Statement By Commissioner Of Education Earl McGrath, Upon Induction as Commissioner
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OCR Page 1 of 5INDUCTION STATEMENT*
In assuming the office of Commissioner of Education I an deeply
conscious of the heavy responsibilities and the exacting duties which
this appointment involves. I am no less aware of the great opportunities
which it offers for constructive leadership in education at all levels.
This is especially true at this point in American history when the
Federal Government is being called upon to play a much larger role
in education than it has hitherto. Fron the beginning, this Nation
has been one of opportunity for those who came from other shores, and for
the succeeding generations born in this land. It has been the view of
the large majority of Americans that all children regardless of their
origins or social status should have the ohance to develop their
abilities to the fullest. To do so, however, they must have equal
opportunity for education.
But the ideal of equal educational opportunity has not been
realised. Differences in the various communities of the Nation in
the ability to produce wealth, and differences in family status and
income, close the doors of the schoolhouse to many children before they
have the chance to develop their minds, their bodies, and their spirits
to the level of their natural endowments. If it ever could do so,
this great democratic Nation can no longer afford the ovil consequences
of widespread educational privation.
By Earl James McGrath upon his induction as U. S. Commissioner of Educa-
tion, Federal Security Agency, Washington, D. C., 12:00 noon, March 18,
1949.
Published in School Life, May 1949; Dictaphone Educational Forum,
April 1949; NEA Journal, "Education Is The Road To Freedem," April
1949; and The Phi Delta Kappan, "Toward Equality of Opportunity,"
May 1949. Also excerpts in California Journal of Secondary Education,
May-1949, The Elementary School Journal, May-June 1949, and through
United Press releases in leading newspapers, March 18, 1949.
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