March 12, 1983
My fellow Americans:
I'd like to talk to you today about one of the most important issues that touches our lives and
shapes our future: the education of America's children. We've always had a love affair with
learning in this country. America is a melting pot, and education has been a mainspring for our
democracy and freedom, a means of providing gifts of knowledge and opportunity to all citizens,
no matter how humble their background, so they could climb higher, help build the American
dream, and leave a better life for those who follow.
Broad educational opportunity not only secured our role as the pathbreaker to progress, it also
protected and strengthened our freedom. We were wise enough to heed Thomas Jefferson's
warning that ``any nation which expects to be ignorant and free expects what never was and never
will be.''
But in recent years, our traditions of opportunity and excellence in education have been under
siege. We've witnessed the growth of a huge education bureaucracy. Parents have often been
reduced to the role of outsiders. Government-manufactured inflation made private schools and
higher education too expensive for too many families. Even God, source of all knowledge, was
expelled from classrooms.
It's time to face the truth. Advocates of more and more government interference in education have
had ample time to make their case, and they've failed. Look at the record. Federal spending on
education soared eightfold in the last 20 years, rising much faster than inflation. But during the
same period, scholastic aptitude test scores went down, down, and down.
The classroom should be an entrance to life, not an escape from it.
As the leader of the free world, the United States must strengthen its defenses, modernize its
industries, and move confidently into a new era of high technology. To do this, we need a smart
and highly skilled work force. Yet, only one-sixth of our high school graduates have taken junior
and senior level courses in science and math. And many U.S. high schools do not offer sufficient
math to prepare graduates for engineering schools.
America can do better. We must move forward again by returning to the sound principles that
never failed us when we lived up to them. Can we not begin by welcoming God back in our
schools and by setting an example for children by striving to abide by His Ten Commandments
and the Golden Rule? We've sent an amendment to the Congress that will permit voluntary prayer
in school again.
But better education doesn't mean a bigger Department of Education. In fact, that Department
should be abolished. Instead, we must do a better job teaching the basics, insisting on discipline
and results, encouraging competition and, above all, remembering that education does not begin
with Washington officials or even State and local officials. It begins in the home, where it is the
right and responsibility of every American.
Parents and teachers have the toughest, sometimes the most thankless, but always the most
important jobs in America. They need our help and support.
Our administration has put together an education package that addresses the challenge of
restoring opportunity to families and excellence in our schools. It contains several proposals to
help parents reestablish control and to assist them in meeting education costs.
First, tuition tax credits, which we've already sent to the Congress, will soften the double-payment
burden for those paying public school taxes and independent or parochial school tuition. This
proposal will help those who need help the most -- low- and middle-income families.
Second, we're proposing a voucher system to help parents of disadvantaged children. We want to
give States or individual school districts the option of using certain Federal education funds to
create vouchers so these parents can choose which school, private or public, they want their
children to attend.
Third, we're proposing a system of educational savings accounts to help families save for college
education. Parents will be able to save up to $1,000 per year, per child, with no tax on the
interest.
These proposals will expand opportunities by allowing parents to keep more of their own money,
rather than taxing it away to finance bigger bureaucracies. They will also increase healthy
competition among schools. Without a race, there can be no champion, no records broken, no
excellence in education or any other walk of life.
We're talking about no less than the future of this nation. Last Monday, I was pleased to meet 40
of America's top high school math and science students. I told them that science and technology
are keys to prosperity, learning, and a better quality of life.
We've already sent legislation to the Congress to stimulate training of more math and science
teachers. Another program we've proposed will encourage existing math and science teachers to
go back to school themselves to update their own knowledge. And we're also beginning a new
program, one I intend to participate in myself, to honor some of America's best science and math
teachers. They are a true national resource.
Private sector initiatives can also make great contributions. We're encouraging corporations,
community organizations, and neighborhood groups across the country to adopt schools and help
them meet their education needs with funds, equipment, and personnel.
Finally, to combat adult illiteracy, we will encourage college students to provide tutoring, either
through voluntary community service or as part of our expanded work-study program.
Just as we're now seeing a healthy revival of our national economy, we can improve America's
educational system and make it the best in the world again. But we must not delay. I hope we'll
have your support and the cooperation of the Congress.
Until next week, thanks for listening, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 12:06 p.m. from Camp David, Md.