most challenging thing that new teachers
face--first-year teachers?
[Ms. Bell said it was a teacher's first conference with the parents, the
development of a good rapport and the positive interaction with the
parents.]
The President. I could use her in any number of positions--
[laughter]--in the Federal Government. We've got an airplane strike in
the Midwest I think you could settle--[laughter]--by tonight, and I'd
appreciate it.
Principal Freeman. Mr. President, she's taken. [Laughter]
The President. But one of those parents who is sitting to your left,
Mr. Lewis, you're the PTA president. First of all, I know this is not
what you are going to say, but what do you do when you're not the PTA
president, and why did you decide to do this?
[E. Tracey Lewis commended the President on his education policies. He
told the President he works with Bill Milliken in the Communities in
Schools program, the largest stay-in-school program in the Nation. Mr.
Lewis stressed a citizen's obligation to the community and likened the
Herndon Elementary School PTA to the President's theme of building
bridges to the 21st century. He noted the PTA is about building a
community context around the school and its students. He then outlined
10 guiding principles that direct the PTA's decisionmaking.]
The President. I would just like to say a couple of things and ask
you one question. First of all, I want to thank you for your work with
the Cities in Schools program. I brought
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it to Arkansas with Bill Milliken probably 15 years ago, and that's a
long time ago. Secondly, I want to thank you for your work in the PTA
and as a father who used to be an active participant in all our school
events, I think it's a good thing to have men as well as women be
present. And I think that's good.
How many members does your PTA have? How many parent members?
Mr. Lewis. Last year, 47 percent of the parent population of Herndon
Elementary School were members of the PTA. This year, under the able
leadership of Mary Mann, who is our vice president for membership, we
expect to go to scale--100 percent. [Laughter]
The President. I'd say that's pretty good.
Ms. Mann. We think big here.
The President. Well, Mr. Superintendent, are all your schools like
this? [Laughter]
[Superintendent Domenech welcomed the President and said the county has
the Nation's 12th largest and best school system in America. He
attributed the success to dedicated staff and community and to the
diversity of the county's overall student body. He defined the
challenges that confront the county as providing more facilities to
handle overcrowding and obtaining better technology for the classroom.
He described a program called, ``Success by Eight,'' whereby all
students are expected to be able to read by the time they are 8 years
old. He stressed the need for smaller class sizes to achieve that goal
and expressed hope for assistance from the President.]
The President. Well, let me say, I think this is a truly
extraordinary school district. And I have done my part to promote you,
you know, around the country. [Laughter] I always talk about what an
amazing school district this is. Some of your schools, particular
schools, are as diverse as any in America and a stunning array of people
coming from different places. So I'm very impressed, and I thank you for
what you're doing.
I wonder if--Secretary Riley, would you like to say anything before
I talk a little bit about the congressional agenda?
[Secretary Riley announced the availability within days of guidebooks on
early warning signals to help detect school violence before it takes
place. He then commended the members of the roundtable for their
participation in the discussion.]
The President. Didn't they do a great job?
[Applause]
[At this point, Secretary Riley introduced the President.]
The President. The way I was prepared for this, I was supposed to go
up there to the podium and give a little talk, and it's way too past
that. [Laughter] We've had too much fun. But what I would like to do is
to outline to you--there are six things that the Congress should pass
that are in my budget that don't break the balanced budget, that are in
our balanced budget, that they can pass or not pass in the next few days
that I think would really help our children a lot. Five of them bear
directly on our schools, one indirectly.
But I'd like to just mention them so you would know, because I would
like to see them get broad bipartisan support . I don't really believe
we're best served when education is a partisan issue. I think we're best
served when it's an American issue that crosses party lines.
First of all, I have given Congress a plan for smaller classes,
better-trained teachers, and more modern schools. Let's begin with the
teacher shortage. You know what's acute here; it is profound in many
places. Now, let me say one other word of introduction. There has been
what I consider to be a legitimate question raised of me by many Members
of Congress who say, ``Well, now, look Mr. President, you're trying to
get the Federal Government into financing things that the Federal
Government has never before financed. We've never been into building or
repairing schools, for example--there are many States in this country
where the States don't even do that, where it all has to be done at the
local level--or putting 100,000 teachers out there for smaller classes
in the early grades.''
My answer is as follows: Number one, it's hard to think of a more
important national issue. Number two, I'm not doing anything to
interfere with the local direction of the
[[Page 1674]]
schools or the States' constitutional responsibility to set the
framework of public education. And number three, in some places like
this district, the level of growth, and in other places the level of
poverty, make it simply inconceivable that they can achieve these
objectives otherwise.
So I think if we have the money, this is what we ought to do. But I
want to prepare you in case any of you feel moved by the spirit to call
or write your Congressman or Senator. [Laughter] There is a legitimate
historic pattern here where they'll say, ``Well, you know, President
Clinton's got a lot of energy, but he may have gone too far this time
because the Federal Government's never done this.'' There is a reason
we're doing it now. There's a reason we're doing it now. We have to
prove that our elementary and secondary schools can be uniformly as
excellent as our colleges and universities are and give all of our kids
world-class education. And unless we do this, I am convinced there won't
be the resources out there to get the job done.
So let me say first of all, the teacher shortage. I've asked
Congress to pass a plan to help school districts hire 100,000 new
teachers, all trained, tested, and certified by State education
authorities, targeted to smaller classes in the early grades. Again,
where all the research shows, there are permanent gains if kids get the
kind of individual attention they need in the early grades.
I've also asked them to help me support better teacher training
programs not directed by Washington, those things that all of you know
work, all educators know work. There is not today in my opinion a
sufficient commitment to helping teachers continue to improve their
skills, upgrade their skills, work with other teachers, to have the time
necessary to try to continue to improve, to avoid burnout under all the
pressures that they're under. When I go out and talk to educators,
there's really a lot of support for increased investment in teacher
training. So I hope that Congress will fully fund this class size
reduction program. It would get us down to an average of 18 children per
class once we do it.
The second problem is, it's hard to have a small class without a
classroom. [Laughter] What did you call them, learning cottages?
Learning cottages. That sounds like someplace you're sent when you
misbehave--[laughter]--learning cottages. Anyway, so I have also
presented a plan to help to modernize or build new, 5,000 schools. Next
Tuesday, when I get back from my trip, the Secretary and I and others
are going to hold school modernization days all across America to
highlight our proposal which would provide tax credit to build or
modernize or rebuild 5,000 public schools.
I have been to schools in this country where whole floors were
closed because they were so old. But they're wonderful buildings.
Structurally, no one could afford to build such buildings today because
of the cost of construction. But if you go to an inner-city school, for
example, think of what message it gives a 7-year-old child to walk up
the steps of a school where the paint's peeling off and the windows are
broken. Think of the message you're sending your child--you want to say,
``Oh, every child is a treasure,'' all these things that your PTA
president said; I believe every one of them. But sometimes, the actions
speak louder than words. You can tell those children that, but if they
have to keep walking up steps into broken-down buildings, do they really
think we believe it?
The other day, I was in Philadelphia in a school--the average school
building, the average age of school buildings in Philadelphia is 65
years. That's the average age. Now, the good news is, those structures,
by and large, are magnificent. The bad news is, a whole lot of them are
in terrible shape, and I think it's a worthy investment. I think it's a
worthy investment of our money.
So, we want to give fast-growing districts like this one and
districts with good structures but old, run-down buildings the chance
they need to go forward. So that's the first: more teachers for smaller
classes and more classes.
Second, we want to fully fund my plan to equip our Nation's
classrooms with computers and cutting-edge educational software and to
train teachers to be there to make sure that the technology is properly
used. I want to hook up every classroom and library in the entire
country to the Internet by the year 2000 and make sure that the software
[[Page 1675]]
is good and that the teachers are trained to make the most of it. And we
have to help you do that. You shouldn't have to fully fund that.
Third, I want to strengthen the charter school movement. There are
some school districts that have been greatly advanced by letting
teachers and others get together and start new schools within the
framework of the school district where the whole district's not
reforming, but they want to try something new. We've got now about
almost 1,000 of those schools out there. When I became President, there
was only one in the whole country. When I was talking about it in 1992,
I might have been trying to explain the theory of relativity. Everybody
thought I was nuts. [Laughter] But now, first we had one, now we've got
nearly 1,000, and if my budget passes, we'll have 3,000 funded by the
year 2000.
Fourth, I want to continue to open the doors of college to all
Americans who will work for it by reauthorizing the Higher Education
Act. Now, that doesn't mean anything, so let me tell you what that
means, that reauthorization. [Laughter]
This legislation will help more children reach their potential by
improving teacher education. It will help struggling communities to hire
35,000 well-qualified teachers. It will expand mentoring programs,
something that you've already said is important to you. It will reduce
interest rates on student loans. It will extend Pell grants and the
Federal work-study program. We've taken it from 700,000 work-study
positions to a million in 3 years. So these things are very important.
You know, we have provided for lower interest rates on student
loans, better repayment, 300,000 more work-study slots, and now tax
credits worth about $1,500 a year for the first 2 years of college, and
then for junior and senior year and graduate school. I am determined
that when I leave office, no American will ever, ever walk away from
college because of the cost. We can open the doors of college to
everybody who is qualified, and it's important.
Fifth, let's go back to what we were talking about on reading. We
want to pass a bipartisan early literacy bill to help to train teachers
and mobilize an army of volunteer tutors, because as I said, we already
have 1,000 colleges participating in this program. And I think it's
very, very important.
Sixth, we have a general program to strengthen our schools that
would expand Head Start, strengthen after-school programs for hundreds
of thousands of children. This is a huge deal in areas with a lot of
juvenile crime, with a lot of dangerous streets, with a lot of gangs.
These after-school programs and summer school programs have dramatically
reduced student problems while increasing student achievement, and I
think that's very, very important.
We have a special initiative aimed at Hispanic young people because
the school dropout rate is still much higher for Hispanics than for any
other group, largely because of language barriers and economic problems.
And we also have in this package program I just mentioned our safe and
drug-free schools program. We've tried to take the initiatives that we
know work in schools like this one and make sure they are in every
single school in America.
Now, the bill that the House Republican majority has proposed falls
short of these goals in every single one of these areas. But it's not
too late. The bill has to be considered in the Senate; then both the
Senate and the House must vote on it. So I would implore you, without
regard to your political party, just to contact your Members of
Congress, your Senators, and ask them to support this agenda. We have
the money.
We have worked hard to balance the budget. We've worked hard to show
fiscal discipline, to get the economy going again. There is no more
important area in which to spend the money now that we have it, and so I
hope you will help us to do that.
Let me just say one final thing. The Senate tomorrow takes up the
summer jobs program. Now, that's not for this summer, but--the one we
just passed--but for the summer about to come. It provides more than
500,000 young people a chance to work. It is a godsend to this country.
And because of the funding--Federal-funded summer jobs program--we have
a lot of places which we are able then to go out and get other
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people to put up money to expand the program. For reasons I do not
understand, the House committee wants to disband it, and I think it
would be a disastrous error.
It comes up in the Senate tomorrow, and again, this is fundamentally
an education issue, because if kids get in trouble over the summer or
they have problems and they don't have something to do or if they need
the money and they can't earn it, it increases the chances that they'll
drop out. So I hope that you will also support the summer jobs program.
The Senate is taking it up quite soon. I believe the Senate, across
party lines, will vote to extend it, but we need help.
So I just wanted to close by trying to close this circle here. We
started in this roundtable talking about what you are doing to give to
children in your charge the future they deserve and a future America
desperately needs for them to have. But we think we have a role here if
we're going to build those bridges to the 21st century. And I've done my
best to define that role based on 20 years now of working with people in
education. I think it's a good agenda. Secretary Riley and I, ourselves,
started working together almost 20 years ago on public education. I
guess next year will be our 20th anniversary of working together on
these things when we were young Governors.
Other Popular 1998 Presidential Documents Documents:
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