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An Excerpt from Remarks by President George W. Bush at The Civil Rights Summit Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library Austin, Texas | April 10, 2014 EDUCATION AND WORKFORCE BUsiness Horizon Quarterly

Education as a Civil Right: BHQ#11

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Excerpt of speech by President George W. Bush

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Page 1: Education as a Civil Right: BHQ#11

An  Excerpt  from  Remarks  by  President  George  W.  Bush  at  The  Civil  Rights  Summit

Lyndon  Baines  Johnson  Presidential  LibraryAustin,  Texas    |    April  10,  2014

EDUCATION AND WORKFORCE BUsiness Horizon Quarterly

Page 2: Education as a Civil Right: BHQ#11

T he 1960s began a limited role for the federal government in American education. !e results have been better than some have claimed—and worse than many had hoped. !ese programs—particularly Title 1—helped break down the dual educational system in the South. Poorer states

have made some progress relative to richer states. Since the 1970s, achievement gaps between whites and minorities have narrowed.

During the last 50 years, educational progress has been generally positive—but completely insu"cient. Education in America is no longer legally separate, but it is still not e#ectively equal. Quality education for everyone, of every background, remains one of the most urgent civil rights issues of our time.

Beginning in the 1990s, many states—including Texas—lost patience with the pace of change. !ese reform e#orts gathered into a national accountability movement and culminated in the bipartisan e#ort called No Child Left Behind. It is a rare kind of issue that could unite two leading Democrats, the late Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy and longtime California Congressman George Miller, with me. We found common ground: Schools must demonstrate improved results on reading and math for minority children—or face consequences if they don’t. It is hard to imagine that anything so basic could be so controversial. It was, and it still is.

DURING  THE  LAST  50  YEARS,  EDUCATIONAL  PROGRESS  HAS  BEEN  GENERALLY  POSITIVE—  

BUT  COMPLETELY  INSUFFICIENT.

An  Excerpt  from  Remarks  by  President  George  W.  Bush  at  The  Civil  Rights  Summit

Lyndon  Baines  Johnson  Presidential  LibraryAustin,  Texas    |    April  10,  2014

EDUCATION

Page 3: Education as a Civil Right: BHQ#11

Between 1999 and 2008, reading scores for African-American 9-year-olds increased about two grade levels. Math scores for Hispanic 9-year-olds rose about the same. !e achievement gap was closing. Sadly, the gains have stalled.

No law is perfect. Every legislative instrument eventually requires adjustment. But the problem comes when people start to give up on the goal. Some have ideological objections to any federal role in education. Some are too comfortable with the status quo. !e alliance between ideology and complacency seems to be getting stronger. I fear that the soft bigotry of low expectations is returning. And for the sake of America’s children, that is something we cannot allow.

Let me focus on one fact that is uncomfortable even to contemplate. According to the most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress (the Nation’s Report card), the average reading score for a white student at age 13 is about the same as an African-American at age 17—that’s a four-year, four-grade achievement gap. In an economy where higher skills are ever more necessary, that is scandalous. In a nation dedicated to equal opportunity, that is scandalous. Among the political heirs of Martin Luther King, Jr., Lyndon Johnson, Everett Dirksen, and Hubert Humphrey, this should be a national scandal, demanding action.

None of the solutions are easy. We don’t have, and should not have, a federal education system. Power and responsibility are properly spread on many levels—so the need for reform and creativity is spread on many levels. And sometimes teaching professionals feel trapped in the same massive, immutable structures as parents and children.

But whatever di"culties we face, they will not be addressed by weakening accountability. !ere is a growing temptation among public o"cials in both political parties, at the federal, state, and local level, to lower expectations. But any education gains we make will eventually be undermined by lowering our sights in the classroom. Without meaningful accountability, our sights into reality will be dimmed. Without meaningful accountability, it is poor and minority children who su#er the most.

The  average  reading  score  for  a  white  student  at  age  13  is  about  the  same  as  an  

African-­American  at  age  17—  

That’s  a    FOUR-­YEAR,  FOUR-­GRADEachievement  gap.  In  an  economy  where  higher  skills  are  ever  more  necessary,    

THAT  IS  SCANDALOUS.  

EDUCATION AND WORKFORCE BUsiness Horizon Quarterly

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Page 4: Education as a Civil Right: BHQ#11

!e goal of ending achievement gaps should unite Republicans and Democrats. It should unite teachers and parents, business leaders, and civil rights leaders. It should unite anyone committed to a reasonable assessment program, transparency with results, and holding the system accountable—anyone who believes in unleashing local creativity while maintaining clear measures and objectives. !ere is a needed federal role—it is not to dictate methods, but to help educate poor, minority, and special education children. But when we invest taxpayers’ dollars, it is only right to insist upon results. And when we $nd poor results, it is only right to blow the whistle on mediocrity.

On the issue of education, we are dealing with the meaning of America, and the extent of its promise. Equal opportunity is a unifying national purpose, but it is not a natural condition. It must be purposely and carefully built by every generation for the next generation. It is the continuing goal of education reform—and it really is the continuing work of the civil rights movement.

// E D U C AT I O N A S A C I V I L R I G H T |    7

THERE  IS  A  NEEDED  FEDERAL  ROLE—  IT  IS  NOT  TO  DICTATE  METHODS,  BUT  TO  HELP  EDUCATE  POOR,  MINORITY,  AND  SPECIAL  EDUCATION  CHILDREN.

George W. Bush served as the 43rd President of the

United States and is a longtime proponent of improved

education standards and academic performance.

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