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Hello, everybody. (Applause.) Thank you so much. Well, can everybody please give Nelson
a big round of applause for the outstanding job that he did? (Applause.) So Nelson just
told me backstage he plans on being a Navy SEAL. So I was really nice to him now so he
doesn't mess with me later. (Laughter.) We are very proud of him, proud of all the students
who are here today.
I want to thank Principal Richardson for the great job that he's doing. (Applause.) And
I want to thank all the wonderful teachers who are here at Buck Lodge Middle School.
Go, Vikings! (Applause.)
I brought along some people who very much care about the future of these young people.
We've got America's Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, in the house. (Applause.) We've
got the FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler and two of his fellow commissioners who are here, doing
great work. (Applause.) Congressman Steny Hoyer is in the house. (Applause.) County
Executive Rushern Baker is here. (Applause.) And we've got some business leaders who've
made some very big commitments today -- because they know that your education is the very
best investment that all of us can make in America.
Now, last week, in my State of the Union address, I spent some time talking about opportunity
for everybody, which is at the heart of this country -- the idea that no matter who you
are, no matter what you look like -- if you have a chair feel free to sit down. (Laughter.)
That wasn't actually my line, but I thought -- (laughter.) But at the core of America,
the essence of it, what makes us exceptional is this idea, no matter what you look like,
where you come from, what your last name is, if you're willing to work hard, if you're
willing to live up to your responsibilities, you can make it here in America.
But each generation has to work hard to make sure that dream of opportunity stays alive
for the next generation. And the opportunity agenda that I laid out last week will help
us do that. It's focused on four areas: Number one, more new jobs; number two, training folks
with the skills to fill those jobs; number three, making sure our economy rewards hard
work with decent wages and economic security; and number four, the piece I'm here to talk
about today -- guaranteeing every child access to a world-class education. Every child. Not
just some, but everybody. (Applause.)
Now, I'm only standing here today because my education gave me a chance. I'm not so
different than a lot of these young people. I was raised by a single mom, with the help
of my grandma and my grandpa. We didn't have a lot of money, and for a while my mother
was working and going to school at the same time as she was raising a couple of kids.
And there were times where times were tight. But with a family who loved me, and with some
hard work on my part -- although it wasn't always consistent -- as my mother and my grandparents
would point out. And then, ultimately, with the help of scholarships and student loans,
I was able to go to college. I was able to go to law school. And entire worlds of opportunity
opened up to me that might not otherwise have been available.
So the country invested in me. My parents invested in me, my grandparents invested in
me, but my country invested in me. And I want America to now invest in you -- because in
the faces of these students, these are future doctors and lawyers and engineers, scientists,
business leaders. We don't know what kinds of products, services, good work that any
of these students may do. But I'm betting on them, and all of us have to bet on them.
So five years ago, we set out to change the odds on all of our kids. Our Race to the Top
challenge has helped raise expectations and performance in states all across the country.
Our high school graduation rate is the highest that it's been in more than 30 years. (Applause.)
That's an achievement. The dropout rate among Latino students has been cut in half since
2000 -- a really big deal. (Applause.) We reformed our student loan programs, so that
more young people are able to afford to go to college, and now we've got more young people
earning a college degree than ever before.
Teachers and principals across the country are working hard to prepare students like
you with the skills you need for a new economy -- not just the basics of reading and writing
and arithmetic, but skills like science and technology, engineering, critical thinking,
creativity -- asking, what do you think about that idea, and how would you do things differently.
Now, we still have more work to do to reach more kids and reach them faster. And some
of the ideas that I've presented will require Congress to act. But while Congress decides
what it's going to do, I said at the State of the Union -- and I want to repeat here
today -- I will act on my own. Wherever I have the opportunity to expand opportunity
for more young people, wherever I have a chance to make a difference in their lives, I'm going
to act. I'm going to act. (Applause.)
So in this Year of Action, we're going to work with states and communities to help them
make high-quality pre-K available to more young children. We know it's a good investment.
(Applause.) We want to keep working to partner high schools with colleges and employers to
offer real-world education experiences that can lead directly to jobs and careers. And
we want to do more to make sure no middle-class kid is priced out of a college education and,
obviously, no poor kid is priced out of a college education. That's got to be a priority
for us. (Applause.)
But today, we're here to announce some big strides that we're making to put the world
and outer space at every child's fingertips -- whether they live in a big city or a quiet
suburb or in rural America.
Last year, I launched something called ConnectED -- a new initiative to close the technology
gap in our schools and connect 99 percent of America's students to high-speed broadband
Internet within five years. Now, this is something we can do without waiting for Congress. We
do need some help, though. So we picked up the phone and we started asking some outstanding
business leaders to help bring our schools and libraries into the 21st century. Today,
thanks to the leadership of some of these companies, we've got some big announcements
to make.
But first, I want you to know why it matters that we make sure technology is available
to every child. Technology is not the entire answer, by the way, when it comes to educational
excellence. We've got to make sure we've got outstanding teachers. (Applause.) We've got
to make sure that parents are doing what they need to do. (Applause.) We need young people
to make the effort and to have high expectations for themselves. (Applause.) But technology
can help; t's a tool, it's just one more tool.
So today, the average American school has about the same Internet bandwidth as the average
American home, but it serves 200 times as many people. Think about it. So you've got
the same bandwidth, but it's a school -- it's not your house. Only around 30 percent of
our students have true high-speed Internet in the classroom. In countries like South
Korea, that's 100 percent. We shouldn't give that kind of competitive advantage over to
other countries. We want to make sure our young people have the same advantages that
some child in South Korea has right now. In a country where we expect free Wi-Fi with
our coffee, we should definitely demand it in our schools. (Applause.)
Now, here at Buck Lodge, you are showing how we can use technology to teach our young people
in innovative ways. And by the way, the principal told me that part of how this got started
was some of the stimulus dollars that we put in place almost five years ago now. But every
student here has access to their own iPad. And you don't just write papers or take tests;
they're animating movies, they're designing blogs, they're collaborating on multimedia
projects. In the word of an 8th grader, Annie Gomez, she says, "You can learn even more,
you can take in more, and then you know more about the world."
And new technologies are helping teachers. So in Mr. Jeter's science class, students
take quizzes on their tablets; he then can check the answers in real time and he can
figure out who needs extra help. In Ms. Galinat's language arts class, students learn vocabulary
not just with flashcards, but with online video. In Ms. Stover's math class -- I was
just over with Ms. Stover -- students bring their tablets home to watch lectures about
concepts like ratios and rational numbers, and then use the next day's classroom time
applying those concepts to the real world. So technology allows teachers here to spend
more time being creative, less time teaching to the test, giving continual feedback, being
able to pinpoint where a young person is having trouble because they're able to see their
work right away in a pretty efficient way.
And I will say, I was just in a classroom -- there was a lesson plan that was organized
around the Curiosity Rover on Mars. And the young people there were doing some amazing
stuff -- making their own iBooks with video and multimedia. And as I was walking out,
I was talking to Steny Hoyer about how I remember using gluesticks -- (laughter) -- and scissors
to cut stuff out and it didn't look very good. (Laughter.) These guys were making books you
could publish. (Laughter.)
But it makes learning exciting, it makes it interesting. If you're studying science and
you are actually seeing the engineers who built Rover talk about what it is -- or the
Curiosity Rover -- talking about what they're doing and how they did it, and being able
to see the Rover on the Martian landscape, it makes vivid and real math and science in
a way that is more interesting to students, which means that they're more likely to be
engaged and can potentially do better.
And this is how it should be for every student and every teacher at every school and library
in the country. That's how it should be for everbody, not just some. (Applause.)
Today, almost eight months after we launched ConnectED, we can announce some very big commitments
that are going to go a long way towards realizing that vision where every child has the access
to the technology that they can use to help them learn. So, under Tom Wheeler's leadership,
the FCC is announcing a down payment of $2 billion to connect more than 15,000 schools
and 20 million students to high-speed broadband over the next two years -- (applause) -- 15,000
schools, 20 million students. (Applause.) It won't require a single piece of legislation
from Congress. It won't add a single dime to the deficit.
And even better, some of America's biggest tech companies have decided to join this effort,
with commitments worth more than three-quarters of a billion dollars. So let me just give
you some examples.
Apple will donate $100 million worth of iPads, MacBooks, and other products to schools across
the country. (Applause.) That's an enormous commitment.
Sprint will provide free wireless service for up to 50,000 low-income high school students
over the next four years, so their 21st century education isn't confined to the classroom.
(Applause.)
AT&T will donate over $100 million worth of wireless service to middle-school students,
so that they can continue to do homework when they get home. (Applause.)
Autodesk will make its 3D-design software available for free to every high school in
the country. (Applause.)
Microsoft will offer products like Windows to students and teachers at a deep discount,
and provide 12 million free copies of Office to our schools. (Applause.)
O'Reilly Media and Safari Books Online will donate more than $100 million worth of eBooks
that will help students learn technology skills like coding and web design. (Applause.)
And finally, because no technology will ever be as important as a great teacher, Verizon
will expand a program to help train educators to use all these new tools in all 50 states.
(Applause.)
So I want to thank all the business leaders who are here today for stepping up. Why don't
you stand up? Let's give them a big round of applause. (Applause.) We're very proud
of them. Thank you. (Applause.)
Now, this is an extraordinary commitment by these business leaders, but they're business
leaders, so they're not just doing it out of the goodness of their heart. They want
the country to do well, but they also understand that they want educated customers. They want
customers who are able to get good jobs, who are going to be using these tools in the future.
They want that next young architect coming out of here to be familiar with using that
iPad so that they're designing buildings and using their products.
They know that the entire economy will be lifted if more of our young people are doing
better. So they're doing good, but it will also help them succeed from a bottom-line
perspective by this kind of participation. They are united in their support of young
people like you, even though sometimes they compete against each other -- because all
of us have a stake in your education and in your future.
And that's why we have to build on this progress together. Later this year, I'm going to ask
Congress to do its part and give teachers using cutting-edge technologies the training
they deserve. (Applause.) Because it's important -- as I said before, technology is not a silver
bullet. It's only as good as the teachers who are there using it as one more tool to
help inspire and teach and work through problems.
And although I've noticed that these days when I visit schools, most teachers are much
younger than I am -- (laughter) -- I'm getting on in years, obviously, which means that I'm
not always as familiar with iPads and technology as I need to be. We want every teacher in
every school to understand from soup to nuts how you can potentially use this technology.
And that oftentimes requires a training component that makes sure that the technology is not
just sitting there, but is actually used and incorporated in the best way possible.
So I'm going to ask every business leader across America to join us in this effort.
Ask yourself what you can do to help us connect our students to the 21st century. Ask yourselves
what you can do to support our teachers and our parents and give every young people every
shot at success.
And we can make this happen. And just imagine what it will mean for our country when we
do. Imagine what it could mean for a girl growing up on a farm to be able to take AP
Biology or AP Physics even if her school is too small to offer it, because she's got the
access to technology that allows her to take those classes online. Imagine what it means
for a boy with an illness that confines him sometimes to home where he can join his classmates
for every lesson with FaceTime or Skype. Imagine what it means for educators to spend less
time grading tests and papers, more time helping young people learn. Imagine more businesses
starting here and hiring here, because they know for a fact that the young people here
are going to be equipped with the skills that are better than anybody else on Earth.
That's the future we're building. That's what these companies are investing in. And if America
pulls together now -- if we do our part to make sure every young person can go as far
as their passion and their hard work will take them, whether it's to Mars or to the
bottom of the ocean or to anywhere on this planet where you've got an Internet connection
-- if we commit ourselves to restoring opportunity for everybody, then we can keep the American
Dream alive for generations to come.
That's our main project. That's our main obligation. That's why I ran for President. That's what
I'm going to be working on for the next three years. (Applause.)
Thank you for all the work that you're doing here at this outstanding school. God bless
you. God bless America. Thank you. (Applause.)