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NEWSWEEK MAR 10 1997 Tech / Wesler Govs 2000 12 THE MILLENNIUM NOTEBOOK Internet U-No Ivy, No Walls, No Keg Parties We may have to be. especially when faced with the educational demands of the future. Utah Gov. Michael Leavilt has OW CAN and circuit board has obvious advantages spearheaded the formation of a sort of elec- there be for Joe Martin. whose employer put up tronic consortium of some 20 universities H classes with- $75.000 for the 19-month Duke program. in 13 nearby states dubbed Western Gov- out class- "My job, combined with the fact that I ernors University (WGU) - that would al- rooms? Ex- wanted to keep a family life. has made it low online students to take classes from ams without impossible for me to go back to school any of the institutions or from a combina- blue books? these last 20 years." he says. "The tradi- tion of all of them. Leavitt conceived the Isn't the steady inhalation of tional programs didn't have the flexibility I plan as a response to projections that his chalk dust essential to a top- needed." Lisa Haddock, an online instruc- state's college enrollments would double drawer education? Joe Martin tor at the University of Phoenix, took the by 2015. Utah can't afford the $3 billion it doesn't think so. The 41-year-old new medium's flexibility to extremes when would cost to build the nine new campuses CFO of Farm Bureau Insurance her second daughter opted to arrive in the required. Some futurists even go so far in Indianapolis is enrolled in midst of two ongoing classes. "I logged on as to predict the demise of conventional Duke University's Global Execu- three times during labor." she says. teachers. Joseph Coates, coauthor of "2025: tive M.B.A. program. On his Virtual colleges. of course. still struggle Scenarios of U.S. and Global Society Re- lunch hour, or in his bedroom as with the stigma of their forebears. those shaped by Science and Technology. envi- his wife sleeps. Martin logs on to back-of-the-magazine correspondence sions a virtual education system from the Internet and delves into courses. Not all online offerings are ac- kindergarten to grad school that would homework assigned by a profes- credited. and prospective students should eventually dispense altogether with age- sor more than 500 miles away. be cautious - - for the time being. anyway. based grades and allow pupils to progress He listens to lectures delivered "By the millennium, I think some of the independently. But not even staunch pro- via audio stream and engages in really bad programs will have run their ponents of online education believe acade- real-time Web chats with class- course." says Dixon. "We'll be out of the mia's hallowed halls will disappear any mates from China to Brazil. In honeymoon phase, and more realistic time soon. Says WGU executive director nine months, he and 40 others about what really works for students" Jeffery Livingston, "There's no anticipation from 14 countries will make up that it's either technology or a traditional the first class to graduate from campus - this is just another alternative." Duke's virtual business school. NEWSWEEK And so it will likely remain, at least until Duke is one of several they devise a way to download beer. schools, including Ohio University and KENDALL HAMILTON and SUSAN MILLER Purdue, that have recently launched Inter- COMMITMENT WATCH net-based M.B.A. programs for far-flung execs. Other institutions have begun offer- What Beautiful Service 3 ing electronic graduate programs in fields from computer science to nursing. and would-be liberal-arts majors can collect The "beauty part," as Ross Perot would say, of the April 27-28 bipartisan Presidents' Summit for America's Future is the way It's structured. Or- B.A. degrees from places like the Universi- ganizations don't get to go to Philadelphia without a concrete commit- ty of Alaska without the need to invest in ment to at-risk kids. That means less talk, more action. Not so beautiful: earmuffs. About 300 colleges and universi- planners are swamped. For info, check out www.citizenservice.org. ties now offer virtual degrees. says Pam Dixon, author of the book "Virtual Col- ORGANIZATION COMMITMENT CHALLENGE lege." And. as we head into the next millen- Kiwanis Engage 250,000 kids in 30 million- Hunting for Lions nium, she predicts. professors will increas- International plus hours of service by year 2000 and Elk ingly trade their ivory towers for spires of 300 natural- Sponsor school to career Would work in silicon "In 10 years, cybercolleges will def- gas and electric experiences for 1.5 million any industry initely be part of mainstream education. company CEOs young people There's no escaping it," she says. Richard Federated Dept. Staelin. director of the Duke program. is Sponsor 50,000 hours of employee Paging the rest of Stores time in schools as tutors, mentors the retail trade similarly optimistic. "This is a paradigm shift in education." he says. "In five years. I National Educa- Recruit and train more than 1,000 Now 'bout other tion Association retired teachers to tutor 50,000 retirees? believe, we'll have as many applications for youths in reading our [online] M.B.A. program as for our reg- ular one." New York Vol- Provide intense une-to-one help Time to clone this unteer for Trading pomp and circumstance for plug to 25.000 youths 10 improve one Youth schoolwork. prevent crime THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary For Immediate Release April 19, 1997 April 18, 1997 MEMORANDUM FOR THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES SUBJECT: Expanding Access to Internet-based Educational Resources for Children, Teachers, and Parents My number one priority for the next 4 years is to make sure that all Americans have the best education in the world. One of the goals of my Call to Action for American Education is to bring the power of the Information Age into all of our schools. This will require connecting every classroom and library to the Internet by the year 2000; making sure that every child has access to modern, multimedia computers; giving teachers the training they need to be as comfortable with the computer as they are with the chalkboard; and increasing the availability of high-quality educational content. When America meets the challenge of making every child technologically literate, children in rural towns, the suburbs, and inner city schools will have the same access to the same universe of knowledge. I believe that Federal agencies can make a significant contribution to expanding this universe of knowledge. Some agencies have already launched a number of exciting projects in this area. The White House has a special "White House for Kids" home page with information on the history of the White House. NASA's K-12 initiative allows students to inter- act with astronauts and to share in the excitement of scientific pursuits such as the exploration of Mars and Jupiter and with experiments conducted on the Space Shuttle. The AskERIC service (Education Resources Information Center), supported by the Department of Education, has a virtual library of more than 900 lesson plans for K-12 teachers, and provides answers to questions from educators within 48 hours -- using a nationwide network of experts and databases of the latest research. Students participating in the Vice President's GLOBE project (Global Learning and Observation for a Better Environment) collect actual atmospheric, aquatic, and biological data and use the Internet to share, analyze, and discuss the data with scientists and students all over the world. With support from the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Defense's CAETI program (Computer-Aided Education and Training Initiative), the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory has developed a program that allows high school students to request and download their own observations of the universe from professional telescopes. We can and should do more, however. Over the next 3 months, you should determine what resources you can make available that would enrich the Internet as a tool for teaching and learning, and produce and make available a new or expanded version of your service within 6 months. more (OVER) 2 You should use the following guidelines to support this initiative: Consider a broad range of educational resources, including multimedia publications, archives of primary documents, networked scientific instruments such as telescopes and supercomputers, and employees willing to serve as tele-mentors or answer student and teacher questions. Expand access not only to the information and other resources generated internally, but by the broader community of people and institutions that your agency works with and supports. For example, science agencies should pursue partnerships with professional societies, universities, and researchers to expand K-12 access to scientific resources. Update and improve your services in response to comments from teachers and students, and encourage educators to submit curricula and lesson plans that they have developed using agency material. Focus on the identification and development of high-quality educational resources that promote high standards of teaching and learning in core subjects. Of particular importance are resources that will help students read well and independently by 4th grade, and master challenging mathematics, including algebra and geometry, by 8th grade. Make sure the material you develop is accessible to people with disabilities. Earlier this month, I announced my support for the Web Accessibility Initiative, a public- private partnership that will make it easier for people with disabilities to use the World Wide Web. I am also directing the Department of Education to develop a "Parents Guide to the Internet," that will explain the educational benefits of this exciting resource, as well as steps that parents can take to minimize the risks associated with the Internet, such as access to material that is inappropriate for children. The Department of Education will also be responsible for chairing an interagency working group to coordinate this initiative to ensure that the agency-created material is of high quality, is easily accessible, and promotes awareness of Internet-based educational resources among teachers, parents, and students. WILLIAM J. CLINTON Internet THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary For Immediate Release March 15, 1997 RADIO ADDRESS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT TO THE NATION 10:06 A.M. EST THE VICE PRESIDENT: Good morning. This is Vice President Al Gore. President Clinton asked me to fill in for him this morning as he recovers from yesterday's successful operation to repair a torn tendon in his knee. The President's doing great, he's resting comfortably and he'll be back on his feet - - both of them -- very soon. He wanted me to thank all of you who have sent your prayers and best wishes for a speedy recovery. Over the past four years, our country has made real progress. The American economy has produced nearly 12 million new jobs. Family incomes are going up and the poverty rate is going down, and we've had the biggest drop in the welfare rolls in our nation's history. But we face new challenges in a competitive global economy. And the one thing that will most determine our success or failure is the quality of the education we give to all of our children. That is why President Clinton has made education our nation's number one priority for the next four years. And in recent days, he and I have traveled the country to stress the importance of all Americans working together to make American public education the very best in the entire world. Here's our goal: By the year 2000, every eight-year-old can read. Every 12-year-old can log onto the Internet. Every 18-year-old can go to college, and every American can keep on learning for a lifetime. And the President has proposed a plan of action to reach this goal and to improve American education. We must start by focusing on our youngest children. The President's balanced budget plan will expand Head Start to one million children. And this week the President and the First Lady announced that they will host the first White House Conference on Early Childhood Development and Learning. We also must open more charter schools that stay open as long as they meet high standards. And we must make the 13th and 14th years of schooling as universal as high school is today. And the cornerstone of this plus is 1.., unise standards so we make sure our children We have challenged every state to adopt high national academic standards, and then by 1999 to test fourth graders in reading and eighth graders in math so that all of our children, no matter where they live or what their backgrounds, will have the same chance to make the most of their lives and their futures. Last month, the first two states, Michigan and Maryland, announced plans to adopt these tests. And on Thursday, President Clinton spoke before the North Carolina Legislature where Governor Jim Hunt announced that North Carolina would become the third state to adopt these standards. The national government is also taking responsibility for the schools it controls. The Department of Defense runs a school system as big as that of the State of Delaware, educating 115,000 American children at bases here and around the world. This week, the Department of Defense schools asked that their students be among the first to take the new tests when they become available. Starting in 1999, students in American classrooms from Wiesbaden to Okinawa to Camp Lejeune will learn the same rigorous material and take the same national test as students throughout the country. On Thursday, as the President was traveling to North Carolina, I traveled to California and spoke to that state's legislature about another element of our education crusade, a national effort to reinvent the way we finance public education, to reorganize our schools in harmony with the principles of the knowledge economy. This reinventing public education effort will begin not in Washington but in communities across America. Its goal is to enlist everyone concerned about the education of children, from parents to school administrators to students themselves, to begin asking some fundamental questions about their public school systems - - in particular, how school dollars are spent. In an age of tight budgets, we should be spending public funds on teachers and children, not on unnecessary overhead and bloated bureaucracy. Yet any educational progress we achieve is at risk if our children are asked to learn in a landscape littered with peeling paint and broken glass. With student populations at an all-time high, many of our schoolhouses are now at an all-time low - - rundown, overcrowded, and stuck with ancient technology or no technology at all. One-third of our schools now need major repair or outright replacement. Sixty percent need major building repairs to fix sagging roofs or to repair cracked foundations. Forty-six percent even lack the basic electrical wiring to support computers, modems, and modern communications technology. This has become a national problem and it demands national action. That is why yesterday the President sent new legislation to the Congress to provide federal assistance to help local communities and states rebuild the nation's schools. The Partnership to Rebuild America's Schools Act will provide $5 billion over the next four years to help upgrade old schools and build new schools. This will spur $20 billion in investments for school modernization by states, localities, and the private sector. We urge Congress and communities to step up to this challenge. We simply cannot ask our teachers to build up children in buildings that are literally falling down. Our children deserve to be held to the highest standards, to learn from school systems that focus on teaching and not bureaucracy, inside school buildings that shine as brightly as their hopes. On all these fronts, we are working hard to prepare our people for the 21st century. We will keep at it, and we ask for your help. Thanks for listening. END 10:12 A.M. EST