[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[April 19, 1999]
[Pages 577-581]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at the Award Ceremony for the National Teacher of the Year
April 19, 1999

    Thank you very much. Thank you, Terry. I also want to acknowledge and welcome Congresswoman 
Patsy Mink from Hawaii, who is here with her 
husband, John. We're very delighted to see them. 
I'd like to thank the Chief State School Officers for sponsoring this 
award along with Scholastic, and I believe Gordon Ambach and Ernie Fleishman are both 
here.
    Terry said I'd given 131 speeches on education. I didn't know that 
until I just came in here. [Laughter] I wasn't keeping count. It is true 
that a few years ago I started reeling off all my teachers, beginning at 
kindergarten. And when I started running for office a long time ago now, 
I remember I asked--the fellow who was helping me put my first campaign 
together said, ``People don't know much about you; we've got to do a 
little biographical film, and we ought to put one of your teachers in 
it.'' And I said, ``Well, I still carry on a correspondence with my 
sixth grade teacher, Kathleen Scher.'' I did until she died at about 91 
years of age. And I used to see her about once a year.
    ``But you can't use her,'' I said. And they said, ``Well, why? That 
sounds like a wonderful story.'' I said, ``It is, but she's liable to 
tell you what she told me the day I finished my elementary school 
career.'' [Laughter] True story. My sainted sixth grade teacher, who is 
one of these wonderful--she lived with her first cousin, and they lived 
until their late eighties or early nineties, and they taught school for 
a gazillion years. And she looked at me when I left elementary school 
for the last day and she said, ``Bill, I just don't know about you.'' 
[Laughter] She said, ``You know, if you ever learn when to talk and when 
to keep quiet, there is nothing you can't achieve. But if you don't 
learn the difference, I'm not sure whether you're going to be Governor 
or wind up in the penitentiary.'' [Laughter] So we found someone else to 
do the film. [Laughter] But Kathleen Scher continued to write me for the 
rest of her days, including a letter I have that I received just a week 
before she passed away.
    So I want to thank all of you for being here today. I also would 
like to thank Terry for the 
magnificent perspective she's provided to us for years now, in the 
Department of Education, on education and on teachers. And I'd like to 
thank

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her for mentioning Kosovo today. I know a lot of you--probably in every 
school in the country, now, children are looking at maps and learning 
about the world we live in. And I think that's very important because it 
is such a small world, growing smaller.
    I went out to San Francisco a couple of days ago to speak to the 
newspaper editors, and I said that it is truly ironic that here we stand 
on the verge of a new century and a new millennium, where education is 
more important than ever before, because we have this explosion in 
technology, drawing us closer to different people of different cultures, 
and our own country is becoming more diverse; we can imagine a future 
that is more prosperous and more peaceful and more interconnected, in a 
very human way, than ever before; we got by the cold war--thank 
goodness--without any nuclear weapons falling; and now we've found that 
that future was threatened by the oldest demon of human society, which 
is our fear of people who are different from us.
    I'm sure at one point it was rational when tribes roamed around in 
isolated ways in prehistorical times and fought over limited resources 
and saw people in different tribes who were different from them, and 
they were maybe afraid for rational reasons. But today we have an 
opportunity to sort of celebrate our differences and enjoy them, as long 
as we understand they have to operate within a framework that says, 
underneath, the common humanity we all share as children of God is more 
important than those things which distinguish us one from another. 
That's really what's at stake there.
    And it would be ironic, indeed, if after two World Wars and a cold 
war being fought on the continent of Europe, and all the lessons we have 
learned over this century, that it would be in southeastern Europe and 
the Balkans where our vision of the 21st century would come apart.
    So this conflict in Kosovo, in a fundamental way, is either the last 
conflict of the 20th century or the first conflict of the 21st century. 
And it's very important that our children understand that.
    I just want to say one word about it, and then I will come back to 
the task at hand. But I do have to announce today that I intend to send 
to Congress an emergency funding package to pay for our military and 
humanitarian needs for the operation in Kosovo; to ensure that we have 
the resources to sustain the air campaign until we achieve our goals, 
while maintaining our high level of general military readiness; to 
provide critical humanitarian assistance and relief to the hundreds of 
thousands of refugees; and to provide for resources for the nations in 
the region, the neighbors of Kosovo, who have suffered so much from the 
effects of this conflict.
    One of the things that a lot of people don't understand is that this 
is putting an enormous burden on Albania, the poorest country in the 
region, taking all those refugees, struggling to maintain a democracy. 
It's putting enormous burdens on Macedonia, a very small country trying 
to manage its own ethnic differences, now having these refugees loaded 
on top of them. It causes real problems for Bulgaria and Romania. This 
is a difficult thing for the neighborhood.
    So I hope that the Congress will act on this. The need for this 
funding is urgent, immediate, clearly in the national interest. There 
are literally lives hanging in the balance. And so I hope, in the spirit 
of genuine bipartisanship, the Congress will move the package right 
away.
    Now, let's talk about why we're here. The first Teacher of the Year 
Award was presented in 1952 by a man who was one of my heroes as a child 
growing up, Harry Truman. He did it right here on the White House 
grounds. The recipient was a Miss Geraldine Jones, who taught first 
grade in Santa Barbara, California, in a school whose name I rather 
like, the Hope School. [Laughter] Harry Truman said on that occasion 
that next to one's mother, a teacher had the greatest influence on what 
kind of a citizen a child grew up to be.
    Every year since, Presidents or members of their families have 
personally handed out this award, as Terry said, to recognize not only 
the awardee and all of you, but, through you, all teachers in our 
country.
    Eight hours a day, 5 days a week, 9 months a year, teachers hold the 
future of America in their hands. They teach our children to read, to 
write, to calculate, to sing, to play, to paint, to listen, to question, 
hopefully to work with others, and think for themselves. They excite our 
children's imaginations, lift their aspirations, open their hearts, and 
strengthen their values.
    Everyone probably can recall a story like the one I told you at the 
opening of my remarks today. Many of us can remember our teachers

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in stunning detail, their faces, their expressions, their voices, their 
favorite admonitions, the way their hands gripped the chalk at the 
blackboard. We can still, most of us, summon the pride we felt when they 
praised us and the absolute chill we felt when we were scolded. 
[Laughter]
    The role of teachers, while hard to exaggerate, unfortunately, is 
too often easy to overlook. Teachers do their jobs, quietly, largely 
isolated from other adults. Their work, therefore, is seldom glorified 
by Hollywood and rarely sufficiently rewarded by society.
    Andy Baumgartner is our Teacher of the 
Year. He spent 2 years in the United States Marines. He gained inner 
confidence, self-motivation, physical stamina at Parris Island and Camp 
Lejeune. I imagine they have been useful to him in dealing with young 
children. [Laughter]
    Since he is a former marine, I think 
it's worth pointing out that today we rightly honor the men and women 
serving in and around the Balkans as patriots. We should also honor our 
teachers as patriots.
    Andy's colleagues marvel at the way he 
rivets the attention of his kindergarten students by keeping himself in 
constant creative motion. That's the first impression I had of him. 
[Laughter] I have met a person who has even more energy than I do. 
[Laughter] One minute he's using popcorn and M&M's to teach counting. 
The next, he's conducting a sing-a-long to ``This Land Is Your Land.'' A 
few minutes later, he's marching the class up the hill behind the school 
to conduct a solemn funeral for a departed pet tarantula named ``Legs.'' 
[Laughter]
    As the father of a son with a learning 
disability, he knows firsthand the struggle many parents go through to 
get the individual attention their children need. He works hard to give 
that kind of attention to all his students.
    When he's not teaching, he can be found directing a school play, 
teaching other educators, writing guidebooks for parents, working in 
community theater, participating actively in his church. He is an 
example of the kind of vital, active American that Alexis de Tocqueville 
marveled at when he came here so long ago and talked about the unique 
quality of our citizenship.
    If he were alive today, de Tocqueville, I think, would agree that 
America could do more to honor classroom teachers like Andy Baumgartner. 
Perhaps more of our best and brightest young people would choose 
teaching as a career if we did more to lift our teachers up and honor 
them. Even though I am one, we don't need many more lawyers; we have 
plenty of financial analysts on Wall Street, but we desperately need 
more teachers.
    When our finest young people pass up teaching, they're missing out 
on rewarding careers, and we're missing out on a chance to put our 
talent where we need it the most today. With 53 million children in our 
public schools, the greatest number ever, from more diverse backgrounds 
than at any time in our history, certainly since the turn of the 
century, with enrollments growing and a wave of teacher retirements 
about to hit, our schools will have to hire 2 million more teachers in 
the next decade.
    At the same time, we're trying to bring down class size, and that 
requires more teachers. And the new teachers must be better trained. A 
quarter of all secondary school teachers today do not have majors or 
even minors in the subjects they are teaching. And of course, the 
deficit is worse in low-income neighborhoods where the need is greatest.
    Now, these are enormous challenges. I believe we can meet them if we 
act now, when our economy is the strongest it has been in a very long 
time. But we have to act now. There are things the Federal Government 
can do, to be sure, and I want to talk a little about them. But I'd like 
to point out that we provide only about 7 percent of the funding of 
total public school funding in America. That's a higher percentage than 
it was when I became President. When we were cutting the deficit and 
cutting programs, we doubled our investment in education in about 5 
years. But it's still important to remember that a lot of this has to be 
done at the State and local level.
    And so as the Governors of our various States enjoy great 
prosperity, and as the crime rate comes down and presumably, therefore, 
they don't have to keep spending all their new money on building 
prisons--as was the case when I was a Governor, too often--I certainly 
hope that as much money as possible will be put into our public school 
systems to hire those teachers and to raise teacher pay. That has to be 
done at the State level, primarily, and it is absolutely imperative.
    At the national level, we're going to do what we can to pass a bill 
to build or modernize thousands of schools, to help to hire 100,000 
highly trained new teachers to reduce class size

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in the early grades. The studies, of course, confirm what a lot of our 
teachers have been saying for a long time, that smaller classes means 
more individual attention, more discipline, and more learning. Last fall 
Congress reached across party lines to put down a downpayment. They paid 
for about a third of these 100,000 teachers. I certainly hope we can 
finish the job this year.
    We have to redouble our efforts to recruit more of the best and 
brightest young Americans into teaching. A lot of our young people in 
the AmeriCorps program are getting some of their college education paid 
so they can go and become teachers. Our budget now calls for an 
investment to provide 7,000 college scholarships for students who will 
commit to teach in the poorest inner-city and rural schools. It calls on 
an investment to get 1,000 Native American young people to teach on 
Indian reservations and in other public schools with large Native 
American populations.
    It calls for more money to recruit and train members of the United 
States military when they retire to become teachers through our Troops 
for Teachers program, something that has really been very, very 
successful. Our 25 million veterans represent a vast pool of potential 
teachers. Many of them, because they're drawing military retirement, can 
actually afford to be teachers. [Laughter] And most of them have their 
kids grown. So it's a pool that we need to look at and draw on. Our 
Teacher of the Year, here, is pretty good 
evidence that soldiers can be quite good teachers. We ought to make it 
easier for others to do the same thing.
    Third, in our budget we provide more funds for teacher training. I 
think it's quite important that teachers, our new teachers especially, 
demonstrate that they know what they're supposed to teach. But we cannot 
expect the schools out there, who have to teach the kids, to be able to 
do what they're supposed to do unless we provide--we in the public 
sector--provide the resources we need not only to recruit but to 
properly train the teachers in the subjects they have to teach.
    Fourth, we should do more to make our schools attractive places 
where people want to work. In our ``Educational Accountability Act,'' we 
have a lot of funds for better schools and for turning around schools 
that aren't performing and for after-school and summer school programs 
to help the children who need extra help.
    Now, last thing I'd like to say is something I've already said. I 
know I've given 131 speeches on education--I now know that--so I've 
learned a new fact today, and I love facts. But the larger truth is 
this: Everybody is for education in general, but not enough people are 
for it in particular. It's easy to give a talk and harder to foot the 
bill. And I think it is very important that we not only remain committed 
to substantive reforms--you know, I believe that every school district 
should have a ``no social promotion'' policy, but I don't think the kids 
should be branded failures. I think if they're not making it, then they 
should get the extra held they need. And that's why we have moved on 
from $1 million, and $20 million, to $200 million, to $600 million this 
year in Federal support for after-school programs and summer school 
programs. We're working at this. But America needs to focus on this.
    We're going to honor Andy. I'm going to 
bring him up here to give him his award, and he's going to give a 
speech, and we're all going to practically laugh or cry. And it will be 
a wonderful thing. But I want America to hear this when they see you 
tonight on television. We have 2 million teachers to hire in the next 
few years. And in the best of all worlds, they would, every one of them, 
be just as committed and just as knowledgeable and just as effective as 
you are. And it isn't going to happen unless we make the necessary 
decisions and put the necessary priorities in place, not only in 
Washington but in every State capital and every local school district in 
the country.
    So I say today, the best way we can honor America's teachers is for 
the rest of us to give them the tools to succeed with our children in 
the 21st century. [Applause] Thank you.
    Ladies and gentlemen, the 1999 Teacher of the Year, Mr. Andy 
Baumgartner.

Note: The President spoke at 10:10 a.m. in Presidential Hall (formerly 
Room 450) in the Old Executive Office Building. In his remarks, he 
referred to Therese Knecht Dozier, Special Adviser on Teaching to the 
Secretary of Education; Gordon M. Ambach, executive director, Council of 
Chief State School Officers; and Ernest Fleishman, senior vice 
president, Scholastic, Inc. The transcript released by the Office of the 
Press Secretary also

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included the remarks of Mr. Baumgartner, kindergarten teacher at A. 
Brian Merry Elementary School in Augusta, GA.