President Bush Signs Indian Education Executive Order
Remarks by the President at Signing of the Indian Education Executive Order
Room 450
Eisenhower Executive Office Building
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for coming. Glad you all are here. Please
be seated. Thank you for coming. Welcome. I'm so pleased to have so
many distinguished leaders in this historic place. I see a lot of
friendly faces here. I want you to know it's a privilege to stand with
you as we take an important step toward a shared objective: improving
the education of all American Indian and Alaska Native children.
That's what we're here to discuss today. It's an important goal.
(Applause.)
Two people that are going to be important in this, in reaching this
goal -- we'll reach it, by the way. My attitude is, when America sets
a goal and puts our mind to it, we'll meet the goal. And two people
that are going to be very important in reaching this goal will be the
Secretary of the Interior, Gale Norton, and the Secretary of Education,
Rod Paige, both of whom have joined me here today. Thank you for
coming. (Applause.)
I'm also pleased that we're joined by some mighty distinguished
members of the United States Congress, two from the Senate and three
from the House, starting with the President Pro Tem of the Senate,
Senator Ted Stevens from Alaska. Thank you for coming, Senator. A
member of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, Senator Craig Thomas,
from Wyoming. Welcome. Members of the House Resources Committee --
three members are with us today -- Ken Calvert of California --
(applause) -- Richard Pombo of California -- (applause) -- and Dennis
Rehberg, of the great state of Montana. (Applause.) We're glad you're
here. I want to thank you for taking time. These guys are busy
people, but obviously, they're committed to this important goal.
I appreciate the Tribal leaders who are here. I see leaders from
all over the country. I really appreciate you coming to -- you honor
us with your presence. And you honor us with your strong commitment to
making sure every child learns. It's a really important part of our
mutual responsibility. When you're a leader, you've got to set
important goals and follow through on those goals. And I know you
share the same goal I've got -- every child -- not just a few, not just
some -- but every child gets the best possible education. That's what
we're here to discuss today.
I want to thank the students who are with me, on stage. They've
set one standard, and that's the standard of excellence. And they're
achieving that. They're scholars, high school scholars, soon to be
university and college scholars who are in town to participate in a
science bowl. I told them we need more scientists in the country. And
they picked a good area to become an expert, because there's a lot of
demand for scientists here in this country that is changing because of
technology.
I want to thank the teachers who are here. I appreciate you being
a teacher. You know, Senator, you might not remember, but I was the
governor of Texas once. Well, of course, you remember, what the heck
am I thinking. (Laughter.) But my predecessor was Sam Houston. He
was a senator, a congressman; he was the President of the Republic of
Texas. It's a pretty big deal, when you're President of the Republic
of Texas. He was the governor of Texas. They asked him the most
important thing he ever did in his life. He said, "Teacher." He
didn't hesitate. He said, being a teacher. So for those of you who
are teachers here, thank you for being compassionate citizens who care
deeply about the students of our country.
We place a high value on education because we understand the
importance of education to our future and the importance of education
to Tribal Nations. It's really important we get it right. In the
words of the late Sam Ahkeah, the former Chairman of the Navajo Nation
Council, "We must encourage our young people to go into education. We
need thousands of young lawyers and doctors and dentists and
accountants and nurses and secretaries," is what he said. You can't be
one of those unless you're educated, if I could paraphrase what this
great leader said. His vision was clear. And that's what we're here
to talk about today, to make sure all our visions are clear, starting
at the federal level.
His commitment to education has been shared by American Indians and
Alaska Natives through the generations. Today, his granddaughter,
Sharon, is with us. Where are you, Sharon? Sharon, thanks for
coming. (Applause.) There's nothing better than being a relative of a
famous person. (Laughter and applause.) Sharon is a leader here in
Washington, D.C., following in her Granddad's footsteps. So thanks for
being here. Welcome.
To improve education for children of every background, I was
honored to sign what has been called the No Child Left Behind Act.
This law challenges what I call the soft bigotry of low expectations.
In other words, sometimes people walk into a classroom and see a child,
and say, well, gosh, that child can't learn. That's the lowest of low
expectations. This law basically says, we've got a different mind-set
in America; we believe every child can learn, and expect every child to
learn. That means we've raised standards for every child, not just a
few.
You know what happens when you have low expectations and low
standards? People just get simply shuffled through the system. And
you know who gets shuffled through -- the so-called hard to educate,
the isolated, the inner-city child. That's not good enough for
America. And this law changes that attitude. We spend more money at
the federal level. But now, for the first time, we're asking the
question, can you show results? If you expect every child to learn to
read and write and add and subtract, if you believe every child can
learn to read and write and add and subtract, it makes sense for people
to show us whether or not every child is meeting those goals.
The No Child Left Behind Act challenges the soft bigotry of low
expectations because it helps raise the bar, and it helps identify
problems early, before they're too late. A terrible problem we have at
times is that a child can't learn to read early, doesn't learn to read
early, and just gets moved through the system. And then they come out
of their schools and they can't read at all. And we've got to stop it
-- now, before it's too late. And the No Child Left Behind Act does
that. The No Child Left Behind Act is meant for every student, not
just a few.
It's going to improve the lives of our American Indian children and
Alaska Native children. It is an important part of making sure we have
a hopeful future. It's also very important that we have people who
work hard to make sure the No Child Left Behind Act works. One way to
do so is for there to be teacher training. You see, if we expect
children to learn to read and write, we've got to use curriculum that
work, and therefore, we need people who know how to teach the
curriculum that works.
An accountability system, by the way -- I recognize sometimes
people fear it. But my attitude is, how do you know whether or not
you're succeeding unless you measure? Or how do you know whether the
curriculum you're using works unless you measure? It's not worth
guessing anymore as to whether or not something that you've got in
place is working. We need to know, see. And one of the things --
we're learning how best to teach, and we need people to teach the
teachers how to teach.
And Marilyn Nichols is with us today. Where are you, Marilyn.*
Oh, there you are. Thanks for coming. (Applause.) Marilyn* is a --
she leads an intertribal teacher training program in the Haskel Indian
Nations University in Lawrence, Kansas. She's really making a profound
difference in a lot of people's lives by using her skills to train
teachers on how to teach. In other words, the effort has got to be
more than just measuring; the effort has got to be a unified effort to
help teachers follow their hearts and to help make sure that every
student has got a qualified teacher in their classroom.
I really want to thank you for what you're doing. I appreciate
your soul; I appreciate your hard work. I also appreciate your clear
vision.
And today I'm going to sign an executive order that will build on
the No Child Left Behind Act. First, I want to thank the Tribal
leaders who have been involved with the writing of this order.
Secondly, an executive order is, when it's signed by the President,
means something. At least it does when this President signs it.
(Laughter.) My order establishes a federal working group, co-chaired
by Secretaries Norton and Paige, with this specific mission: to help
American Indian and Alaska Native children meet the standards set by
the No Child Left Behind Act.
This is an important mission. It's an important mission that will
call together elements of our government to put forth a strategy. This
commission will consult closely with Tribal leaders. See, we believe
people closest to the problem are those that can help designate the
solutions to the problems. (Applause.) It will meet with members of
my National Advisory Council on Indian Education, who were sworn in by
Secretary Paige this morning. I want to thank you all for coming.
(Applause.) The executive order calls on Secretary Paige to develop
recommendations to improve the teaching of reading.
I'll never forget when I was the governor of Texas, and a woman --
I was speaking in Houston. A woman walked up and said, reading is the
new civil right. It's a powerful statement, when you think about it,
isn't it? Reading is the new civil right. If we're interested in
civil rights, human condition and human improvement, our kids have got
to learn to read. And there needs to be a focused strategy to make
sure that that happens, that that happens.
We've got to strengthen early childhood education. What that means
is, the best place to start is early in a child's education. The truth
of the matter is, the first teacher a child has is a mom or a dad. And
we want our parents to understand how important it is to read to their
children. But we also want the education system to focus early in a
child's education. We want them reading. We want to dash the false
expectations that certain children can't learn to read.
We want to improve preparation for college and the work force. We
want there to be high high school graduation rates. In other words,
we're going to raise the standards. That's what this commission is
going to do. It's going to work with the leadership to say, how can we
work together to raise the standards and expect the best?
Under this order, Secretaries Norton and Paige will organize a
national conference to discuss ways to meet our goal. In other words,
there's not going to be just a group of people huddled in Washington.
We're going to call in citizens and get input. We want what they call
community buy-in. We want people understanding the mission. We also
want to make sure we achieve high academic achievement while
maintaining the strong and vibrant tradition of cultural learning.
Learning to read and honoring a culture go hand in hand, they're not
mutually exclusive. And that's an important part -- (applause.)
I told you I'm an optimistic person. I believe when America sets a
goal and puts our mind to it, we can achieve those goals. I also know
that every parent of every heritage shares the great dream of a better
life for their children. It's a common dream we all have, and it's an
important dream to recognize as real in all communities. We will
continue the federal government's long-standing commitment to the
sovereignty of American Indians and Alaska Natives. And we will
continue our government-to-government cooperation as we work to meet
this very vital goal. (Applause.)
So thank you for coming. Thank you for giving me the opportunity
to share some thoughts with you. And thank you for witnessing the
signing of this executive order. For those who are part of the
authorship, I appreciate your input. I appreciate your willingness to
make your views known.
And now I'm going to sign this executive order. And if the members
of the Congress would like to come up and serve as witnesses, I'd be
honored. (Applause.)