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Originally Processed With FOIA(s): FOIA Number: S FOIA MARKER This is not a textual record. This is used as an administrative marker by the George Bush Presidential Library Staff. Record Group/Collection: George H.W. Bush Presidential Records Collection/Office of Origin: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Davis, Mark, Files Subseries: Subject File, 1989-1991 OA/ID Number: 13869 Folder ID Number: 13869-007 Folder Title: Community Colleges, 3/30/89 [2] Stack: Row: Section: Shelf: Position: G 19 2 6 2 Springs mills first to join literacy drive By THOM FLADUNG State Business Writer South Carolina's Initial battle in the war to improve its workers' reading and writing skills will be waged in some of the textile mills of Springs Industries Inc. About 45 different companies operate some sort of workplace program for literacy, according to the S.C. Department of Education. But Springs is the first to begin a program under Gov. Carroll Campbell's "Initia- tive for Work Force Excellence" that is designed to bring together the different state agencies concerned with illiteracy. Gov. Carroll Campbell in a release Tuesday called Springs' announcement "a precedent-setting day for South Carolina." The state literacy program will be paid for immediately by an $800,000 grant Campbell has autho- rized under the Job Training Part- nership Act, a federal economic as- sistance program. In addition, Campbell is seeking $1 million in next year's state budget. State officials estimate 16 per- cent of the South Carolina work- force - 307,000 employees - have eight years or less of school. Many more are "functionally illiterate,' Campbell unable to perform the basic skills necessary to advance in the working world or adjust to technological changes, the officials said. Illiteracy translates into unemployment, lower sala- ries for those who do work, and additional barriers to the state attracting new industry, state officials said. In a recent national study, South Carolina ranked 40th in the nation with an adult illiteracy rate of .15 percent, according to The Corporation for Economic Development Springs, with 24 plants and more than 17,000 em- ployees in South Carolina, already has a pilot program for workplace literacy that involves 50 people at a plant called the Lancaster complex, said Springs spokesman Bob Thompson. That program will be expanded to include the Kath- erine and Eureka plants in Chester and the White plant in Fort Mill - not coincidentally, all plants that soon will receive a major equipment update, Walter Y. Elisha, Springs chairman, said. Eventually, the program will include all Springs plants in South Carolina and perhaps company plants outside the state, Thompson said. As is outlined in Campbell's plan, the Springs pro- gram will concentrate on training very specifically for workplace skills, rather than general literacy instruction. The state's adult Ilteracy training has been available in various forms from the S.C. Department of Education, the South Carolina Literacy Association, local literacy councils and the state technical college system. It has been Campbell's contention, however, that the 5/18/88 The system is lacking coordination and needs more direct contact with the workplace. Under Campbell's plan, "employer round tables" with leaders from various businesses will be set up. in each county. Each round table will then have a "work- force specialist" from a technical college who will link employers with literacy services. Employers will work with the round tables and spe- clalist to draw up a specific training plan. Campbell said he would announce later this week the 300 business people who will serve on the round tables, 6-2-88 Survival training PRIVATE industry, realizing Gov. Carroll Campbell, who that an educated work force is es- quite correctly has given high pri- sential to economic development ority to literacy training, helped of the state, gave strong support to launch this program with some the Education Improvement Act, federal funds and expects it to which was designed to strengthen spread to other companies that the public schools. have educationally impaired se- But that deals with the needs of nior workers. future workers. In a state where The participating industries one worker in five over the age of and the state's 16 technical col- 18 has nine years of schooling or leges will pay for much of the in- less, the present work force pre- structional materials, and the sents problems that will get worse training will be provided by pro- if not addressed. fessional adult education teachers. "Many of our people who have At Springs, there will be two hours been the most loyal and productive of instruction each week. The com- over the decades," said Springs In- pany will pay regular wages for dustries Chairman Walter Y: Eli- one hour and workers are asked to sha, "suddenly find they lack the give the other out of their free skills to cope with electronic con- time - a wise investment on the trols and computer read-outs." part of both But Springs has launched an in- "If we can get it across to the house literacy program to give people that there is a direct corre- them the basic reading ability lation between education and their needed to handle the vast changes productivity, we can get more par- taking place in modern industry. ticipation," said Governor For their sake, the initiative is a Campbell. godsend," Mr. Elisha said. Spring Industries, a forward- A godsend indeed. It would be a looking, home-grown company shame to allow people willing to with headquarters in Fort Mill, is work hard to be cast out at mid- the state's largest employer. It is career, the victims of the very the logical firm to take the lead in modernization that industry, par- this important effort. Others ticularly the textile industry, should hasten to follow its needs to survive. example. Program Launched To Improve Workers' Reading, Math Skills CHAR OBS 5/18/88 By LINDA BROWN Rock HE Bureau Improving the quality of the state's work force by improving workers' reading and math skills is the goal behind a program an- nounced Tuesday by Gov. Carroll Campbell and Walter Elisha, Springs Industries chairman and chief executive officer. At a morning news conference at York Technical College at- tended by some 90 business and literacy officials, Campbell, Elisha and college President Baxter Hood revealed details of the program. It formally sets in motion a literacy initiative announced by Campbell during his state of the state address in January. The program announced Tues- day will target the thousands of BOB LEVERONE/Staff South Carolinians working in plants and factories who lack basic Gov. Carroll Campbell: "These reading skills and thus are held are the people who have to back from advancing in their jobs. have their basic skills raised in Starting at Springs, it will be order to compete.' expanded to other companies across the state. grant Campbell has authorized un- "These are the people who have der the Job Training Partnership to have their basic skills raised in Act, a federal economic assistance order to compete," Campbell said. program. In addition, he is seeking "Because of all these things, the $1 million in next year's state initiative for work force excellence budget. was born It also is good busi- ness when you have good workers, In the program. a work force to help them attain the skills to specialist is assigned to each of the help you stay in business." 16 technical colleges in the state, said Mona Baker, work force spe- Added Elisha, "Adult illiteracy cialist for York Tech who handles is a major challenge in our state. York, Chester and Lancaster coun- It's something that's easy to look ties. Each local specialist works over. but it's a major challenge." with a group of business leaders to "It's rat just a matter of teach- help develop the program. ing people to read." Elisha added, noting that the project will help Volunteers and workers from workers gain more job opportuni- the technical colleges and commu- ties. nity literacy groups review job manuals and the reading level re- Hood said industry is undergo- quired to use the manuals. Offi- ing technological changes and cials then try to develop and initi- many current workers do not have ate a program that meets the needs the educational background or of people at the site. technical skills needed to work in a highly technical environment. The workers use a combination "In fact, it has been found that of methods, including videos, one-third of the current work force computers and books to teach par- does not have the equivalent of a ticipants, said JoAnn Gardiner, fifth-grade education,' Hood said. general education coordinator at York Tech. Springs has had a test program for about 50 employees in the The type of program and how engineering department of its Lan- long it lasts are tailored to the caster complex since early April. It needs of individual businesses. pians to expand the project to its They won't focus on general liter- Katherine and Eureka-plants in acy training. Chester and the White Plant in Fort Mill between June and Sep- "We don't have time to edu- tember. cate." said Jim Godwin, director for work force excellence in the The textile products company governor's office. "We have time will expand the program to 20 sites to train, but we don't have time to in South Carolina, employing educate.' 17,000 people. Immediate funding for the pro- The Associated Press contributed gram will come from an $800,000 to this article. Springs mills first to join Sinh literacy drive STATE 5/18/83 By THOM FLADUNG State Business Writer South Carolina's initial battle in the war to improve its workers' reading and writing skills will be waged in some of the textile mills of Springs Industries Inc. About 45 different companies operate some sort of workplace program for literacy, according to the S.C. Department of Education. But Springs is the first to begin. a program under Gov. Carroll Campbell's 'Initia tive for Work Force Excellence" that is designed to bring together the different state agencies concerned with illiteracy. Gov. Carroll Campbell in a release Tuesday called Springs' announcement "a precedent-setting day for. South Carolina. The state literacy program will be paid for immediately by an $800,000 grant Campbell has autho- rized under the Job Training Part- nership Act. a federal economic as- sistance program. In addition, Campbell is seeking $1 million in next year's state budget. State officials estimate 16 per- cent of the South Carolina work- force - 307,000 employees - have eight years or less of school. Many more are "functionally illiterate, Campbell unable to perform the basic skills necessary to advance in the working world or adjust to technological changes, the officials said. Illiteracy translates into unemployment. lower sala- ries for those who do work. and additional barriers to the state attracting new industry. state officials said. In a recent national study. South Carolina ranked. 40th in the nation with an adult illiteracy rate of 15 percent. according to The Corporation for Economic Development. Springs, with 24 plants and more than 17,000 em- ployees in South Carolina. already has a pilot program. for workplace literacy that involves 50 people at a plant called the Lancaster complex. said Springs spokesman Bob Thompson. That program will be expanded to include the Kath- erine and Eureka plants in Chester and the White plant in Fort Mill - not coincidentally. all plants that soon will receive a major equipment update, Walter Y. Elisha, Springs chairman, said. Eventually. the program will include all Springs plants in South Carolina and perhaps company plants outside the state, Thompson said. As is outlined in Campbell's plan. the Springs pro- gram will concentrate on training very specifically for workplace skills, rather than general literacy instruction." The state's adult literacy training has been available in various forms from the S.C. Department of Education. the South Carolina Literacy Association, local literacy councils and the state technical college system. It has been Campbell's contention. however, that the system is lacking coordination and needs more direct contact with the workplace. Under Campbell's plan. "employer round tables with leaders from various businesses will be set up in each county. Each round table will then have a "work- force specialist" from a technical college who will link employers with literacy services. Employers will work with the round tables and spe- cialist to draw up a specific training plan. Campbell said he would announce later this week the 300 business people who will serve on the round tables. Campbell To Help Launch Literacy Program Charlote will be used in other areas of the state, Hood Gov. Carroll Campbell and Springs Industries said. "That's the reason the governor is coming." chairman and chief executive officer Walter Elisha Officials will not divulge details, but the pro- will help unveil what is being billed as a major gram will reportedly involve a cooperative effort literacy program at a news conference this morn- between York Tech and Springs Industries involv- ing at York Technical College: ing literacy training. Campbell, Elisha and York Technical College The program is part of the Governor's Initiative President Baxter Hood planned the news confer- Work Force Excellence, initiated when Camp- ence for 10 a.m. in Building A, Room 217, at York on bell entered office in January 1987, to improve the Tech. quality of the state's work force. - Linda Brown Campbell Elisha "It's going to be a model concept that they hope 6.0 Staffing 6.1 The Grantee will sub-contract with each technical college for work force specialists and support staff. These staff will be responsible for the local Initiative activities described in this work statement. 7.0 Contractor Responsibilities in Local Areas 7.1 The work force specialist will develop assessments of basic skills needs of the area by gathering information from the Employment Security Commission, State Development Board, local businesses and basic skills providers to - identify current and future employment demands; - identify specific industries and employers within the area and their current and future basic skills needs; - identify emerging skills requirements based on projected needs. 7.2 The work force specialist will develop strategies and programs to meet the employers needs identified in 7.1. The work force specialist will coordinate the needs of employers with the basic skills providers so that training/educational opportunities can be made available whenever possible through existing programs. The work force specialist will be responsible for ensuring the development of curricula that provides basic skills training through job specific programs. 7.3 The work force specialist will establish a basic skills provider team for the area. The purpose of the provider team will be the improvement of services and better utilization of community and state resources. The work force specialist must ensure that the team is comprised of representatives for adult education, the local literacy council and technical college developmental education at a minimum. The work force specialist will coordinate, schedule, convene and preside over regular team meetings. The work force specialist will request the team to participate in the development of workplace programs and work force relevant program strategies. The work force specialist will gather data from the basic skills providers that details program elements, capacities, budget, restrictions and capabilities of these programs. The work force specialist will use the above-mentioned data to assess and evaluate the ability of the providers to respond to the Initiative for Work Force Excellence programs. The work force specialist will present this provider data and employment data to the business round table for their use. 7.4 The work force specialist will schedule meetings with basic skills providers, Employment Security Commission and employers to address the best method to develop and implement a one-stop referral system for job applicants who fail initial employment tests. The work force specialist and this group will develop plans for the evaluation of the effectiveness of this model. 7.5 The work force specialist will work with the Initiative office to develop and implement program evaluation procedures. These procedures will be used to evaluate each Work Force Initiative activity. These procedures will focus on: - basic skills gains and wage increases made by employers as a result of program participation; - employer objectives/benefits; - overall effectiveness by area and for specific communities within the service area. The work force specialists will meet the deadlines for activities outlined in this statement of work. 8.0 Business Round Tables 8.1 The work force specialist will be responsible for planning, scheduling, convening and reporting meetings of the business round table(s) in their area. The work force specialist will research and assemble data or other information as requested by the round table. The work force specialist will work in a similar fashion with any sub-committees appointed by the round table. The work force specialist will accept instructions from the round table and perform such tasks as are required to assist the round table in fulfilling their responsibilities as outlined in Secton 2. 8.2 The round tables will meet the deadlines for activities outlined in this statement of work. 9.0 Responsibilities of the Work Force Specialist to the State Initiative for Work Force Excellence 9.1 The work force specialist will report all activities, performance and budget data to the Grantee on a monthly basis. The work force specialist will report round table activities to the Grantee. 9.2 The work force specialist will accept and conform to the Initiative for Work Force Excellence performance standards listed in Section 5.0. The work force specialist will participate in the Initiative for Work Force Excellence scheduled training and program activities. The work force specialist will accept instructions and reporting requirements as required by the Grantee. The work force specialists will coordinate activities within their area with other work force specialists and the Initiative for Work Force Excellence. DARRY CARMIENA 732-2873 Assess local lalor level well. (Trustees) no lawminds. Problem - Don't have x such a program. Ony 1946 Tuman Comminor report, pheromion of ' G05/'70's cutting / issue To Junior + College spread Came along after G.S. - programs- out in T.HETII, Adult Ed, Voc ED, PellCeants They love (2+2 ARTICULATION ) Juin t sea contume of J-S h.s. + 2 YRS Bill still in O.M.B. junior Clud w/ O.M.B. 80 332 x ~ Buts & 14 Lolley i Mcl- Sunior Andimal E Illu brown atreet SW two maldang I mg massay for community planis wagnay ₹ ) purals ama escows Dural count 050 03-306 03 stat FREE O THE iss A. "national resource" B. Lust 3 STATE THE STATE Stephanie /3/89 DAle PARnell 2,000 pm MRS.Bush people Panell C - HOUR before, MARTIN + Campbell "Eco. Develop" in STATES - Jim BRARY (gives) handiciapped AWARD. - Unique to United StAtes -45% Black in higher ed in Comt JR Colleges - 53% Hispanics - 51% FREShmAn in 4 yR PROGRAM START in C. + j. C. / 55% women Biz partnership - " Employer / CollEGE PARTNERSHIP. " HElping to builD AND STREngthen community - 1) TECH. ED. / HELP DEVELOP wor Kfonce 2) Get people into 4-yrcollege 3) Community fits of. or excellence. literacy- - Hany Tumar - Who lest Mrs. Burh more than any sured single puron on OMB. - no BUSA initiatives on junior + com. CAN'T USE PEll & GSL/ basedon how many loans taken. 5.3 million people college credit some at com. colleges. 4.9 million non aedit about ed. 10.2 taking one or more classes in come. tech. etc. Two CAROLINAS: DON'TSAY "junior" colleges. Bonnie DARMY 3/23/89 Guitow [Communty - One thing come colleges use well. Colleges - Altenatine Techner PRob. never whed at themselves at allendi Alway use the them. Utilizing expective- Teacher Centification, and A extend what you are Day dom to the elemetary and secondary level. 1pm m. 1pm. His General Session #3 1989 AACJC Convention - March 30, 1989 International Ballroom - Washington Hilton Hotel Washington, DC Presidents Academy Luncheon Tentative Program Outline Program Presiding Jess H. Parrish, Chair, Presidents Academy and President, Midland College, 12:15 p.m. Call to Order Intro/Headtable 12:20 p.m. Greetings Richard J. Ernst, President, Northern Virginia Community College 12:21 p.m. Invocation Lex D. Walters, Immediate Past Chair, Presidents Academy and President, Piedmont Technical College, SC 12:22 p.m. Lunch 1:05 p.m. Intro/Mrs. Bush Jess Parrish 1:07 p.m. Special Greetings Mrs. George Bush 1:12 p.m. Recognition of Mrs. George Bush and Retiring Chief Bill F. Stewart, Chair-Elect, Presidents Executive Officers Academy and Chancellor, State Center Community College District, CA (Stewart will read names; Mrs. Bush will present certificates to each retiree; Stewart will present mug to retiree's spouse; photographer will take photo) 1:35 p.m. Presentation of Dale Parnell, AACJC President Truman Award to Mrs. Bush 1:37 p.m. Acceptance Mrs. George Bush 1:38 p.m. Introduction of David Ponitz, Chair, AACJC Board of President Bush Directors and President, Sinclair Community College, OH 1:40 p.m. Remarks George Bush, President, United States of America 1:50 p.m. Drawing Acknowledgments Announcements 2:10 p.m. Adjournment OPD 3/22 Investing in the Future: Competitiveness, Education and the Role of Junior Colleges I. Competitiveness and Education 1. One of the keys to our being competitive in world markets is an adaptable and well-trained work force. 2. Appropriate training and retraining is essential to a flexible work force. 3. Excellence in education is critical at all levels, but at a minimum, we need to assure that the basic work force has the education it needs to keep America competitive. 4. With the increasing skill requirements placed on our Many prople ven capate to correte n.Buinm work force today -- those entering it and those already in it -- junior colleges can serve as a "rapid cannot skills. count on them alone stroy morkforce deployment resource for competitiveness. II. The Basic Work Force 1. America leads the world in number of Nobel winners -- scientists, economists, etc. 2. Very important that we continue to invest in basic research: research that opens new frontiers of knowledge an understanding. We have proposed increased funding for NSF, NIH, etc. 3. That will give us continued excellence in fundamental research, and provide opportunities for advancing our scientific knowledge and capacities of American scientists, but 4. What about our basic work force and are we truly competitive there? 5. Answer: No. (Cite statistics about U.S. /Japan literacy, etc. Job requirements for the future, etc.) 6. We must do better -- indeed we need to insist on illitifuning excellence throughout all of our educational institutions -- including junior and community colleges -- if we are to be competitive. EDMAN 2 PHELPS it is III. Role of the Junior College OR, 1. Introduction to higher education -- as the starting gate for four years of higher education. (Cite statistics of continued education.) 2. Remediation: literacy, etc. 3. Work force training/vocational education: O partnerships with local business by producing workers with the skills they need: retraining for new roles and or/specialty training; skills are being updated and upgraded; partnerships with state economic development agencies to train workers for arriving new businesses; O lifelong learning: skills, cultural, literacy, etc 4. Access for older citizens, women, minorities; these groups are important segments for meeting the growing labor force needs of the nation; junior colleges are educating these groups. 5. This is a vitally important role - America needs you to do your job well. IV. Bush Principles and Junior Colleges 1. Excellence at the community college/junior college level is critical to competitiveness. 2. Community colleges contribute to the diversity of Flexibility educational choice -- for a wide range of students -- Pana from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses not offered in their high school; to low-income students who cannot afford to leave their community to bint obtain higher education; to older individuals who are returning to school to round out their education. 3. Junior colleges are a ready resource for those who need help -- provide access to higher education for those who might otherwise go without -- minorities, women, low-income. 4. Accountability: junior colleges have a visible presence in the community -- if you are not producing, the businesses in your city know it, as do your students, as does the state university which may take your graduates. V. What does George Bush ask of America's Junior Colleges. 1. Help us develop a world-class work force. 2. Consider yourself a "rapid deployment resource for competitiveness, providing now the skills which are needed in the workplace today. Even as we work now to improve the education of those who will graduate in the year 2000, we must turn to you to help us with our immediate needs. 3. Work with local businesses -- employers, etc. -- marry education and the skills needed. As you ARE Doing 4. Help your students, and communities lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. Each of us knows the potential for the lifelong influence of an outstanding teacher who helped us develop a sense of our own potential. Your institutions are resources not only for those who pass through your classrooms, but for those who live in your city, who garner a sense of community and local character by virtue of the resources you provide. 3/22/89 *6429* ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ASSOCIATIONS, 18th Edition - 1984 Page 584 technologists so that government, science, and industry will be advised of education's present and future requirements. Provides a forum where Maintains small resource center; provides information states Convention/ specialists in radio and television, data systems, and others can meet with Association. Meeting: annual in conjunction with the National Community Education representatives of education. Publications: (1) Monitor, monthly; (2) Data Base, irregular. Formerly: (1961) Joint Council on Educational Television; Joint Council on Educational Broadcasting. *6433* NATIONAL COMMUNITY EDUCATION ASSOCIATION (NCEA) 1201 16th St., N.W., Suite 305 Phone 466-3530 Washington, DC 20036 *6429 UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE DESIGNERS ASSOCIATION Dr. Paul W Trenser. Exec.Dir. (Communication) (UCDA) Founded: 1966. Regional Groups: 1. State Groups: E "Immunity school c/o Dale Rosenbach directors, principals, superintendents, professors, teachers students, lay University Communications people. To promote and expand community schood and to establish 271 Aylesworth Hall community schools as an integral part of the education Jan of every Colorado State Univ. Phone: (303) 491-6622 community. Serves as a clearinghouse for the exchange of we the sharing Ft. Collins, CO 80523 of efforts, and the promotion of programs. Offers consultations service, in- Dale Rosenbach, Pres. Founded: 1967. Members: 450. Colleges, universities, junior colleges, or service workshops and semiannual national workshops, training, and technical institutions which have an interest in visual communication design; regional conferences. Presents annual awards. Publications: (1) Community individuals who are involved, either in the active production of such Education Today, monthly; (2) Community Education Journa cuarterly; (3) communication design or as a teacher or student of these related disciplines. Job Information Service, quarterly; (4) Annual Report Membership Purposes are: to aid, assist, and educate members through various programs Directory, annual. Formerly: (1974) National Community School Education Association. Convention/Meeting: annual - 1983 Dec. 7-3 usa. OK. of education; to improve members' skills and techniques in communication and design, including but not exclusively graphics, photography, signage, films, and other related fields of communication design; to be concerned with the *6434* NATIONAL COUNCIL ON COMMUNITY SERVICES AND CONTINUING EDUCATION (NCCSCE) individual members' relationships within their own institutions as well as the Kellogg Community College larger communities in which they serve; to aid and assist members in their 450 North Ave. efforts to be professionals in their respective fields through various programs Phone: (616) 965-3931 Battle Creek, MI 49016 of education and information. Sponsors competitions; bestows awards. Gary ra Lemke, Pres. Maintains placement service. Committees: Competition; Education. Founded: 1969. Members: 1017. Community services and continuing Publications: Designer (newsletter), 3/year. Convention/Meeting: annual. education practitioners, primarily employed with community and junior colleges supporting life-long learning. Objectives are: to provide a national COMMUNICATION S unified voice to federal and state officials for community services and Also See Index continuing education in community and junior colleges; to foster individual institutional commitment to community services and continuing education; and to encourage the growth of community services and continuing education in *6430* ASSOCIATION FOR COMMUNITY BASED EDUCATION (ACBE) 1806 Vernon St., N.W. response to community needs, such as older adults, low-income groups, and Phone: (202) 462-6333 women preparing for new careers. Provides consulting services to members. Washington, DC 20009 Christofer Zachariadis, Exec.Dir. Founded: 1976. Members: 53. Staff: 9. Community-based, free standing Bestows awards. Publications: (1) Community Services Catalyst, quarterly; (2) Newsletter, quarterly; (3) Directory, semiannual; (4) Working Papers, alternative colleges providing educational opportunities to adults at the post- semiannual; also publishes monographs. Affiliated with: American Association secondary level; non-formal adult learning centers and community of Community and Junior Colleges. Convention/Meeting: annual conference development organizations that have an established educational or training - always October. 1983 Oct. 2-5, Orlando, FL; 1984 Ft. Worth, TX; 1985 component. Seeks to: promote the organization and development of Washington, DC. Also sponsors annual regional conferences, community-based, free standing educational institutions; encourage communication and coordination among members; and obtain direct funding for community-based educational institutions. Offers workshops on planning, *6435* AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR COLLEGES (AACJC) management, fundraising, self-evaluation, and program development. Provides National Center for Higher Education professional review and critique of member proposals. Has sponsored One Dupont Circle, No. 410 "minigrant" programs to assist general institutional improvement, to Phone: (202) 293-7050 Washington, DC 20036 document exemplary educational methods and approaches, to demonstrate Dale Parnell, Pres. new ideas and approaches and to provide seed money for pilot projects. Founded: 1920. Members: 1275. Community, junior and technical colleges Publications: (1) CBE Reports, biweekly and monthly editions; (2) Newsletter, (925); individual associates interested in community college development quarterly; (3) Annual Report; (4) Directory of Members, annual; also publishes (250); institutional associate members (100). Office of Federal Relations resource directories. Formerly: (1981) Clearinghouse for Community Based monitors federal educational programming and legislation. Maintains library of Free Standing Educational Institutions; (1982) Association for Community community, technical, and junior college catalogs; reference books; textbooks; Based Educational Institutions. Convention/Meeting: annual always last and journals. Compiles statistics. Programs: Community Organization Boards; weekend in October. Energy Communication; International Education; Small Business Administration; Telecommunications. Publications: (1) AACJC Letter, 26/ 6431* EDUCATIONAL CENTER FOR APPLIED EKISTICS (Community) year; (2) Community and Junior College Journal, 8/year; (3) Community, (ECAE) Junior, and Technical College Directory, annual; also publishes many booklets 229 Ponce de Leon Ave., N.E. and pamphlets for two-year college faculty and administrators. Formerly: Phone: (404) 897-1798 Atlanta, GA 30308 (1972) American Association of Junior Colleges. Convention/Meeting: Dr. Lorraine Wilson, Dir. Founded: 1977. Staff: 7. Concerned with generating awareness and interest annual 1984 Apr. 1-4, Washington, DC; 1985 Apr. 14-17, San Diego, CA. in ekistics, particularly among people engaged in education. (Ekistics is the science dealing with human settlements and drawing on the research and AMERICAN COLLEGES ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN IN COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR experience of professionals in various fields such as architecture, sociology, See Women and city planning.) Goals are: to provide educational resources to assist in the study, understanding, and application of ekistics; to extend applied ekistics to educators through the production and dissemination of educational materials *6436* ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRUSTEES (Community Colleges) (ACCT) and relevant research; to maintain an arena for cross-cultural exchange and 6928 Little River Tpke., Suite A collective global planning in the field; to provide a forum for meaningful Phone: (703) 941-0770 Annandale, VA 22003 dialogue on planned and alternative futures. Maintains Horizons School (multi- William H. Meardy, Exec.Dir. cultural demonstration school); offers seminars, symposia, technical Founded: 1969. Members: 680. Regional Groups: 5. Community college or assistance, and teacher education programs; acts as educational consultant. technical institute districts, or other accredited post-secondary educational Publications: Ekistical Education (newsletter), quarterly; also publishes institutions whose courses lead to degrees or objectives less than a educational materials, teachers' guides, audiovisual materials, and research baccalaureate degree, and educational institutions of other nations which are reports. considered as being post-secondary, but not baccalaureate. by that nation; any group of individuals or any single individual; individual lifetime members *6432* NATIONAL CENTER FOR COMMUNITY EDUCATION (NCCE) who have been so designated by the association. Objectives are: to unify 1017 Avon St. Phone: (313) 238-0463 trustees in order to give direction to the community college movement Flint, MI 48503 Duane R. Brown, Dir. through the development of resolutions and policies: to promote the Founded: 1968. Staff: 4. To provide short-term training workshops for philosophical concept of the community college and technical institute and the persons entering and/or working in the field of community education. Areas of elimination of all existing and potential barriers with regard to race, creed or concern include: community education, school advisory councils, group sex which may hinder development of the community college and technical facilitating, time and stress management, and decision-making through institute philosophy. Develops liaisons with other national and international problem-solving. Provides information and services to university centers and organizations concerned with the community college are technical institute state departments of education. Conducts workshops and makes referrals. movement; conducts seminars; sponsors Chief Executive Search Service, assisting boards of trustees in selection of a chief maintains MAR 23 '89 16:37 OIG PAGE. 02 Davis you droft TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES: I am pleased to transmit today for your immediate consideration and enactment the "Educational Excellence Act of 1989," a bill to provide incentives to attain a better-educated America. I believe that greater educational achievement promotes sustained economic growth, enhances the Nation's competitive position in world markets, increases productivity, and leads to higher incomes for everyone. The Nation must invest in its young people, giving them the knowledge, skills, and values to live productive lives. The "Educational Excellence Act of 1989" would move us toward this goal. The initiatives included in this bill embody several principles central to my Administration's policies on education. First, excellence and achievement in education should be recognized and rewarded. Second, federal dollars should help those most in need. Third, greater flexibility and choice in education-both parental choice in selecting schools for their children and local school systems' choice of teachers and principals--are essential. Finally, I support educational accountability, and toward this end, I am committed to measuring and rewarding progress toward quality education. This legislation builds on the accomplishments of the last Congress, which enacted into law the Augustus F. Hawkins-Robert T. Stafford Elementary and Secondary School Improvement Amendments of 1988. That law took significant steps toward improving elementary and secondary education by improving program accountability, reauthorizing the magnet school program and expanding parental choice, providing greater flexibility to local school districts in the implementation of bilingual education programs, enhancing parental involvement in programs for disadvantaged children, and stimulating education innovation and reform. The President's initiative complements in numerous ways the important work of the 100th Congress in pursuing educational excellence. The Educational Excellence Act of 1989 includes seven specific legislative initiatives aimed at fulfilling these important principles: 1) The Presidential Merit Schools program would reward public and private elementary and secondary schools that have made substantial progress in raising students' educational achievement, creating a safe and drug-free school environment, and reducing the dropout rate. This program would provide a powerful incentive for all schools to improve their educational performance. 2) A new Magnet Schools of Excellence program would support the establishment, expansion, or enhancement of magnet schools, without regard to the presence of desegregation plans in applicant districts. Magnet schools have been highly successful at increasing parental choice and improving educational quality. MAR 23 '89 16:38 OIG PAGE 03 Page 2 3) The Alternative Certification of Teachers and Principals program would assist States intersated in broadening the pool of talent from which to recruit teachers and principals. Funds would assist States to develop and implement, or expand and improve, flexible certification systems, 80 that talented professionals who have demonstrated their subject area competence or leadership qualities in fields outside education might be drawn into education. 4) President's Awards for Excellence in Education would be given to teachers in every State who meet the highest standards of excellence. Each award would be for $5,000. 5) Drug-Free Schools Urban Emergency Grants would provide special assistance to urban school districts that are disproportionately affected by drug trafficking and abuse. These funds would be used for a comprehensive range of services appropriate to the needs of individual communities. 6) A National Science Scholars program would provide scholarships to high school seniors who have excelled in the sciences and mathematics. These scholarships, of up to $10,000 a year, would recognize recipients' academic achievement and encourage them to continue their education in science, mathematics, and engineering. The President would select recipients after considering recommendations made by Senators and members of the House of Representatives. 7) I am proposing to provide additional endowment matching grants for Historically Black Colleges and Universities, institutions that occupy a unique position and have a major responsibility in the structure of American higher education. I urge the Congress to take prompt and favorable action on this legislation. Taken together, these seven initiatives, for which I have proposed adding $422.6 million to the 1990 budget, would help us advance toward the goal of a better-educated Nation. In addition to these initiatives, I have proposed a budget amendment for $13 million in new funds for experiments and data collection in support of education reform. I am also asking Congress to fund fully the authorization in the Stewart McKinney Homeless Assistance Act. For education, this means an additional $5.2 million. THE WHITE HOUSE MAR 23 '89 15:38 DIG PAGE. 04 draft THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary FOR RELEASE AT THE EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE ACT OF 1989 FACT SHEET The President outlined today a program for fostering excellence in education. The need for action is evident: o America is in an increasingly competitive world where investment in people, in human capital, is becoming a critical factor in a country's potential for economic growth and prosperity. o Many of our young people are performing well below their capacity and below the levels of young people in other countries in such important subjects as science and math. o Outstanding achievement by schools, teachers, and principals too often goes unrecognized and unrewarded. o Achieving excellence in education requiring high expectations, low dropout rates, and safe and drug-free schools. Parents lack adequate choice in the education of their children. Schools often find that 1t is difficult to hire capable teachers and administrators, even though many people possess outstanding subject matter knowledge and management skills. o Projections of the future indicate an increasing shortage of people with advanced training in science and mathematics. 0 Our country's historically black colleges and universities struggle to maintain their commitment to Black Americans. The Educational Excellence Act would authorize several initiatives designed to address these problems. / MAR 21 183 16:39 OIG PAGE. 05 -2- This legislation builds on the accomplishments of the last Congress, which snacted into law the Augustus F. Hawkins-Robert T. Stafford Elementary and Secondary School Improvement Amendments of 1988. That law took significant steps toward improving elementary and secondary education by improving program accountability, reauthorizing the magnet school program and expanding parental choice, providing greater flexibility to local school districts in the implementation of billngual education programs, enhancing parental involvement in programs for disauvantaged children, and stimulating education innovation and reform. The President's initiative complements in numerous ways the important work of the 100th Congress in pursuing educational excellence. This legislation is based on the principles discussed in Building a Better America. These principles include: o Recognition of excellence -- Recognizing and rewarding our best schools and our best teachers will serve as an incentive for all schools, teachers, and students to improve their performance. o Addressing need -- This Administration believes that Federal dollars should assist those most in need. O Flexibilicy and choice -- Greater flexibility and choice in education - both parental choice in selecting schools for their children and local school systems' choice of teachers and principals -- are important to providing the means and incentives for achieving educational excellence. o Accountability -- The Administration supports objective measurement and reward of progress toward quality education. The Educational Excellence Act includes seven legislative initiatives aimed at fulfilling these important principles. Highlights of the individual initiatives follow. Presidential Merit Schools Program o The Presidential Merit Schools program would provide cash awards to public and private elementary and secondary schools that have made substantial progress in raising student educational achievement, creating a safe and drug-free school environment, and reducing the dropout rate. This program would provide a powerful incentive for all schools to improve the educational achievement of their students. Funding 0 The legislation would authorize $250 million for fiscal year 1990, increasing to $500 million by 1993. These funds would be allocated by formula to the States, with State allocations based on school-aged population and State shares of funding under the "Chapter 1" Basic Grants program. MAR 23 '89 16:39 01- PAGE.06 -3- o The amount of each merit award would depend on State-established criteria, including criteria related to the size of the school and the composition of the student body. Implementation o Presidential Merit Schools would be selected by the State, assisted by a special State Review Panel, using State and Federal criteria. These criteria would focus on schools' progress in improving students' educational performance, creating or maintaining a safe and drug-free environment, reducing the dropout rate, and other, State-determined, factors. States could also give special consideration to schools enrolling substantial numbers or proportions of children from low-income families. o A school selected as a Presidential Merit School would use its award for any purpose that furthers its educational program, including development or implementation of special educational programs, purchase of computers and other materials and equipment, and bonus payments to teachers and administrators. Private schools would be prohibited from using Presidential Merit Schools funds to provide religious instruction or for other sectarian purposes. o The bill would also prohibit the reduction of other Federal, State, or local support to a school because of its receipt of a Presidential Merit Schools award. Magnet Schools of Excellence Program o Currently, the Department of Education makes Magnet Schools Assistance grants to school systems undergoing court-ordered or voluntary desegregation. Because of the success of magnet schools in increasing parental choice and improving educational quality, the bill would create a Magnet Schools of Excellence program to support the establishment, expansion, or enhancement of magnet schools, without regard to the presence of desegregation plans. Funding o The bill would authorize $100 million for Magnet Schools of Excellence for fiscal year 1990 and eac: of the three succeeding fiscal years. Implementation o Local educational agencies (LEAS), intermediate educational agencies, or consortia of such agencied would apply directly to the Department for competitive grants. Applications would be selected for funding on the basis of the quality of the proposed project, the likelihood of its successful implementation, and the likelihood of its strengthening the educational program of the district or districts. MAR 23 '89 10:40 CIG PAGE. 07 -4- o The Department would encourage applications that recognize the potential of educationally disadvantaged children to benefit from magnet school programs and applications to establish, expand, or enhance magnet schools which enhance the diversity of educational offerings to students. o No magnet school could be supported under the program for more than two years, or if the award would result in segregation or impede the process of desagregation. Alternative Certification of Teachers and Principals Program o The bill would provide assistance to States interested in expanding the pool of talent from which to draw teachers and principals. Funds would support such activities as training, program development, and evaluation. The bill would provide incentives for States to develop, expand, or improve flexible certification systems designed to draw into education talented professionals with demonstrated subject area competence or leadership qualities. Funding o The legislation would authorize $25 million for fiscal year 1990 only, for one-time grants to the States. States would apply for the amount of funds they need or an amount that is proportional to their school-aged population, whichever is less; excess funds would be reallocated on the basis of demonstrated need. Implementation o Grants could support the design, development, implementation, testing, and evaluation of strategies for the alternative certification of teachers and principals, as well as training and recruitment activities. 0 States would be required to consult with teachers, principals, parents, and others in developing their applications. Subgrants to school districts, intermediate educational gencies, colleges and universities, and consortia of these agencies would be authorized. President's Awards for Excellence in Education Program o The success of American education depends heavily on the Nation's teachers. Because teachers who meet the highest standards of excellence deserve public recognition, respect, and appropriate financial rewards, our bill includes authorization for a new program of Presidential Awards for excellent public and private school teachers. The amount of each Presidential Award would be $5,000. Teachers receiving awards would be permitted to use their awards for any purpose. MAR 23 ' 89 16:40 1G FAGE. 08 -5- Funding 0 The bill would authorize $7.6 million for each of the fiscal years 1990 through 1993. Funds would be allocated to the States on the basis of the number of full-time equivalent public school teachers in each State. Implementation o In each State, winners of Presidential Awards would be selected by a Statewide panel, selected by the Governor, from nominations made by local educational agencies, public and private schools, parents, teachers, teacher associations, associations of parents and teachers, private businesses, business groups, and student groups. In making selections, the panel would use selection criteria developed by the State, subject to approval by the Secretary. O Each State would be permitted to use up to 5 percent of its allocation for administrative expenses, including the cost of convening the Statewide panel. National Science Scholare Program O The National Science Scholars program would encourage achievement in the sciences by providing scholarships to graduating high school students who have excelled in the sciences, and mathematics, and engineering. The scholarships would recognize the academic achievement of these students and would encourage them to continue their education in these academic areas at the postsecondary level. Funding o The bill would authorize $5 million for fiscal year 1990. The amount authorized would increase in increments of $5 million per year to a total authorization of $20 million for fiscal year 1993. These funding levels would ensure that the scholars would be supported throughout their undergraduate study and that a new group of 570 scholars would be selected each year. Implementation o National Science Scholars would receive up to $10,000 a year for each year of undergraduate education. Each State would nominate between four and ten students per congressional district to receive scholarships. The President would select a total of 570 scholars after considering the recommendations of an advisory board (30 scholarships) and the recommendations of Senators and Members of the House of Representatives (540 scholarships). The scholars would be nominated in accordance with specific academic achievement criteria that would be developed by the Secretary in consultation with a panel of experts in the sciences, mathematics, and engineering. MAR 23 '89 16:41 OIG PAGE.09 -6- Drug-Free Schools Urban Emergency Grants Program o Prevention and education programs are frequently inadequate in urban areas with the most severe drug problems; more concentrated and comprehensive approaches are required. The bill would amend the Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act of 1986 to authorize a program of "Urban Emergency Grants." Funding o The bill would authorize $25 million for each of the fiscal years 1990-1993 for Urban Emergency Grants. Implementation This amendment would authorize a small number of special, competitive grants to urban districts that have the most severe drug problems, so that these districts can develop and implement comprehensive approaches to solving those problems. Historically Black Colleges and Universities Program o Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) play a vital role in the American system of higher education. In the past, these institutions offered many Black Americans their only opportunity for a higher education. Today, HBCUs enrich the range of educational choice. These institutions enroll approximately 220,000 students. Many HBCUs are financially weaker than comparable institutions. This bill would strengthen HBCUs by providing additional support for endowment matching grants. Endowment building is an especially effective way to create financial strength and long-term financial security for HBCUs. Funding o The bill would provide ditional authorizations of $10 million for fiscal year 1990, $20 million for both fiscal year 1991 and fiscal year 1992 and $10 million for fiscal year 1993. Implementation Federal funds would be available to match private sector contributions to the school's endowment fund. Income from the endowment fund could be used to improve academic programs as well as administrative management. o All HBCUs currently eligable under Title III of the Higher Education Act of 1965 would be eligible to apply for grants. Burping 50 HEIN AACJC American Association of Community and Junior Colleges 1989 For A New Century D.C. March 23, 1989 To: Tony Benedi The Old Executive Office Building Room 182 From: Dale Parnell, President DD American Association of Community & Junior Colleges Re: Appearance of President and Mrs. Bush at the AACJC Convention on Thursday, March 30th, 1:00 p.m., Washington Hilton Hotel 1/ Thanks for your call that President Bush will be able to accompany Mrs. Bush to our convention luncheon meeting on next Thursday, March 30th that is great news and they will find a most friendly audience. 2/ The White House office for Mrs. Bush has all the information on the Harry S. Truman Distinguished Service Award (our highest honor). The award is given once each year to a person outside the ranks of higher education who best exemplifies our slogan of "Opportunity With Excellence." 3/ Enclosed is information about the March 30th luncheon meeting including: Tentative program outline and head table arrangements. Some notes for the remarks of Mrs. Bush. Some notes for the ten-minute speech of President Bush. Some facts about community, technical, and junior colleges. Some information about our employer/college partnership awards. National Center for Higher Education, One Dupont Circle NW. Suite 410. Washington. D.C 20036 (202)293-7050 Fax Number: (202)833 2467 RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:40AM ; 0333- 2024566218:# 1 732.3956 4608 MEMORANDUM OF CALL Previous editions usable TO: Freddie To YOU WERE CALLED BY- YOU WERE VISITED BY- : Stephanie Blessey OF (Organisation) white House K PLEASE PHONE FTS AUTOVON 456.7750 WILL CALL AGAIN IS WAITING TO SEE YOU RETURNED YOUR CALL WISHES AN APPOINTMENT MESSAGE 1 FACS # 456-6218 would like materal FACS ASAP RECEIVED N DATE TIME 63-110 ala NON 7540-00-534-4018 3/23 9:10 STANDARD FORM $3 (Rev. 8-81) *U.S.GPO:1965-0-461-274/20004 Prescribed by GSA FPMR (41 CFR) 101-11.6 FROM: FREDDIE LIEBERMANN us ED 732-3525 Photo Copy Preservation nov DI relecopier 1011, 0-20-09 9.40AM 0000 2024500210 2 20 PROGRAM DESCRIPTION PROGRAM NAME: BUSINESS AND INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION PROGRAM AUTHORIZING LEGISLATION: HIGHER EDUCATION ACT OF 1965, AS AMENDED. TITLE VI, PART B, SEC. 611 PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: of this program is to promote linkages between institutions activities. of higher The purpose and American businesses engaged in international economic education The of each project assisted under this Part is to enhance the appropriate international academic services programs to the business community that will enable it to expand its purpose of institutions of higher education, and to provide capacity to sell its goods and services outside the United States. ELIGIBILITY: Accredited institutions of higher education are eligible to apply. BUDGET: NEXT COMPETITION: FY 1988 CLOSING DATE: November 9, 1987 APPROPRIATION: FY 1988 $ 2,200,000 FY 1987: $ 2,200,000 NUMBER OF AWARDS: 35 AVERAGE AWARD: $ 54,000 TO: $ 120,000 RANGE OF GRANT AMOUNTS: $ 6,500 Photo Copy Preservation FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: INTERNATIONAL STUDIES BRANCH CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION OFFICE OF POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION ROOM 3054, ROB - 3 400 MARYLAND AVENUE, S.W. FY 1989 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20202 TELEPHONE NUMBER: (202) 732-3283 # 2,125,000 continuation awards #934,000 new awards #1,191,000 - included 5 to community college RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:41AM ; 0333- 2024566218:# 3 A <1 A APPENDIX A Y 1989 Business and International Education Program Funding Slate New Awards R NUMBER APPLICANT AVERAGE STATE SCORE AMOUNT REQUESTED AMOUNT P153A900 RECOMMENDED 68 U. of Miami FL 101 U. of Michigan MI 77 Bentley College MA 26 Normandale MN Comm. College 06 St. Louis MO Comm. College 47 SUNY-Binghamton NY 11 Harold IL Washington Coll. 73 North Seattle WA Comm College 95 U.of Utah UT 62 Williamsport PA Comm. College 69 Brandeis U. MA 109 SUNY-Brockport NY 38 Louisiana St. U. LA 88 SUNY-Albany NY photo 94 U. of Denver CO 03 St. Louis U. MO 55 Copy Present R 100% Southwestern CA Comm. College RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:42AM ; 0333-> 2024566218:# MEMORANDUM UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20202 TO: Kenneth D. Whitehead DATE: February 3, 1989 Assistant Secretary for Postsecondary Education THROUGH: Card Noel R. Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Higher Education Programs FROM: Ralph Hines of Acting Director, OIE SUBJECT: Request for Approval of Final Slate for Fiscal Year 1989 for the Business and International Education Program (CFDA No. 84.153) PROGRAM DESCRIPTION We hereby submit for your approval the final slate of 16 projects recommended for funding under the Business and International Education Program for Fiscal Year 1989 (Appendix A). This program is authorized under Part B, Title VI, of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended. The purpose of this program is to: 1. Increase and promote the Nation's capacity for international understanding and economic enterprise through the provision of suitable international education and training for business personnel in various stages of professional development. 2. Promote institutional and non-institutional educational and training activities that will contribute to the ability of United States business to prosper in an international economy. EVALUATION PROCESS In response to the solicitation for proposals published in the Federal Register, 110 applications were received. Seven applica- tions were rejected as technically ineligible, leaving 103 applications. to be reviewed by the panelists. In accordance with the terms of the Technical Evaluation Plan, the following review procedures were used: The applications were randomly divided for review, and subsequently evaluated by 15 field readers, convened in Washington, D.C. on December 12-16 and 19-23, 1988. The Photo Copy Preservation RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:42AM ; 0333-> 2024566218:# 5 -2- readers were divided into five sub-panels, with each sub-panel sting of three readers. Each eligible application was read and by one of these sub-panels. A normalization process, using the and Grants Service's standard deviation table, was then applied Nontracts the raw scores of each panelist, resulting in a computerized rank order listing of all applicants (Appendix B). RECOMMENDED FUNDING LEVELS AND DURATION OF AWARDS In our Closing Date Announcement, we indicated that approximately 16 projects might be funded in Fiscal Year 1989. Our budget allocation for this year is $2,125,000. of this total, $934,000 has been set aside for 15 non-competing continuation applications. This would permit us to fund the non-competing projects at an average cost of $62,267, approximately the same funding level. as last year. The final slate listing for these projects is due in the Office of the Assistant Secretary on April 10, 1989. The amount available for new awards, once $934,000 has been set aside, is $1,191,000. This amount will permit us to fund the 17 highest ranked applications at an average cost of $70,059. The actual dollar amount for each project will be determined during negotiations by the Grants Management staff. Appendix A lists the 17 recommended schools and two alternates in ranked order, as well as the dollar amounts requested by each of the applicants, and our proposed allocations. All of the applicants we propose to fund are recommended for two-year support. Where reduction in funds are recommended, these are proposed in cases where: 1. certain project components are not consonant with the intent of the legislation; and/or 2. funds requested were judged excessive in relation to the scope of the proposed project. Photo Copy Preservation RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:43AM ; 0333-> 2024566218:# 6 10 PROGRAM DESCRIPTION PROGRAM NAME: INSTITUTIONAL AID PROGRAMS: STRENGTHENING PROGRAM AUTHORIZING LEGISLATION: HIGHER EDUCATION ACT OF 1965 HIGHER EDUCATION AMENDMENTS OF 1986, TITLE III, PART A PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: The Strengthening Program assists eligible institutions of higher education to become self-sufficient by providing funds to improve and strengthen their academic quality, planning, management and fiscal capabilities. Planning grants, renewable 1-3 year development grants, and 4 and 6 year development grants are awarded to two and four year, public and private institutions of higher education to enable them to move toward self-sufficiency. Funds may be used for faculty development; funds and administrative management; development and improvement of academic programs; acquisition of equipment for use in strengthening funds management and academic programs; joint use of facilities, i.e., libraries and laboratories; and student services. ELIGIBILITY: Eligible institutions are institutions of higher education which (a) have at least 50 percent of the degree students receiving need-based assistance under Title IV of the Higher Education Act (other than loans for which an interest subsidy is paid) or a substantial percentage of students receiving Pell Grants; (b) have lower education and general expenditures than do similar institutions and provide an educational program which awards a degree; (c) be accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or association, or making reasonable progress toward such accreditation; (d) have satisfied both the "degree awarding" and "accreditation" requirement during the five academic years preceding the academic year for which it seeks assistance. Also included as eligible institutions are those: which have an enrollment of at least 60 percent American Indian, or 5 percent Alaskan Natives provided that these institutions meet the requirements of (a), (b), (c) and (d); Micronesian, Guamian, and Northern Marianian, provided these institutions meet the which have an enrollment of 5% Native Hawaiian, Asian American, American Samoan, requirements in (a) and (b) above. of #60 M appropriated. In the FY 1988, the set aside for 2-yr colleges was #51,001,316 New awpEds: planning grants 56 development grants New FY 89 applications not due until 4/27/89. Minimum of #51,400,000 of FY 89 # I is earmarked Photo Copy Preservation RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:44AM ; 0333-> 2024566218:# 7 11 BUDGET: NEXT COMPETITION: FY 1988 CLOSING DATE: April, 1988 APPROPRIATION: FY 1988: $ 60,060,500 (est.) FY 1987: $ 75,467,000 $ 23, 314 PLANNING $ 166,000 RENEWABLE 1-3 YEAR AVERAGE AWARD: $ 271,000 4 and 5 YEAR NUMBER OF AWARDS: - 284 RANGE OF GRANT AMOUNTS: $ 25,000 TO: $ 500,000 FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: DIVISION OF INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT OFFICE OF POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ROOM 3042, ROB-3 400 MARYLAND AVENUE, S.W WASHINGTON, D.C. 20202 TELEPHONE (202) 732-3314 Photo Copy Preservation RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:44AM ; 0333-> 2024566218:# 8 Lakwood community Gelege 3401 century Avenue white Bear Lahe, MN 55110 Extensity Service for honlestitional sand Students F487 89,014 FY88- 149,367 FY89. 79,648 Litte III and institutional foods are contened to provide comprehensive career, academic, and personal advising for currently enrolled students who are displays or underemployed workers, single parents, smd/or Southeast asians. Thervies are offered - at a site that is near where most of the students line pr work Coclege. include referrals for housing health, ratter them Sewies on the main campus of Lakewood Community and shild care needs, remediation and tutorials services John and Training (JTPA). available through the Holo Minnesota Department of Photo Copy Preservation RCV BY: XEROX lelecopier 7017, 3-20-00 3:40AM 9 PROGRAM DESCRIPTION PROGRAM NAME: ENDOWMENT CHALLENGE GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZING LEGISLATION: HIGHER EDUCATION ACT OF 1965, TITLE III, PART C PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: Under the Endowment education to enable them to establish or increase The endowment Federal Challenge Grant Program, grants are awarded to eligible institutions of higher must match the Federal grant funds that they receive. Institutions funds. Grantees institutional match are called the endowment fund corpus. period. grant and the and not spend endowment fund corpus for a 20-year grant for must When the invest grant expires, may the institution may use the endowment fund corpus any educational purpose. ELIGIBILITY: Any institution is any medical school that makes a substantial economically eligible to apply under Part A or Part B is eligible contribution to participate to in graduate this program, or postgraduate as medical opportunities for minorities and the disadvantaged. BUDGET: CLOSING DATE: June 9, 1988 (est.) NEXT COMPETITION: FY 1988 FY 1987: $19,785,000 APPROPRIATION: FY 1988 19,148,000 NUMBER OF AWARD$: 80 AVERAGE AWARD: $ 250,000 RANGE OF GRANT AMOUNTS: Small Grants $ 50,000 TO: $ 500,000 Large Grants Over $1.0 Milllion FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: DIVISION OF INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT OFFICE OF POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ROOM 3042 - ROB -3 400 MARYLAND AVENUE, S.W. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20202 TELEPHONE: (202) 732-3335 FY 89 appropriation 12.6 M funds not awarded yet minoto Copy Pressvation RCV BY: XEROX Telecopier 7017; 3-23-89 ; 9:46AM ; 0333-> 2024566218:#10 Endowment- Hinety- five (95) of the (193) institutions that have received Endownment Endowment grants on will since 1984 resenations are two year institutions. of the total amount granted on reserved ($83.4M), $30.3M went to 2 year institutions. no Copy Preservation 03 21 5.17133 OSERS 01 To: MARK DAVIS FROM: DARRY CARMiNE 732-2873 Subject: Community College Speech MAteriAl Please see PP8-14 - fox dommunity college background - Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:34 OSERS 03 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY LUR 10. AND ADULT EDUC A NON A 1411 REMARKS OF DR. BONNIE GUITON Assistant Secretary for Vocational & Adult Education U.S. Department of Education Association of Community College Trustees' 1989 National Legislative Seminar, Washington, D.C. February 28, 1989 Our topic today - global competition and its impact on the work force - has captured national interest in recent months. This interest has in turn caused many to focus on education. Consider these thoughts of President Bush's when he wrote in the November 1988 issue of Phi Delta Kappan, As we look to the 1990's, one thing is already clear, as a nation we will face unprecedented levels of global competition. Our rapidly changing, increasingly complex society will require a better educated work force if we Photo Copy Preser are to compete successfully with our economic and military rivals around the world. In outlining his priorities for education, President Bush said, We must encourage education that will prepare the students of the 1990's and beyond. Basic skills and a general education are crucial, but we also need an improved system of vocational-technical education. Our schools must work with business and industry to develop programs that reflect the labor market now and in the future. as variations of these words reverberate throughout the Country, business and industry has also voiced their concern for a more highly skilled work force. And I know that many of you here today have heard these concerns and have been actively involved with business and industry to address their needs. You've already given us many models that work and we look forward to learning more from your experience. 03/22/89 17:33 OSERS 02 2 But before I talk about your role in this process - and it is a critical role - let me spend just a few minutes doing what I was asked to do, and that's to discuss global competition and the American work force. By now you've all heard many variations of demographic trends and their consequences for the future. And, we all know that future trends aren't easy to predict, but projections of future demographic shifts and their potential effects serve a very useful purpose. They tell us what will happen if we continue on a particular course and they highlight possible activities that could alter the trend. Typically there are two ways in which people respond to these predictions. -- First, there are those who like to talk about the predictions and then wait for them to happen. -- And secondly, there are those who will use the predictions to plan for the future, recognizing that they will become self-fulfilling prophesies only if nothing is done to alter them. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:34 OSERS 04 3 Community colleges have already begun the process of altering the trends, but the challenges are going to intensify as inasmuch as changing demographics and a global economy will create complex challenges and opportunities for American Photo Copy Presentation education. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the Hudson Institute and other experts, America is getting grayer and less white and will literally stop growing within 50 years. From 1988 to 2080 we will have fewer young people, but more than a million people over 100, and nearly three million 90-95 years old. Persons under 35 years of age presently make up 55 percent of the population. That will drop to 41 percent by the year 2030. -- America's life expectancy will increase six years by 2080, from 75 today to 81 (conservative estimate). This will result in changes in retirement age rules and, will place a strain on the Nation's health care system -- due to the need for more hospital beds and more nursing home beds. 03/22/89 17:35 OSERS 05 4 AS the population ages, deaths will increase to outstrip births every year after 2030 -- by 2030, there will be one million more deaths a year than there are today, making the funeral business a growth business. At the same time, the total birth rate will drop in the 1990's falling from 3.7 million next year to 3.4 million in the year 2005 and 3 million a year by 2080. This "baby bust" will create a shortage of young people that will be felt in the labor force. The future will also bring dramatic changes in the Country's racial and ethnic mix in part because of the lower birth rate among whites. By the year 2080, white, non-hispanic Americans will be on the verge of losing their majority to three major minority groups, African-Americans, Asians and Hispanics. At the same time that America is undergoing dramatic demographic changes that affect the workforce and social, civic and educational responses, our national economy is also changing. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:35 OSERS 06 5 Consider the changes that have taken place since 1900-1960 when railroads, long-haul trucks, radio/television and microwave communications helped to create a self-contained U.S. market. That market allowed us to maintain an extraordinary standard of living by trading "almost solely" within our own boundaries. But since the 1960s containerization, jet airplanes, satellite and fiber optic communications have created an international market. The U.S. now finds itself part of a globally integrated, interdependent economy. This is exemplified by the free flow around the globe of even the lowest priced products. Today, world markets establish prices. Not only commodity prices such as wheat, coal, oil, and precious metals, but also the prices of manufactured goods such as clothing, automobiles, and semi-conductors. Capital markets are now globally integrated, whereas just a decade ago, borrowing in foreign currencies or investing in foreign assets was restricted to sophisticated multinationals. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:36 OSERS 07 6 This essentially means that the United States is now intrinsically linked to the world marketplace. We simply cannot maintain the quality of life as we now enjoy it unless we maintain a strong competitive position and, the only way to maintain that position is to produce a well-educated, highly skilled work force. A few months ago, R. J. Jordan of Mercury, said, the pace of technological change is being quickened by the "internationalism of technology". He said that just a few years ago, the United States was a synonym for technology. But that is no longer true ... "Technology, he said, "is now an international pastime." He went a step further and reminded us that in the Middle Ages, the technology of the Venetian glassmakers lasted for as long as three centuries. Contrast that with today when technological changes occur virtually overnight. Couple that with the international aspects of technology and the changes become even more dramatic. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:36 OSERS 08 7 We simply cannot escape the fact that education is the key element of global competitiveness. As we approach the year 2000, the low-skill, no skill jobs will continue to decline. Already a minimally-trained high school graduate has difficulty finding a slot on an assembly line. More often than not, today's assembly line worker needs to be computer literate and perform tasks born of increasingly comple technologies. Jobs considered today to be in the middle of the skills distribution requirements, will be the least skilled occupations by the turn of the century, and will require even higher levels of literacy. In his book, The High Flex Society, Pat Choate of TRW, suggests that two powerful currents are transforming our work and our lives. He says, The convergence of these forces--accelerating change and declining American flexibility--has far-reaching implications for business, unions, and government; for financial and educational institutions; and especially for the people who are doing the work. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:36 OSERS 09 8 He attributes declines in many of our industries- such as automobile manufacturing, and the production of consumer electronics' products--to our inability to adapt to new technology as soon as we should. Workforce 2000 suggests that the United States must find a way to solve several perplexing dilemmas. For example, we must find 1 a way to maintain the dynamics of an aging workforce as it approaches an average age of 40. And, we must also find ways to fully integrate female, minority and handicapped workers into the economy. The stark reality is that unless we do so, we , simply may not have the human capital needed to maintain a healthy economy as we approach the year 2000 and beyond. As a consequence, education as we know it will be greatly challenged as it attempts to respond to developing human capital for the future. It's my belief that a successful educational system must have three major attributes, accessibility, flexibility, and accountability. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:37 OSERS 10 9 Accessibility is key, because educators will be serving the needs of a very diverse group of consumers. The new students will have to overcome numerous obstacles in achieving their educational goals, such as financial problems, low self-esteem, and demands of balancing family and job while attending school. In order to serve these needs, educational systems must be accessible in every way possible -including affordable tuition, flexible class scheduling, the provision of remedial education as needed, and assistance with English if it is not the student's native language, to mention just a few. Community colleges are probably the most accessible educational institutions today. In many ways you've been pioneers in accessibility. Community college classes can be found within easy commuting distance of millions of adults. You've provided education with a high level of sensitivity, caring and concern about students' needs. You've offered the remediation where its needed and provided flexible scheduling and affordable tuition Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:37 OSERS 11 10 You're developing new educational products such as the 2+2 Tech Prep programs of articulation that will further expand access to your programs for thousands of high school vocational-technical students. But you must continue to do more as the challenge intensifies, particularly in recruiting inner city students who have limited or successful work experience. And, keep in mind that access should also include all potential students including those incarcerated and handicapped, I also mentioned that our new educational systems must be characterized by a high degree of flexibility. Flexibility, in the context of meeting the global challenge of education, is the ability to change, eliminate or create an educational program in an extremely short timeframe when its found that the program no longer fulfills the employment and training needs of its students as new needs are identified. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:38 OSERS 12 11 Flexible programs are characterized by a high degree of business-industry cooperation wherein local employers are consulted for advice and direction, and program administrators know their local labor market needs and the programs that have economic utility to meet those needs. Again, the community colleges are pioneers in business-industry cooperation. But, there remains much more to be done. Its no longer sufficient to work with business and industry to fulfill short-term human resource needs. The highly flexible successful educational systems needed to meet the global economic challenge must work with the private sector to anticipate future human resource needs, at least three to five years in the future. Forward-looking educators will constantly be assessing the impact of global and national economic change on their programs, and adjusting those programs accordingly as the local labor market begins to reflect and respond to these major shifts. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:38 OSERS 13 12 To achieve this flexibility, I would urge that the perspective of American education must be broader. For example, a highly flexible training system would try to anticipate the impact of monumental economic changes such as the elimination of internal trade barriers within the European common market by 1992, or the liberalization of trade policy in the eastern bloc nations. In addition to the macroeconomic and geopolitical impact of these events, global economic change of this order is ultimately going to have a significant impact on local labor markets. New products, new manufacturing processes and new training needs will all emerge as new markets open around the world. The key for the flexible educational system is not to be too far ahead of its local labor market so that its response is premature; but yet not so far behind world economic change that the response is too late. Photo Copy Preservation 03/22/89 17:38 OSERS 14 13 The third major attribute I mentioned was accountability. Successful educational systems must be accountable to a wide range of constituents - students, parents, employers, and the community at large. On the elementary/secondary level, accountability means producing students equipped with basic skills that can be effectively applied in the increasingly wide range of jobs that a student will now encounter during his/her working life. In addition to reading, writing, computation, and comprehension, we must include the development of a positive work ethic, interpersonal skills, the ability to interact effectively with fellow employees and consumers, and critical thinking and decision-making - the ability to think on the margin under stressful work conditions. Photo Copy Preservation On the postsecondary level, accountability manifests itself in different ways. At a minimum, postsecondary education must ensure that its graduates are prepared for entry-level employment in the public or private sectors. But there's a lot more to that statement. Analytical ability and critical thinking skills must be sharp and focused among postsecondary graduates to ensure that they can make that transition from campus to work. OSERS 15 14 In the community colleges you've achieved highly successful placement rates among many of your member institutions. And, the success of your students to use their two-year degree to gain admission to four-year technical programs is commendable. I urge you to maintain and expand these efforts. A two-year associate degree has become recognized as a measure of successful quality control. It generally indicates that its graduates have been schooled in state-of-the-art technology or current business techniques, with the close involvement of local employers, and with the guarantee that the degree holder is work ready on the first day of his or her employment. Community colleges will continue to play a key role in meeting the challenge of global competition. You have the strategies, "thods and techniques as part of your tradition that will foster increased accessibility, flexibility and accountability, three elements essential to producing the needed human capital for the year 2000 and beyond. We know you'll continue to build on your experiences for the benefit of all students. Thank you. Photo Copy Preservation CHRIS- yellow MARKOD Futher possible cuts Davis/Blessey March 23, 1989 9a.m. Draft 1 Title: Junior PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: AMER. ASSOC. OF JR. & COMMUNITY COLLEGES WASHINGTON HILTON MARCH 30, 1989/ 1 p.m. Thank you. Dale, Jim (Brady), Governors Martin and Campbell. (Further acknowledgements.) ((Bar, I am delighted that this distinguished group has recognized your efforts to promote literacy ... And to think, all this time I thought she was cheating at Scrabble )) In all sincerity, this honor will be treasured by Barbara and the whole Bush family for years to come. Still, Bar and I can't get over the feeling that we should be giving you an award. After all, you provide remedial literacy training on a scale that is nothing short of heroic. Benjamin Franklin was once asked what was the most pitiful thing that could befall a human being. After a moment's reflection, he replied: "A lonesome man on a rainy day who does not know how to read." The costs of illiteracy can be calculated in labor lost, and education dollars wasted. But we cannot 2 calculate the loss of human happiness caused by illiteracy -- all the men and women across this country who will never hear the narrative voice of Dickens, Twain or Larry McMurtry; who will never know that a book can be a true friend in the still hours of the night. Barbara and I are deeply moved by the plight of the illiterate. And rest assured, we will continue to work with you to promote literacy skills second This nation grew into greatness because early Americans met the challenge of building a national system of education. With Schools Anouniverities the dawn of a new century only eleven years away, we are faced that with a new challenge -- to revitalize and restore the system our forebears bequeathed to us; to ensure than an American education best in the world is once again second to none. In this crusade, we can look to leadership from a recent American innovation in education -- our nation's community colleges, more than a thousand strong. You best represent the American philosophy of education, based on accessibility for all, for life. Americans believe that education is not a phase to be successfully completed. We believe that education is a lifelong endeavor. What scholars call the "life of the mind" is as essential to the complete man or woman as water and air. 3 In fact, whole communities are enriched and enlightened by the cultural resources you provide, from vast libraries, to night schools, to stages for local theatrical productions. This attitude toward education -- as something more than a requirement of an industrial society, as an embellishment of life -- is uniquely American. In your success, 4 also see challene innovative practices that should he appised Inspired by your success, I am going to ask cha llenge Congress join me in applying a few general principles to education at every level choice, flexibility, talent and to education at every level. accountability CHOICE: Community colleges provide ten million Americans with educational choice. A wide range of students benefit from your institutions, from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses; to low-income students who need a stepping those who seek a 2-YR desree stone to a four-year program; to mature students who are returning to school to round out their education. FLEXIBILITY: Your colleges are training people in the work force today, or those who soon will be. Yet you are also looking to the future, taking the pulse of the local business community, and planning for what will be needed many years down the road. TALENT Secondary and even elementary schools can learn a lot from the way in which you tap local talent, drawing on the 4 knowledge of experts from the private sector. With this in mind, I have proposed extending this same practice, often called Alternative Teacher Certification, right down to the first grade. of a school is easen to use oon esteemed scientist in the community oupet to in able to set him the in ACCOUNTABILITY: Perhaps this is the key to your success. clamo State universities, which accept your students, count on you to serving him instill a precise curriculum. The businesses of your city count wake on you to match skills to the demands of the job market. And to Collex most of all, students count on you to provide a ladder of opportunity. And opportunity is our most basic shared principle. Americans share the conviction that there is no such thing as an expendable student. True, an intolerable number of American students are dropping out of high school. True, we have not always lived up to our own high standard. But we will never accept the notion that vast numbers of illiterate and undereducated Americans can be offset by a well-educated elite. We will not rest until we have found a way to school every young American in the romance of our history and literature, and the wonders of science. Until we can accomplish this, millions of our countrymen will be unable to fully participate in, or even understand, the civic life of their homeland. 5 For years, redeeming these underachieving students has been a quest of the heart. Today, it is also a test of national will, a test critical to the very future of America. This may sound like an overstatement. America, after all, is still a world leader when it comes to producing Nobel Prize winners in physics, economics and literature. But what is the advantage for a nation with a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, if his books are largely unread in his own country? What is the advantage for a nation noone Anread that can invent fiber optic cable, if the art of splicing these & install B the is beyond the skills of our work force? b I am committed to increased investment in basic research. work fore? But America can continue to lead the world in theoretical science, and still lose the race in the application of knowledge. H.G. Wells wrote that "human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe." What had the ring of truth in the 1920s is ominously true in the highly competitive internationalized market of the late twentieth century. Let me share a few stark facts with you. Last year, Japan's functional literacy rate was better than 95 percent. In America, it's down to about 80 percent. The national drop-out rate is XX percent; it runs as high as 50 percent here in Washington. And of those Americans who do graduate from high school, as many as 25 percent cannot read or write at the eighth-grade level. me sat and, he 6 sap. me Two unhealthy trends are converging. According to a study by the Hudson Institute, more than 75 percent of the nation's new workers will have limited literacy skills Yet they will be new jobs WITH the qualified for only 40 percent of new jobs. As many Americans where diy. set jous so lurging, become less educated, the standards of the work place are becoming ever more rigorous. shuls In the past, business could simply ignore the unlettered when h.s. few. But the balmy days of the baby boom are passing us by. The U.S. Census bureau, the Hudson Institute and other experts report that from now until the year 2000, we will face a "baby bust." According to Business Week, this shrinkage of the labor pool will make it necessary to train or retrain as many as 50 million workers in the next dozen years alone. Think of it -- 50 When When unskilled find work, million! Back in the Eisenhower years, high-school drop-outs, if they time the clore the worked hard, could still enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. A large suburban home, a new car in the driveway, and tuition money -- this was a very attainable dream, the American dream. But for those workers who lack skills and basic education today, punch a comfortable middle-class existence will be harder and harder to come by. Already, poorly trained high school graduates are having trouble finding jobs CAll it the education sap. More often than not, they need to 7 be computer literate and perform other tasks with increasingly complex technologies Excellence in education is critical at all levels. But at a minimum, we need to assure that the work force has the basic skills needed to keep America competitive. This is the call to arms you are answering so willingly and so well. DEGREE OF CONGRATULATION: Community colleges are the starting gate for higher education, a ready resource for vocational training and remedial 50 -50/ creat a areat/a challene. schooling. You provide access for older citizens, women, minorities, and the handicapped -- precisely the very people who are being summoned to alleviate the coming labor shortage. You Ann,Imsht are retraining a work force as it approaches the average age of 000, the mm prople must DISAD in the w/force there 40. chayus You mean unmer forso may are training more women and minority Americans as they enter the work force in record numbers. And, by all accounts, you are doing a splendid job. Let me offer further reason for hope in the convergence of revence two healthy trends the way in which the needs of American business are coinciding with that of the disadvantaged. The Butit also means appor. for unsmas focal point of these two vast social needs can be found in hundreds of programs from Connecticut to California called employer-college partnerships. 8 This friendly merger of business and academia is a sweeping force for social improvement. Look at Dallas, where more than one thousand businesses have "adopted" the city's 200 secondary schools. Just look at North Carolina and South Carolina, where state governments have brought businesses and community colleges together to foster customized training and technical education. Governor Martin (Jim), Governor Campbell (Carroll), please you have convey my sincerest congratulations to your state education agencies. You have shown that by working together, as communities as match totha people jobd Thismax socialimp partners in progress, we can develop a world-class work force. I XIM challenge every state, every college, every business, to follow your example. bringhore BRIDGE? Disapis to thi disal., Sinceling Toward this end, let me conclude with a few words of advice, + written at the turn-of-the century, but so appropriate for this a world- build group today: class w.f, "Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably in themselves will not be realized. Make big logical diagram (MM) (IDEA) plans; aim high in hope and work remembering that a noble once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing asserting itself with ever growing intensity. The man who wrote these words, Daniel Burnham, was the architect of such a big plan -- Washington's Union Station, which 9 stands out as a visual delight in a city already crowded with great monuments and statuary. Burnham's legacy is a truly living thing, with its vaulted ceilings and gilded geometry above bustling crowds of shoppers and commuters. But it would be nothing but a wreck, an eyesore, if it had not been lovingly restored. As important as it is to reclaim our civic capital of burnished brass and polished marble, how much more important it is to reclaim our human capital. Think, then, of our educational system in this way, as a vast and beautiful inheritance, which must be lovingly restored; not once, but every generation. In this effort, make no little plans. Think big. Aim high in hope and work. Continue to work wk together in with your local business communi to help your students, to lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. For this, and all you do, you are earning the gratitude of a nation. Thank you, and God Bless America. # # # 3 painting at 70? The doors of America's community colleges are wide open, ready to enlighten and enhance the knowledge of any American, at any age, at every level of learning. Whole communities are enriched by the cultural resources you provide, from vast libraries, to night schools, to stages for local theatrical productions. This attitude toward education -- as something more than a requirement of an industrial society, as an embellishment of life -- is uniquely American. In your success, I also see a few general principles that should be applied to education at every level: choice, flexibility, talent and accountability. CHOICE: Community colleges provide ten million Americans with educational choice. A wide range of students benefit from your institutions, from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses; to low-income students who need a stepping stone to a four-year program; to mature students who are returning to school to round out their education. FLEXIBILITY: Your colleges are training people in the work force today, or those who will soon be. You see results from year-to-year. Yet you are also looking to the future, taking the pulse of the local business community, and planning for what will be needed many years down the road. 4 TALENT: Secondary and even elementary schools could certainly learn a lot from the way in which you tap local talent, drawing on the knowledge of experts from the private sector. With this in mind, I will propose d to extend this same practice, have often called Alternative Teacher Certification, right down to the first grade. ACCOUNTABILITY: Perhaps this is the key to your success. State universities, which accept your students, count on you to instill a precise curriculum. The businesses of your city count on you to match skills to the demands of the job market. And most of all, students count on you to provide a ladder of opportunity. And opportunity is our most basic shared principle. Americans share the conviction that there is no such thing as an expendable student. True, an intolerable number of American students are dropping out of high school. True, we have not always lived up to our own high standard. But we will never accept be motion reconciled to the idea that vast numbers of illiterate and undereducated Americans can be offset by a well-educated elite. We will not rest until we have found a way to school every young American in the romance of our history and literature, and the wonders of science. Until we can accomplish this, millions 5 of our countrymen will be unable to fully participate in, or even understand, the civic life of their homeland. For years, redeeming these underachieving students has been a quest of the heart. Today, it is also a test of national will, a test critical to the very future of America. This may sound like an overstatement. America, after all, is still a world leader when it comes to producing Nobel Prize winners in physics, economics and literature. But what is the advantage for a nation with a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, if his books are largely unread in his own country? What is the advantage for a nation that can invent fiber optic cable, if the art of splicing these delicate strands is beyond the skills of our work force? I am committed to increased investment in basic research. But America can continue to lead the world in theoretical science, and still lose the race in the application of knowledge. H.G. Wells wrote that "human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe." What had the ring of truth in the 1920s is ominously true in the highly competitive internationalized market of the late twentieth century. Let me share a few stark facts with you. 6 Last year, Japan's functional literacy rate was better than 95 percent. In America, it's down to about 80 percent. The national drop-out rate is XX percent; it runs as high as 50 percent here in Washington. And of those Americans who do graduate from high school, as many as 25 percent cannot read or write at the eighth-grade level. Two unhealthy trends are converging. According to a study by the Hudson Institute, more than 75 percent of the nation's new workers will have limited literacy skills. Yet they will compete for only 40 percent of the new jobs. As many Americans become less educated, the standards of the work place are becoming ever more rigorous. In the past, business could simply ignore the unlettered few. But the balmy days of the baby boom are passing us by. The U.S. Census bureau, the Hudson Institute and other experts report that from now until the year 2000, we will face a "baby bust." Persons under 35 years of age presently make up 55 percent of the population. That will drop to 41 percent by 2030. According to Business Week, the shrinkage of the labor pool will make it ? necessary to train or retrain as many as 50 million workers in the next dozen years alone. Think of it -- 50 million! Back in the Eisenhower years, high-school drop-outs, if they worked hard, could still enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. 7 A large suburban home, a new car in the driveway, and tuition money -- this was a very attainable dream, the American dream. But for those workers who lack skills and basic education today, a comfortable middle-class existence is harder to come by. The numbers bear this out. From 1959 to 1986, earnings for young men who quit high school fell by 26 percent after inflation, while that of college graduates rose by 6 percent. Although average annual income has increased for all major demographic groups over the last seven years, these gains could be threatened by an ever- widening education gap. Already, poorly trained high school graduates are having trouble finding jobs. More often than not, they need to be computer literate and perform other tasks with increasingly complex technologies. And the Department of Education reports that jobs considered to be in the middle of the distribution of required skills today, will be considered the least skilled occupations by the turn of the century. Excellence in education is critical at all levels. But at a minimum, we need to assure that the work force has the basic skills needed to keep America competitive. This is the call to arms you are answering so willingly and so well. Community colleges are the starting gate for higher education, a ready resource for vocational training and remedial 8 schooling. You provide access for older citizens, women, minorities, and the handicapped -- precisely the very people who are being summoned to alleviate the coming labor shortage. You are retraining a work force as it approaches the average age of 40. You are training more women and minority Americans as they enter the work force in record numbers. And, by all accounts, you are doing a splendid job. Let me offer further reason for hope in the convergence of two healthy trends -- the way in which the needs of American business are coinciding with that of the disadvantaged. The focal point of these two vast social needs can be found in hundreds of programs from Connecticut to California called employer-college partnerships. This friendly merger of business and academia is a sweeping force for social improvement. Look at Dallas, where more than one thousand businesses have "adopted" the city's 200 secondary schools. Just look at North Carolina and South Carolina, where state governments have brought businesses and community colleges together to foster customized training and technical education. Governor Martin (Jim), Governor Campbell (Carroll), please convey. my sincerest congratulations to your state education agencies. You have shown that by working together, as communities, as partners in progress, we can develop a world-class work force. I 9 challenge every state, every college, every business, to follow your example: Toward this end, let me conclude with a few words of advice, written at the turn-of-the century, but so appropriate for this group today: "Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably in themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever- growing intensity." The man who wrote these words, Daniel Burnham, was the architect of such a big plan -- Washington's Union Station, which stands out as a visual delight in a city already crowded with great monuments and statuary. Burnham's legacy is a truly living thing, with its vaulted ceilings and gilded geometry above bustling crowds of shoppers and commuters. But it would be nothing but a wreck, an eyesore, if it had not been lovingly restored. As important as it is to reclaim our civic capital of burnished brass and polished marble, how much more important it is to reclaim our human capital. 10 Think, then, of our educational system in this way, as a vast and beautiful inheritance, which must be lovingly restored; not once, but every generation. In this effort, make no little plans. Think big. Aim high in hope and work. Continue to work with your local business community to help your students, to lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. For this, and all you do, you are earning the gratitude of a nation. Thank you, and God Bless America. # # # mest: PRE-DRAFT thoughts. a few Davis/Blessey P3 important mest March 23, 1989 9 a.m. Draft 1 Title: Junior PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: AMER. ASSOC. OF JR. & COMMUNITY COLLEGES WASHINGTON HILTON MARCH 30, 1989/ 1 p.m. Thank you. Dale, Jim (Brady), Governors Martin and Campbell. (Further acknowledgements.; ((Bar, I am delighted that this distinguished group has recognized your efforts to promote literacy ... And to think, all this time I thought she was cheating at Scrabble )) In all sincerity, this honor will be treasured by Barbara and the whole Bush family for years to come. Still, Bar and I can't get over the feeling that we should be giving you an award. After all, you provide remedial literacy training on a scale that is nothing short of heroic. Benjamin Franklin was once asked what was the most pitiful thing that could befall a human being. After a moment's reflection, he replied: "A lonesome man on a rainy day who does not know how to read." The costs of illiteracy can be calculated 2 in labor lost, and education dollars wasted. But we cannot calculate the loss of human happiness caused by illiteracy -- all the men and women across this country who will never hear the narrative voice of Dickens, Twain or Larry McMurtry; who will never know that a book can be a true friend in the still hours of the night. Barbara and I are deeply moved by the plight of the illiterate. And rest assured, we will continue to work with you to promote literacy skills weve probably used Mis Phrase before, but it centralization, evokes This nation grew into greatness because early Americans met the challenge of building national system of education With we can schools, colleges Ano univerhities. the dawn of a new century only eleven years away, we are faced repruse? with a new challenge -- to revitalize and restore the system our forebears bequeathed to us; to ensure than an American education is once again second to none. In this crusade, we can look to leadership from a recent American innovation in education -- our nation's community colleges, more than a thousand strong. # You best represent the American philosophy of education, based on accessibility for all, for life. Americans believe that education is not a phase to be successfully completed. We believe that education is lifelong. What scholars call the "life of the mind" is as essential to the complete man or woman as water and air. Do you want to learn Spanish at 40? Take up oil eg, cc's help those who need it most en law-income - 3 and mineribes !!-(get stats painting at 70? The doors of America's community colleges are on wide open, ready to enlighten and enhance the knowledge of any minaths American, at any age, at every level of learning. Whole communities are enriched by the cultural resources you provide, from vast libraries, to night schools, to stages for local theatrical productions. This attitude toward education -- as something more than a requirement of an industrial society, as an embellishment of life -- is uniquely American. ? what Idisaque, I innovative PRACTRES In your success, I also see a few general principles that should be applied to education at every level choice, flexibility, talent and accountability. * CHOICE: Community colleges provide ten million Americans with educational choice. A wide range of students benefit from your institutions, from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses; to low income students who need a stepping include reference here to those who do two-yeeus stone to a four-year program; to mature students who are only. returning to school to round out their education. FLEXIBILITY: Your colleges are training people in the work Needb force today, or those who will soon be. You see results from year-to-year. Yet you are also looking to the future, taking the pulse of the local business community, and planning for what will be needed many years down the road. articulating others. mark: Critical point. Our education program has 4 principles : reward excellence, choice, need target to needy, and accountability. we cannot generate confusion March 30 about an 4 principles but ?? If so, let's are good there xample. of alternative which 4 to be dramatize. more specific TALENT: Secondary and even elementary schools could certainly learn a lot from the way in which you tap local talent, drawing on the knowledge of experts from the private sector. With this in mind, I will propose to extend this same practice, often called Alternative Teacher Certification, right down to the pand> first grade. If a school is eager to top The talent of an ey isteemed scientist m the community who is in teasted R in changing careers to help young people, we ought to have hu flexibelity ACCOUNTABILITY (to findar Perhaps this is the key to your success many of ? Wely toget State universities, which accept your students, count on you to him into the Classroom instill a precise curriculum. The businesses of your city count on you to match skills to the demands of the job market. And himbur w/o most of all, students count on you to provide a ladder of to college opportunity. And opportunity is our most basic shared principle. Americans share the conviction that there is no such thing as an expendable student. True, an intolerable number of American students are dropping out of high school. True, we have not always lived up to our own high standard. But we will never be reconciled to the idea that vast numbers of illiterate and undereducated Americans can be offset by a well-educated elite. We will not rest until we have found a way to school every young American in the romance of our history and literature, and the wonders of science. Until we can accomplish this, millions 5 of our countrymen will be unable to fully participate in, or even understand, the civic life of their homeland. For years, redeeming these underachieving students has been a quest of the heart. Today, it is also a test of national will, a test critical to the very future of America. This may sound like an overstatement. America, after all, is still a world leader when it comes to producing Nobel Prize winners in physics, economics and literature. But what is the advantage for a nation with a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, if his books are largely unread in his own country? What is the advantage for a nation that can invent IRAA fiber optic cable, if the no one ARK of READING blu CAN READ A blueprint to install them. art of splicing these delicate strands is beyond the skills of our work force? if the blueprint (or plans?) for let's use ashell which requires (vs youring manual) eg- laying these cables are uninteligible to the educated itt the I am committed to increased investment in basic research. instatter? But America can continue to lead the world in theoretical a person good science, and still lose the race in the application of knowledge. charged with H.G. Wells wrote that "human history becomes more and more a race installing between education and catastrophe." What had the ring of truth them? in the 1920s is ominously true in the highly competitive internationalized market of the late twentieth century. Let me share a few stark facts with you. 6 Last year, Japan's functional literacy rate was better than 95 percent. In America, it's down to about 80 percent. The national drop-out rate is XX percent; it runs as high as 50 percent here in Washington. And of those Americans who do graduate from high school, as many as 25 percent cannot read or write at the eighth-grade level. most jobs (?) will such & limited well heyand literay skills. Two unhealthy trends are converging. According to a study by the Hudson Institute, more than 75 percent of the nation's new workers will have limited literacy skills. Yet they will compete for only 40 percent of the new jobs. As many Americans become less educated, the standards of the work place are becoming ever more rigorous. In the past, business could simply ignore the unlettered few. But the balmy days of the baby boom are passing us by. The U.S. Census bureau, the Hudson Institute and other experts report that from now until the year 2000, we will face a "baby bust." Persons under 35 years of age presently make up 55 percent of the population. That will drop to 41 percent by 2030. According to Business Week, the shrinkage of the labor pool will make it necessary to train or retrain as many as 50 million workers in the next dozen years alone. Think of it -- 50 million! Back in the Eisenhower years, high-school drop-outs, if they worked hard, could still enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. 7 A large suburban home, a new car in the driveway, and tuition money -- this was a very attainable dream, the American dream. But for those workers who lack skills and basic education today, a comfortable middle-class existence is harder to come by. The numbers bear this out. From 1959 to 1986, earnings for young men they? who quit high school fell by 26 percent after inflation, while those that of college graduates rose by 6 percent. Although average (ie ciamings.) annual income has increased for all major demographic groups over the last seven years, these gains could be threatened by an ever- CAllitthe widening education gap. ] good pmace Already, poorly trained high school graduates are having this trouble finding jobs. More often than not, they need to be is computer literate and perform other tasks with increasingly yours complex technologies. And the Department of Education reports that jobs considered to be in the middle of the distribution of du mark required skills today, will be considered the least skilled } with with perhaps, occupations by the turn of the century. Excellence in education is critical at all levels. But at a minimum, we need to assure that the work force has the basic skills needed to keep America competitive. This is the call to arms you are answering so willingly and so well. Community colleges are the starting gate for higher education, a ready resource for vocational training and remedial this you have 8 schooling. You provide access for older citizens, women, minorities, and the handicapped -- precisely the very people who I are being summoned to alleviate the coming labor shortage. You are retraining a work force as it approaches the average age of bock the up 40. You are training more women and minority Americans as they enter the work force in record numbers. And, by all accounts, facts you are doing a splendid job. 'N Knis Let me offer further reason for hope in the convergence of two healthy trends -- the way in which the needs of American business are coinciding with that of the disadvantaged. The focal point of these two vast social needs can be found in hundreds of programs from Connecticut to California called employer-college partnerships. This friendly merger of business and academia is a sweeping force for social improvement. Look at Dallas, where more than one thousand businesses have "adopted" the city's 200 secondary schools. Just look at North Carolina and South Carolina, where state governments have brought businesses and community colleges together to foster customized training and technical education. Governor Martin (Jim), Governor Campbell (Carroll), please convey my sincerest congratulations to your state education agencies J You have shown that by working together, as communities, as partners in progress, we can develop a world-class work force. I why not just congratulate the 90vR's ?? - youc runs his antob GOVIS office ::- 9 challenge every state, every college, every business, to follow your example: Toward this end, let me conclude with a few words of advice, written at the turn-of-the century, but so appropriate for this group today: "Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably in themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever- growing intensity." The man who wrote these words, Daniel Burnham, was the architect of such a big plan -- Washington's Union Station, which stands out as a visual delight in a city already crowded with great monuments and statuary. Burnham's legacy is a truly living thing, with its vaulted ceilings and gilded geometry above bustling crowds of shoppers and commuters. But it would be nothing but a wreck, an eyesore, if it had not been lovingly restored. As important as it is to reclaim our civic capital of burnished brass and polished marble, how much more important it is to reclaim our human capital. perhaps allude to process -- were private dollars inested, as well as public - ie partnership - entire uniminity involved ?? extend metap 10 Think, then, of our educational system in this way, as a vast and beautiful inheritance, which must be lovingly restored; not once, but every generation. In this effort, make no little HER continue plans. Think big. Aim high in hope and work. Continue to work TO BRING COMMUNITIES TOGETHER with your local business community to help your students, to lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. For this, and all you do, you are earning the gratitude of a nation. Thank you, and God Bless America. # # # Mark - - this is what we asked m- but - sumehed with you lofty prose, me reference to The "business community janing - - can me still keep them but make it sound 10by ? urch 3 of AACJC American Association of Annual Building 1989 For Convention A New Community and Junior Colleges Century D.C. FACTS ABOUT COMMUNITY, TECHNICAL, AND JUNIOR COLLEGES Community, technical, and junior colleges constitute the largest single segment of American Higher Education. In 1965 there were 771 community, technical, and junior colleges enrolling 1.3 million students. In Fall 1988, there were 1,211 institutions enrolling approximately 5.3 million students; an additional 4.9 million adults were enrolled in noncredit, continuing education classes. The following table charts this tremendous growth: Fall Head Count Enrollment in Credit Classes at Community, Technical, and Junior Colleges Year Public Private Total 1945 216,325 78,150 294,475 1955 683,129 82,422 765,551 1965 1,152,086 140,667 1,292,753 1975 3,921,542 147,737 4,069,279 1976 3,939,173 145,803 4,084,976 1977 4,160,611 149.373 4,309,984 1978 4,159,456 144,602 4,304,058 1979 4,334,344 153.528 4,487,872 1980 4,666,286 159.645 4,825,931 1981 4,742,861 144,814 4,887,675 1982 4,823,003 141.376 4,964,379 1983 4,799,768 148,207 4,947,975 1984 4,702,901 133,918 4,836,819 1985 4.597.838 132.397 4,730.235 1986 4,737,123 132.492 4,869,615 1987 4,922,291 135,155 5,057,446 1988 5,162.000 138,000 5,300,000 Over half (51 percent) of all first-time college students begin their postsecondary education at a community, technical, or junior college. National Center for Higher Education. One Dupont Circle N W. Suite 410. Washington, D.C. 20036 (202)293-7050 Fax Number: (202 Community, technical, and junior colleges open the door of higher education to minority students. These colleges enroll --57% of all Native American college students --55% of all Hispanic college students --43% of all Black college students --41% of all Asian college students Community, technical, and junior colleges enroll adults of all ages; the average age of the community college student is 29. The most popular student "financial aid" program for community, technical, and junior college students is work. Over 80 percent are employed while attending college, and only 48% receive financial support from their parents (compared to 70% of the students at four-year colleges). Sixty-seven percent are enrolled on a part-time basis. Community, technical, and junior colleges help hold down the cost of a college education. In 1988-89 the average annual tuition at public community colleges was $767 compared to $1,566 at public four-year colleges and $7,693 at private four-year colleges. Millions of students cut the cost of higher education by attending a community college for two years and then transferring as juniors to four-year colleges. Community, technical, and junior colleges are a key element in this nation's effort to build a world-class work force. Seventy-five percent of these institutions offer customized job-training for local businesses and industries, providing the worker retraining needed in today's competitive economy. Adult literacy training is offered by over 70 percent of all community, technical, and junior colleges. For Further Information Contact Jim Palmer, Vice President for Communications, AACJC, Suite 410, One Dupont Circle, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. Phone: (202) 293-7050; FAX: (202) 833-2467 NOTES FOR THE REMARKS OF PRESIDENT BUSH MARCH 30, 1989 American Association of Community and Junior Colleges Convention Washington Hilton Hotel - 1:00 P.M. I. Background information about the Association and its member colleges o The Association was founded in 1920, This is our 69th Annual Convention. o The Association has 1,093 institutional members representing community, technical, and junior college students across our nation, in Canada, and in several other foreign countries. o Our member colleges enrolled 5.3 million credit students and another 4.9 million non-credit students for a total enrollment of 10.2 million different individuals taking one or more courses fall term 1988. o Our member colleges provide: - Credit courses and programs designed for students to transfer to a four-year college - Career credit courses and programs designed for students to upgrade job skills or for first level entry jobs into technical, business, or industrial settings - Non-credit courses and programs to meet the continuing education, cultural and leisure time needs for citizens in communities they serve - Partnership arrangements with local business, industry, civic, and health organizations to worker training and re-training and to improve community life. II. Ideas to include in the Remarks of the President o Possible congratulations to Mrs. Bush and to the retiring Presidents??? o When then President Truman appointed in 1947 that Truman Commission to study higher education, it is safe to say that even the visionary, but practical-minded Harry Truman had not envisioned the growth of that great and unique American invention called the Community College. I agree with John Gardner who has observed that the greatest American educational invention of the twentieth century is the community college. But, even as the Truman Commission of 1947 was facing some great challenges thrown at us in post World War II America, the technological/information age and the global economic competition is presenting us with some great challenges and even greater opportunities. I know that community, technical, and junior colleges have their sleeves rolled up working with the employers and labor unions of our country in worker training, re-training and workplace literacy programs and we must do more of that. o I know that community, technical, and junior colleges are the entry point for many of our citizens into higher education. You are to be commended for your work with individuals from our ethnic minority communities but we must do more to help our Black Americans, and Hispanic Americans, and to help our American Indians to not only enter college but be encouraged to go on and acquire the associate and baccalaureate degrees. Our country cannot afford to waste even one of our precious human resources. o I know that your colleges have been reaching out to the high schools of our country, and I commend you for developing the exciting new tech prep/associate degree curriculum But SO much more remains to be accomplished in reducing our high school drop-out rate and in increasing the literacy levels of all our citizens. o All of us working together must give great attention to developing a world class work force equipped to work in an increasingly competitive global economy. We simply must out-work, out-produce, and out-smart our competition. This means that our work force must develop new and higher levels of competence in math, science, communication skills, and in technical education. The U.S. community, technical, and junior colleges are the envy of the world and believe me I am counting on your expertise, your energy, and enthusiasm to help us develop all of our human resources and move our country a few more miles up the road toward health and prosperity. Davis/Blessey March 23, 1989 6 p.m. Draft 2 Title: Junior PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: AMER. ASSOC. OF JR. & COMMUNITY COLLEGES WASHINGTON HILTON MARCH 30, 1989/ 1 p.m. Thank you. Dale, Jim (Brady), Governors Martin and Campbell. (Further acknowledgements.) ((Bar, I am delighted that this distinguished group has recognized your efforts to promote literacy And to think, all this time I thought she was cheating at Scrabble )) In all sincerity, this honor will be treasured by Barbara and the whole Bush family for years to come. Still, Bar and I can't get over the feeling that we should be giving you an award. After all, you provide remedial literacy training on a scale that is nothing short of heroic. Benjamin Franklin was once asked what was the most pitiful thing that could befall a human being. After a moment's reflection, he replied: "A lonesome man on a rainy day who does not know how to read." The costs of illiteracy can be calculated in labor lost, and education dollars wasted. But we cannot K- G.B. understanding of h.s. problem/ 1 Dohel Rameates not enough / St, Patersburg College Trade Facenlin (7) Henson (1) Ralph WaddoEmer (811) Clianles Kellery (670) wells (220) J Buenham (421) Commity and JunioR CollEGES: More a part of the commity - course work cygeticatela to community needs - retires - voc-ed. Competitum + ED Challege to reach out to Cursin comity and form a partneship, Cat toxtlum 5 cusibusses - his funds, train people in uniting and computers. Typical jurior colleys- - Look for examples of parln - Boca Raton college ? check out - I Dallas County U anecdotes Fulfiel a role for self-miquent Wynchen, Blichen, Rood SElf improvement LOCAL control Demographics worlin ponets notime to read. Roger Porter - Community Colleges - (a) Remedial (b) Voc-Ed (c) UnDeR Contract, almost design -spec, in "C.C. a stilu force for competitumer" Q problem now. publem aco C.C. - Immediate resource for people in or near morkforce 2 calculate the loss of human happiness caused by illiteracy -- all the men and women across this country who will never hear the narrative voice of Dickens, Twain or Larry McMurtry; who will never know that a book can be a true friend in the still hours of the night. Barbara and I are deeply moved by the plight of the illiterate. And rest assured, we will continue to work with you to promote literacy skills This nation grew into greatness because early Americans met the challenge of building an educational system second to none. With the dawn of a new century only eleven years away, we are faced with a new challenge -- to revitalize and restore that system our forebears bequeathed to us; to ensure than an American education is once again the best in the world. In this crusade, we can look to leadership from a recent American innovation in education -- our nation's community colleges, more than a thousand strong. You best represent the American philosophy of education, based on accessibility for all, for life. Americans believe that education is not a phase to be successfully completed. We believe that education is a lifelong endeavor. What scholars call the "life of the mind" is as essential to the complete man or woman as water and air. ) 3 In fact, whole communities are enriched and enlightened by the cultural resources you provide, from vast libraries, to night schools, to stages for local theatrical productions. This attitude toward education -- as something more than a requirement of an industrial society, as an embellishment of life -- is uniquely American. Inspired by your success, I am going to challenge our educational system at every level to adopt a few creative practices pioneered by the community colleges of America. Community colleges provide ten million Americans with educational choice. A wide range of students benefit from your institutions, from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses; to low-income students who need a stepping stone to à four-year program; to those who seek a 2-year degree; to mature students who are returning to school to round out their education. This is what we need more of up and down the line -- choice. Secondary and even elementary schools can learn a lot from the way in which you tap local talent, drawing on the knowledge of experts from the private sector. With this in mind, I have proposed extending this same practice, often called Alternative Teacher Certification, right down to the first grade. 4 Perhaps accountability is the key to your success. State universities, which accept your students, count on you to instill a precise curriculum. The businesses of your city count on you to match skills to the demands of the job market. And most of all, students count on you to provide a ladder of opportunity. And opportunity is our most basic shared principle. We share the conviction that there is no such thing as an expendable student. We will never accept the notion that vast numbers of illiterate and undereducated Americans can be offset by a well- educated elite. That's not the American way. We will not rest until we have found a way to school every young American in the romance of our history and literature, and the wonders of science. Until we can accomplish this, millions of our countrymen will be unable to fully participate in, or even understand, the civic life of their homeland. For years, redeeming these underachieving students has been a quest of the heart. Today, it is also a test of national will, a test critical to the very future of America. This may sound like an overstatement. America, after all, is still a world leader when it comes to producing Nobel Prize winners in physics, economics and literature. But what is the advantage for a nation with a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, if his books are largely 5 unread in his own country? What is the advantage for a nation that can invent fiber optic cable, if the art of splicing these delicate strands is beyond the skills of our work force? I am committed to increased investment in basic research. But America can continue to lead the world in theoretical science, and still lose the race in the application of knowledge. H.G. Wells wrote that "human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe. What had the ring of truth in the 1920s is ominous by true in the highly competitive -inthe 19805, internationalized market of the late twentieth century. Let me share a few stark facts with you. Last year, Japan's functional literacy rate was better than 95 percent. In America, it's down to about 80 percent. The national drop-out rate is XX percent. And of those Americans who do graduate from high school, as many as 25 percent cannot read or write at the eighth-grade level. As many Americans become less educated, the standards of the work place are becoming ever more rigorous. In the past, business could simply ignore the unlettered few. But the balmy days of the baby boom are passing us by. Between now and the year 2000, we will face a "baby bust." According to Business Week, this shrinkage of the labor pool will make it necessary to train or retrain as many as 50 million 6 workers in the next dozen years alone. Think of it -- 50 million! Back in the Eisenhower years, high-school drop-outs, if they worked hard, could still enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. A large suburban home, a new car in the driveway, and tuition money -- this was a very attainable dream, the American dream. But for those workers who lack skills and basic education today, a comfortable middle-class existence will be harder and harder to come by. When a high school graduate can't get a job in a market begging for workers, then we've got a serious social imbalance, an education gap. Let's bridge that gap. Let's bridge it as fast possible. Excellence in education is critical at all levels. But at a minimum, we need to assure that the work force has the basic skills needed to keep America competitive. Community colleges are the starting gate for higher education, a ready resource for vocational training and remedial schooling. You provide access for older citizens, women, minorities, and the handicapped -- precisely the very people who are being summoned to alleviate the coming labor shortage. Your programs spell opportunity for the most disadvantaged members of the work force. But they also spell opportunity for business. The disadvantaged and business are coming together in hundreds of 7 programs from Connecticut to California called employer-college partnerships. This friendly merger of business and academia is a sweeping force for social improvement. Look at Dallas, where more than one thousand businesses have "adopted" the city's 200 secondary schools. Just look at North Carolina and South Carolina, where state governments have brought businesses and community colleges together to foster customized training and technical education. You have shown that by working together, as communities, as partners in progress, we can match people to jobs, bring hope to the despairing, and build a world-class work force. I challenge every state, every college, every business, to follow your example. For modern In our quest for excellence in education let me conclude by paraphrasing a few words of advice, written at the turn-of-the century, but so appropriate for this group today: "Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably in themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble (idea) once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing." 8 The man who wrote these words, Daniel Burnham, was the architect of such a big plan -- Washington's Union Station, which stands out as a visual delight in a city already crowded with great monuments and statuary. Burnham's legacy is a truly living monument, with its vaulted ceilings and gilded geometry above bustling crowds of shoppers and commuters. But it would be nothing but a wreck, an eyesore, if it had not been lovingly restored. As important as it is to reclaim our civic capital of burnished brass and polished marble, how much more important it is to reclaim our human capital. Think, then, of our educational system in this way, as a vast and beautiful inheritance, which must be lovingly restored; not once, but every generation. In this effort, make no little plans. Think big. Aim high in hope and work. Continue to work together, as a community, to help your students, to lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. For this, and all you do, you are earning the gratitude of a nation. Thank you, and God Bless America. # # # Davis/Blessey March 23, 1989 6 p.m. Draft 2 Title: Junior PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: AMER. ASSOC. OF JR. & COMMUNITY COLLEGES WASHINGTON HILTON MARCH 30, 1989/ 1 p.m. Thank you. Dale, Jim (Brady), Governors Martin and Campbell. (Further acknowledgements.) ((Bar, I am delighted that this distinguished group has recognized your efforts to promote literacy And to think, all this time I thought she was cheating at Scrabble )) In all sincerity, this honor will be treasured by Barbara and the whole Bush family for years to come. Still, Bar and I can't get over the feeling that we should be giving you an award. After all, you provide remedial literacy training on a scale that is nothing short of heroic. Benjamin Franklin was once asked what was the most pitiful thing that could befall a human being. After a moment's reflection, he replied: "A lonesome man on a rainy day who does not know how to read." The costs of illiteracy can be calculated in labor lost, and education dollars wasted. But we cannot CHRIS- yellow MARKOD Futher possible cuts Davis/Blessey March 23, 1989 9 a.m. Draft 1 Title: Junior PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: AMER. ASSOC. OF JR. & COMMUNITY COLLEGES WASHINGTON HILTON MARCH 30, 1989/ 1 p.m. Thank you. Dale, Jim (Brady), Governors Martin and Campbell. (Further acknowledgements.) ((Bar, I am delighted that this distinguished group has recognized your efforts to promote literacy ... And to think, all this time I thought she was cheating at Scrabble )) In all sincerity, this honor will be treasured by Barbara and the whole Bush family for years to come. Still, Bar and I can't get over the feeling that we should be giving you an award. After all, you provide remedial literacy training on a scale that is nothing short of heroic. Benjamin Franklin was once asked what was the most pitiful thing that could befall a human being. After a moment's reflection, he replied: "A lonesome man on a rainy day who does not know how to read." The costs of illiteracy can be calculated in labor lost, and education dollars wasted. But we cannot 2 calculate the loss of human happiness caused by illiteracy -- all the men and women across this country who will never hear the narrative voice of Dickens, Twain or Larry McMurtry; who will never know that a book can be a true friend in the still hours of the night. Barbara and I are deeply moved by the plight of the illiterate. And rest assured, we will continue to work with you to promote literacy skills This nation grew into greatness because early Americans met educational suptem second to nove, the challenge of building a national system of education. With the dawn of a new century only eleven years away, we are faced with a new challenge -- to revitalize and restore the that system our forebears bequeathed to us; to ensure than an American education the listin the world. is once again second to none. In this crusade, we can look to leadership from a recent American innovation in education -- our nation's community colleges, more than a thousand strong. You best represent the American philosophy of education, based on accessibility for all, for life. Americans believe that education is not a phase to be successfully completed. We believe that education is a lifelong endeavor. What scholars call the "life of the mind" is as essential to the complete man or woman as water and air. 3 In fact, whole communities are enriched and enlightened by the cultural resources you provide, from vast libraries, to night schools, to stages for local theatrical productions. This attitude toward education -- as something more than a requirement of an industrial society, as an embellishment of life -- is uniquely American. Inspired by your success, I am going to ask challenge Congress join me in applying a few general principles to education at every level -- choice, flexibility, talent and accountability. CHOICE: Community colleges provide ten million Americans with educational choice. A wide range of students benefit from your institutions, from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses; to low-income students who need a stepping stone to a four-year program; to mature students who are returning to school to round out their education. FLEXIBILITY: Your colleges are training people in the work force today, or those who soon will be. Yet you are also looking to the future, taking the pulse of the local business community And, and planning for what will be needed many years down the road. you ore to keep US competitive. TALENT: Secondary and even elementary schools can learn a lot from the way in which you tap local talent, drawing on the 4 knowledge of experts from the private sector. With this in mind, I have proposed extending this same practice, often called Alternative Teacher Certification, right down to the first grade. ACCOUNTABIL TY Perhaps this is the key to your success. State universities, which accept your students, count on you to instill a precise curriculum. The businesses of your city count on you to match skills to the demands of the job market. And most of all, students count on you to provide a ladder of opportunity. And opportunity is our most basic shared principle. we Americans share the conviction that there is no such thing as an expendable student. True, an intolerable number of American students are dropping out of high school. True, we have not always lived up to our own high standard. But we will never accept the notion that vast numbers of illiterate and undereducated Americans can be offset by a well-educated elite. That's mat the american way. We will not rest until we have found a way to school every young American in the romance of our history and literature, and the wonders of science. Until we can accomplish this, millions of our countrymen will be unable to fully participate in, or even understand, the civic life of their homeland. 5 For years, redeeming these underachieving students has been a quest of the heart. Today, it is also a test of national will, a test critical to the very future of America. This may sound like an overstatement. America, after all, is still a world leader when it comes to producing Nobel Prize winners in physics, economics and literature. But what is the advantage for a nation with a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, if his books are largely unread in his own country? What is the advantage for a nation that can invent fiber optic cable, if the art of splicing these delicate strands is beyond the skills of our work force? I am committed to increased investment in basic research. But America can continue to lead the world in theoretical science, and still lose the race in the application of knowledge. H.G. Wells wrote that "human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe.' What had the ring of truth in the 1920s is ominously true in the highly competitive internationalized market of the late twentieth century. Let me share a few stark facts with you. Last year, Japan's functional literacy rate was better than 95 percent. In America, it's down to about 80 percent. The national drop-out rate is XX percent; it runs as high as 50 percent here in Washington. And of those Americans who do graduate from high school, as many as 25 percent cannot read or write at the eighth-grade level. 6 Two unhealthy trends are converging According to a study by the Hudson Institute, more than 75 percent of the nation's new workers will have limited literacy skills. Yet they will be qualified for only 40 percent of new jobs. As many Americans become less educated, the standards of the work place are becoming ever more rigorous. In the past, business could simply ignore the unlettered few. But the balmy days of the baby boom are passing us by. The U.S. Census bureau, the Hudson Institute and other experts report Between and that from now until the year 2000, we will face a "baby bust." According to Business Week, this shrinkage of the labor pool will make it necessary to train or retrain as many as 50 million workers in the next dozen years alone. Think of it -- 50 million! Back in the Eisenhower years, high-school drop-outs, if they worked hard, could still enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. A large suburban home, a new car in the driveway, and tuition money -- this was a very attainable dream, the American dream. But for those workers who lack skills and basic education today, a comfortable middle-class existence will be harder and harder to come by. Already, poorly trained high school graduates are having trouble finding jobs. More often than not, they need to 7 be computer literate and perform other tasks with increasingly complex technologies Excellence in education is critical at all levels. But at a minimum, we need to assure that the work force has the basic skills needed to keep America competitive. This is the call to arms you are answering so willingly and so well. Community colleges are the starting gate for higher education, a ready resource for vocational training and remedial schooling. You provide access for older citizens, women, minorities, and the handicapped -- precisely the very people who are being summoned to alleviate the coming labor shortage. You are retraining a work force as it approaches the average age of 40. You are training more women and minority Americans as they enter the work force in record numbers. And, by all accounts, you are doing a splendid job Let me offer further reason for hope in the convergence of two healthy trends -- the way in which the needs of American business are coinciding with that of the disadvantaged. The focal point of these two vast social needs can be found in hundreds of programs from Connecticut to California called employer-college partnerships, 8 This friendly merger of business and academia is a sweeping force for social improvement. Look at Dallas, where more than one thousand businesses have "adopted" the city's 200 secondary schools. Just look at North Carolina and South Carolina, where state governments have brought businesses and community colleges together to foster customized training and technical education. Governor Martin (Jim), Governor Campbell (Carroll), please convey my sincerest congratulations to your state education agencies You have shown that by working together, as communities, as partners in progress, we can develop a world-class work force. I challenge every state, every college, every business, to follow your example. peraphrose Toward this end, let me conclude with a, a few words of advice, written at the turn-of-the century, but so appropriate for this group today: "Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably in themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; (plan) aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever growing intensity. The man who wrote these words, Daniel Burnham, was the architect of such a big plan -- Washington's Union Station, which 9 stands out as a visual delight in a city already crowded with great monuments and statuary. Burnham's legacy is a truly living munent thing, with its vaulted ceilings and gilded geometry above bustling crowds of shoppers and commuters. But it would be nothing but a wreck, an eyesore, if it had not been lovingly restored. As important as it is to reclaim our civic capital of burnished brass and polished marble, how much more important it is to reclaim our human capital. Think, then, of our educational system in this way, as a vast and beautiful inheritance, which must be lovingly restored; not once, but every generation. In this effort, make no little plans. Think big. Aim high in hope and work. Continue to work with your local business community to help your students, to lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. For this, and all you do, you are earning the gratitude of a nation. Thank you, and God Bless America. # # # THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON SCHEDULE OF THE PRESIDENT AND MRS. BUSH FOR WASHINGTON, D.C. THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1989 EVENT: Speech to American Association of Community and Junior Colleges DRESS: Men - Business Suit Women - Day Dress CONTACT: Office of Presidential Advance John G. Keller, Jr. - 202/456-7565 Trip Coordinator Barbara Jobe - 202/456-7565 ADVANCE: M. Lukens - LEAD S. Ross - PRESS J. Gallagher - USSS S. Byrne - MIL. AIDE K. Bassmann - WHCA WEATHER: Chance of Showers/Mid 60's SCHEDULE OF THE PRESIDENT AND MRS. BUSH FOR WASHINGTON, D.C. THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1989 1:15 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush depart White House en route Washington Hilton Hotel. MOTORCADE ASSIGNMENTS: Lead J. Parmer Spare Doctor T. McBride LIMO THE PRESIDENT Mrs. Bush Follow Up Control J. Sununu S. Studdert Mil. Aide Support M. Fitzwater Official Photographer Medic Staff I E. Rogers Staff II Press Van I B. Zanca Press Van II (Drive Time: 5 Minutes) 1:20 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush arrive Washington Hilton Hotel and proceed to Holding Room. 1:21 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush arrive Holding Room. Met by: Mr. Todd Fentress National Student Scholar of the Year John C. Calhoun State Community College Decatur, Alabama Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fentress (Elaine) (Parents of Todd Fentress) 1:25 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush depart Holding Room and proceed to Off-Stage Announcement Area. 1:26 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush arrive Off-Stage Announcement Area. EVENT: SPEECH TO AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR COLLEGES OPEN PRESS RUFFLES AND FLOURISHES OFF-STAGE ANNOUNCEMENT HAIL TO THE CHIEF REMARKS 1:27 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush are announced into Ballroom and proceed to Seats at Head Table. Page Two 1:29 pm Dr. Jess Parrish, Chair, Presidents Academy and President, Midland College, Midland, Texas, makes Brief Remarks and invites THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush to participate in Presentations of Plaques to Retiring Junior and Community College Presidents. 1:30 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush participate in Presentations of Plaques. 1:35 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush conclude Plaque Presentations and retake Seats. 1:36 pm Mrs. Bush is invited to Podium for Award Presentation by Dale Parnell, President, American Association of Community and Junior Colleges. 1:40 pm Mrs. Bush makes Brief Acceptance Remarks. 1:43 pm Mrs. Bush concludes Remarks and retakes Seat. 1:44 pm THE PRESIDENT is introduced by David Ponitz, Chair, American Association of Community and Junior Colleges Board of Directors. 1:45 pm THE PRESIDENT Remarks. 2:00 pm THE PRESIDENT concludes Remarks and with Mrs. Bush departs Ballroom and proceeds to Holding Room. Page Three 2:02 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush arrive Holding Room. 2:04 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush depart Holding Room and proceed to Motorcade. 2:05 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush board Motorcade and depart Washington Hilton Hotel en route White House. MOTORCADE ASSIGNMENTS: Same as on Arrival. (Drive Time: 5 Minutes) 2:10 pm THE PRESIDENT and Mrs. Bush arrive White House. Page Four 2 in labor lost, and education dollars wasted. But we cannot calculate the loss of human happiness caused by illiteracy -- all the men and women across this country who will never hear the narrative voice of Dickens, Twain or Larry McMurtry; who will never know that a book can be a true friend in the still hours of the night. Barbara and I are deeply moved by the plight of the illiterate. And rest assured, we will continue to work with you to promote literacy skills This nation grew into greatness because early Americans met the challenge of building a national system of education. With the dawn of a new century only eleven years away, we are faced with a new challenge -- to revitalize and restore the system our forebears bequeathed to us; to ensure than an American education is once again second to none. In this crusade, we can look to leadership from a recent American innovation in education -- our nation's community colleges, more than a thousand strong. You best represent the American philosophy of education, based on accessibility for all, for life. Americans believe that education is not a phase to be successfully completed. We a endcasor believe that education is lifelong What scholars call the "life of the mind" is as essential to the complete man or woman as water and air. Do you want to learn Spanish at 40? Take up oil 3 In fact, whole communities are enriched and enlightened by the cultural resources you provide, from vast libraries, to night schools, to stages for local theatrical productions. This attitude toward education -- as something more than a requirement of an industrial society, as an embellishment of life -- is uniquely American. Inspired by your success, I am going to challenge our educational system at every level to adopt a few creative practices pioneered by the community colleges of America. Community colleges provide ten million Americans with educational choice. A wide range of students benefit from your institutions, from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses; to low-income students who need a stepping stone to a four-year program; to those who seek a 2-year degree; to mature students who are returning to school to round out their education. This is what we need more of up and down the line -- choice. Secondary and even elementary schools can learn a lot from the way in which you tap local talent, drawing on the knowledge of experts from the private sector. With this in mind, I have proposed extending this same practice, often called Alternative Teacher Certification, right down to the first grade. 4 Perhaps accountability is the key to your success. State universities, which accept your students, count on you to instill a precise curriculum. The businesses of your city count on you to match skills to the demands of the job market. And most of all, students count on you to provide a ladder of opportunity. And opportunity is our most basic shared principle. We share the conviction that there is no such thing as an expendable student. We will never accept the notion that vast numbers of illiterate and undereducated Americans can be offset by a well- educated elite. That's not the American way. We will not rest until we have found a way to school every young American in the romance of our history and literature, and the wonders of science. Until we can accomplish this, millions of our countrymen will be unable to fully participate in, or even understand, the civic life of their homeland. For years, redeeming these underachieving students has been a quest of the heart. Today, it is also a test of national will, a test critical to the very future of America. This may sound like an overstatement. America, after all, is still a world leader when it comes to producing Nobel Prize winners in physics, economics and literature. But what is the advantage for a nation with a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, if his books are largely 5 unread in his own country? What is the advantage for a nation that can invent fiber optic cable, if the art of splicing these delicate strands is beyond the skills of our work force? I am committed to increased investment in basic research. But America can continue to lead the world in theoretical science, and still lose the race in the application of knowledge. H.G. Wells wrote that "human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe." What had the ring of truth in the 1920s is ominously true in the highly competitive internationalized market of the late twentieth century. Let me share a few stark facts with you. Last year, Japan's functional literacy rate was better than 95 percent. In America, it's down to about 80 percent. The national drop-out rate is XX percent. And of those Americans who do graduate from high school, as many as 25 percent cannot read or write at the eighth-grade level. As many Americans become less educated, the standards of the work place are becoming ever more rigorous. In the past, business could simply ignore the unlettered few. But the balmy days of the baby boom are passing us by. Between now and the year 2000, we will face a "baby bust." According to Business Week, this shrinkage of the labor pool will make it necessary to train or retrain as many as 50 million 6 workers in the next dozen years alone. Think of it -- 50 million! Back in the Eisenhower years, high-school drop-outs, if they worked hard, could still enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. A large suburban home, a new car in the driveway, and tuition money -- this was a very attainable dream, the American dream. But for those workers who lack skills and basic education today, a comfortable middle-class existence will be harder and harder to come by. When a high school graduate can't get a job in a market begging for workers; then we've got a serious social imbalance, an education gap. Let's bridge that gap. Let's bridge it as fast possible. Excellence in education is critical at all levels. But at a minimum, we need to assure that the work force has the basic skills needed to keep America competitive. Community colleges are the starting gate for higher education, a ready resource for vocational training and remedial schooling. You provide access for older citizens, women, minorities, and the handicapped -- precisely the very people who are being summoned to alleviate the coming labor shortage. And I might add, for the most disadvantaged members of the work force, your programs spell opportunity. But they also spell opportunity for business. The disadvantaged and business are 7 coming together in hundreds of programs from Connecticut to California called employer-college partnerships. This friendly merger of business and academia is a sweeping force for social improvement. Look at Dallas, where more than one thousand businesses have "adopted" the city's 200 secondary schools. Just look at North Carolina and South Carolina, where state governments have brought businesses and community colleges together to foster customized training and technical education. You have shown that by working together, as communities, as partners in progress, we can match people to jobs, bring hope to the despairing, and build a world-class work force. I challenge every state, every college, every business, to follow your example. In our quest for excellence in education, let me conclude by paraphrasing a few words of advice, written at the turn-of-the century, but so appropriate for this group today: "Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably in themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble (idea) once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing." 8 The man who wrote these words, Daniel Burnham, was the architect of such a big plan -- Washington's Union Station, which stands out as a visual delight in a city already crowded with great monuments and statuary. Burnham's legacy is a truly living monument, with its vaulted ceilings and gilded geometry above bustling crowds of shoppers and commuters. But it would be nothing but a wreck, an eyesore, if it had not been lovingly restored. As important as it is to reclaim our civic capital of burnished brass and polished marble, how much more important it is to reclaim our human capital. Think, then, of our educational system in this way, as a vast and beautiful inheritance, which must be lovingly restored; not once, but every generation. In this effort, make no little plans. Think big. Aim high in hope and work. Continue to work together, as a community, to help your students, to lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. For this, and all you do, you are earning the gratitude of a nation. Thank you, and God Bless America. # # # THE WASHINGTON POST MONDAY, MARCH 20, 19 Louis V. Gerstner Jr. Martin Plissner One Nation, Underqualified Inkbites In the next five years American Express Co. not. AT&T says it spends $6 million a year to participation we expect from good parents: we On one of those weekly television broadcasts in which a One reason for the accelerating demand for will be hiring a minimum of 75,000 people. educate 14,000 employees in basic reading must be generous with our creativity, our sages from the print media tries to fill the intellectual void l the academy approach is that in the course of That's the good news. and math. American Express spends more attention, our enthusiasm and our concern. yahoos whose work is aired daily, a panelist recently tosse the program something unexpected happened The bad news is we may not be able to find than $10 million to teach employees to do I, for one, believe that American business of those profundities that distinguish this journalistic genre. to our students. It was as if a big light bulb them. their jobs competently. has not lost its power to energize and that flashed on: they focused on American enter- The average television "soundbite," he said that he'd b The jobs I'm talking about are entry-level The work-force dilemma goes beyond quali- young people who are exposed to the dyna- had shrunk from 14 to nine seconds between 1984 and 198 prise and, for the first time, realistically saw positions that have traditionally helped young ty. Our labor pool is shrinking; 10 million mism of corporate enterprises will embrace it themselves as part of its future. this pundit hadn't quite worked it all out yet, he was sure t people make the step from high school to a fewer people will enter the work force in the eagerly and quickly make up lost ground. connection could be found between the reported downsizi first foothold in the adult work force. In my '90s as compared with the '70s. So we have a The question is how to proceed. A number As soon as this happened, we started losing them. Although most of the students started soundbites and the decline (3 percent) in the perce company, we will need people who can run double-edged problem: quality and quantity are of companies have taken admirable initiatives, both going down. attacking the problem in different ways. In the the program with no thought of going on to voting-age people who voted last year. word processors and computers, write airline tickets, phone in buy-and-sell orders for stock Our education system is clearly the underly- long run, however, the best solutions must higher education, an extraordinary 90 percent I have no idea of the original source of these fig trades. They will have to learn to fit into involve partnerships in which businesses, subsequently decided to enroll in college. They soundbites, although I and the print reporter who cited th ing source of many of the shortcomings of the American work force. One hopes that Presi- schools and communities join in innovative were in a hurry to learn, to catch up. read them on the lips, a while back, of Roger Ailes, the m systems, to communicate with customers and coworkers, to deal with technology. dent Bush, who began his election campaign educational programs. Many were inner-city minority youngsters savant who designed the 1988 media campaign of President Yet we find people who can barely write- vowing earnestly to be the "education presi- Six years ago, American Express created who had undoubtedly contributed to the nega- It doesn't really matter, however, whether these figures not even a phone message let alone a business dent," will not forget the priority he empha- tive projections about the literacy and compe- more connection to reality than to voter turnout. The fallac such a program, which now includes partner- letter. We see students' math scores plummet- sized at the start. tence of American youth. No longer. When in the very premise: that 14 seconds is short, and nine ships with school boards and more than 100 ing-will they be able to keep our books? We In the meantime the private sector must. other companies in 14 U.S. cities. The results their eyes were opened to tangible opportu- terribly short, so terribly short that excessive exposure to qui are told that 20 percent of our sixth graders jump in vigorously. We must stop procrastinat- have been encouraging. The young people we nities, they blasted off and were on their way of that length can drive voters from the polls. cannot point to the United States on a world ing with committees, studies and limited solu- set out to teach taught us something too. up. "Soundbites" in a television news report are nothing mor map-a depressing sign to a company built on tions. We set up what we called Academies of We like to think the academy program was than quotes, that traditional component of news reporting worldwide travel arrangements. We read that Let me suggest two principles we're going Finance to help educate high school young- their catalyst. Some potential employees flew medium. Since the reporter who was so dismayed by the pu half of our high school students are "economic to have to swallow: sters to assume entry-level positions in the the coop, and in that sense the joke was on us skinniness of the 1988 soundbite happens to do his serious illiterates"-a woeful indicator of the brain- It's not going to be cheap. We must see this financial services industry. Students take clas- in the short term. But we're proud of what we Newsweek, I decided to check out the length of the quo power level of the future work force. not as a contingency or short-term expense ses and receive on-the-job training, including a have contributed to the future. These students might say the inkbites, in that publication. The deficiencies go beyond the traditional but as a long-range investment in rebuilding a paid summer internship. will come back as well-educated members of I went through the first 11 pages of the Nov. 18 issue and skills. Too many young job seekers are also foundation of national competence that will The concept works, and a consortium of the American work force. It's a great feeling. I at only those quotes that were complete statements, deficient in fundamentals such as teamwork, benefit all of us. companies has come together to form an recommend it to all my colleagues in American phrases, beginning with a capital letter and ending with a per initiative, problem-solving, adaptability, even Money alone is not the solution. Education is independent National Academy Foundation to business. constituting everything quoted from the particular source or simple communication among themselves. expensive, but more than money is involved. expand the program into partnerships with There were 32 such inkbites and a total of 581 words alto Business has no choice but to train its own, For the future of our companies and our more school districts and provide training in The writer is president of American The average inkbite was 18 words long. An average speak providing the education our school system did country, we must volunteer the same active additional occupations. Express Co. 18 words in about seven seconds-just under the nine whose skimpiness at least one expert has suggested may ha in from voting last year STAFFED DRAFT W/AUTO RECCOMMENDATIONS Davis/Blessey March 23, 1989 6 p.m. Draft 2 Title: Junior PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: AMER. ASSOC. OF JR. & COMMUNITY COLLEGES WASHINGTON HILTON MARCH 30, 1989/ 1 p.m. Thank you. Dale, Jim (Brady), Governors Martin and Campbell. (Further acknowledgements.) ((Bar, I am delighted that this distinguished group has recognized your efforts to promote literacy ... And to think, all this time I thought she was cheating at Scrabble )) In all sincerity, this honor will be treasured by Barbara and the whole Bush family for years to come. Still, Bar and I can't get over the feeling that we should be giving you an award. After all, you provide remedial literacy training on a scale that is nothing short of heroic. Benjamin Franklin was once asked what was the most pitiful thing that could befall a human being. After a moment's reflection, he replied: "A lonesome man on a rainy day who does not know how to read." The costs of illiteracy can be calculated in labor lost, and education dollars wasted. But we cannot 2 calculate the loss of human happiness caused by illiteracy -- all the men and women across this country who will never hear the narrative voice of Dickens, Twain or Larry McMurtry; who will never know that a book can be a true friend in the still hours of the night. Barbara and I are deeply moved by the plight of the illiterate. And rest assured, we will continue to work with you to promote literacy skills This nation grew into greatness because early Americans met the challenge of building an educational system second to none. With the dawn of a new century only eleven years away, we are faced with a new challenge -- to revitalize and restore that system our forebears bequeathed to us; to ensure than an American education is once again the best in the world. In this crusade, we can look to leadership from a recent American innovation in education -- our nation's community colleges, more than a thousand strong. You best represent the American philosophy of education, based on accessibility for all, for life. Americans believe that education is not a phase to be successfully completed. We believe that education is a lifelong endeavor. What scholars call the "life of the mind" is as, essential to the complete man or woman as water and air. 3 In fact, whole communities are enriched and enlightened by the cultural resources you provide, from vast libraries, to night schools, to stages for local theatrical productions. This attitude toward education -- as something more than a requirement of an industrial society, as an embellishment of life -- is uniquely American. Inspired by your success, I am going to challenge our educational system at every level to adopt a few creative practices pioneered by the community colleges of America. Community colleges provide ten million Americans with educational choice. A wide range of students benefit from your institutions, from those in high school who are looking for advanced courses; to low-income students who need a stepping priniciple ofc noice stone to a four-year program; to those who seek a 2-year degree; to mature students who are returning to school to round out their education. This is what we need more of up and down the line -- choice. Secondary and even elementary schools can learn a lot from the way in which you tap local talent, drawing on the knowledge of experts from the private sector. With this in mind, I have proposed extending this same practice, often called Alternative Teacher Certification, right down to the first grade. 4 ( Perhaps accountability is the key to your success. State universities, which accept your students, count on you to instill a precise curriculum. The businesses of your city count on you to match skills to the demands of the job market. And most of all, students count on you to provide a ladder of opportunity. PERhAps And opportunity is our most basic shared principle. We share the conviction that there is no such thing as an expendable student. We will never accept the notion that vast numbers of illiterate and undereducated Americans can be offset by a well- educated elite. That's not the American way. We will not rest until we have found a way to school every young American in the romance of our history and literature, and the wonders of science. Until we can accomplish this, millions of our countrymen will be unable to fully participate in, or even understand, the civic life of their homeland. For years, redeeming these underachieving students has been a quest of the heart. Today, it is also a test of national will, a test critical to the very future of America. This may sound like an overstatement. America, after all, is still a world leader when it comes to producing Nobel Prize winners in physics, economics and literature. But what is the advantage for a nation with a Nobel Prize-winning novelist, if his books are largely 5 unread in his own country? What is the advantage for a nation that can invent fiber optic cable, if the art of splicing these delicate strands is beyond the skills of our work force? I am committed to increased investment in basic research. But America can continue to lead the world in theoretical science, and still lose the race in the application of knowledge. H.G. Wells wrote that "human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe." What had a ring of truth in 14 true the 1920s is ominous in the 1980s, with its highly competitive internationalized market. Let me share a few stark facts with you. Last year, Japan's functional literacy rate was better than ten less 95 percent. In America, it's to about 00 percent. The 27 national drop-out rate is ** percent. And of those Americans who do graduate from high school, as many as 25 percent cannot read inTERMEDiATE or write at the eighth grade level. As many Americans become less educated, the standards of the work place are becoming ever more rigorous. In the past, business could simply ignore the unlettered few. But the balmy days of the baby boom are passing us by. Between now and the year 2000, we will face a "baby bust." According to Business Week, this shrinkage of the labor pool will make it necessary to train or retrain as many as 50 million 6 workers in the next dozen years alone. Think of it -- 50 million! Back in the Eisenhower years, high-school drop-outs, if they worked hard, could still enjoy a comfortable middle-class life. A large suburban home, a new car in the driveway, and tuition money -- this was a very attainable dream, the American dream. But for those workers who lack skills and basic education today, a comfortable middle-class existence will be harder and harder to come by. When a high school graduate can't get a job in a market begging for workers, then we've got a serious social imbalance, an education gap. Let's bridge that gap. Let's bridge it to as REDEEM THOUSANDS fast possible. the of those of Y.A.'S Excellence in education is critical at all levels. But at a minimum, we need to assure that the work force has the basic skills needed to keep America competitive. > BETTER link Community colleges are the starting gate for higher education, a ready resource for vocational training and remedial schooling. You provide access for older citizens, women, minorities, and the handicapped -- precisely the very people who are being summoned to alleviate the coming labor shortage. Your programs spell opportunity for the most disadvantaged members of the work force. But they also spell opportunity for business. The disadvantaged and business are coming together in hundreds of 7 programs from Connecticut to California called employer-college partnerships. 30thers This friendly merger of business and academia is a sweeping force for social improvement. Look at Dallas, where more than one thousand businesses have "adopted" the city's 200 secondary schools. Just look at North Carolina and South Carolina, where CABOR unions state governments have brought businesses and community colleges together to foster customized training and technical education. You have shown that by working together, as communities, as partners in progress, we can match people to jobs, bring hope to the despairing, and build a world-class work force. I challenge every state, every college, every business, to follow your example. Let me conclude by paraphrasing a few words of advice, offeced written at the turn-of-the century, but so appropriate for our modern quest for excellence in education: "Make no little plans: they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably in themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble (idea) once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing." 8 are words who The man who wrote these Burnham, was the architect of such a big plan -- Washington's Union Station, which stands out as a visual delight in a city already crowded with great monuments and statuary. Burnham's legacy is a truly living monument, with its vaulted ceilings and gilded geometry above bustling crowds of shoppers and commuters. But it would be nothing but a wreck, an eyesore, if it had not been lovingly restored. As important as it is to reclaim our civic capital of burnished brass and polished marble, how much more important it is to reclaim our human capital. Think, then, of our educational system in this way, as a vast and beautiful inheritance, which must be lovingly restored; not once, but every generation. In this effort, make no little plans. Think big. Aim high in hope and work. Continue to work together, as a community, to help your students, to lift their vision and lengthen their horizon. For this, and all you do, you are earning the gratitude of a nation. Thank you, and God Bless America. # # #