February 7, 1984
Thank you very much for a very warm reception, although in my past I've had some warm
receptions from principals. [Laughter]
I'm really taken aback. I'm glad there wasn't a knife; I wouldn't have known where to start with
that first good-luck or good-wish slice of that cake. It's just magnificent, very beautiful.
And I must say, with regard to that honorary membership, you have now given me a new sense of
guilt, because about 25 years after I left Eureka College, graduated from there, they gave me an
honorary degree. And that only compounded a sense of guilt that I had nursed for some 25 years,
because I thought that the first one they gave me was honorary. [Laughter]
But I'm delighted to join the National Association of Secondary School Principals here in Las
Vegas for your 68th annual convention. Nothing is younger -- or older than I am! [Laughter]
And a special welcome to the principals that I met with at the White House in September. It was a
pleasure to be with you then and to give awards on behalf of your outstanding schools. But I have
to admit, I have mixed emotions. When I was a boy going to see the principal meant I'd done
something wrong. And today the principals are coming to see me. [Laughter] I don't know
whether I can handle that or not. [Laughter]
By the way, did some of you have training as math teachers? Because on the way in, I thought I
spied a few of you at the machines doing fieldwork in probability. [Laughter]
Before I say anything else, I'd like to recognize three outstanding gentlemen -- Robert Howe, the
president of this association, Dale Graham, your president-elect, and Scott Thomson, your
executive director. Secretary Bell has told me how much assistance these men have given us as
we've worked to improve our nation's schools. And I want to thank them and all of you for the
help that you've already given and ask you to keep the help coming. It means a great deal to those
of us in Washington, but more important, it means a great deal to America's sons and
daughters.
You know, principals and Presidents have jobs that are very much alike. Both of us have to keep
a lot of people happy. You have school boards; I have the Cabinet. You have the PTA; I have the
voters. You have unruly children; well, I better not name any names. [Laughter]
But, if your fine Representatives and Senators won't mind -- from Nevada here -- let me put it this
way: When Congress leaves town, it's no accident that we call it recess. [Laughter]
But I am honored to be with you today. Every man and woman in this room could rightly follow
President Truman's example and keep a sign on his desk that says, ``The Buck Stops Here.''
Education is one of the most important issues facing our country, and that makes you principals
among the most important people in America.
All of us remember all too painfully the crisis our country faced just a few years ago. Big taxing
and spending had led to soaring interest rates and inflation, and our defenses had grown weak. All
over the world America had become known not for strength and resolve but for vacillation and
self-doubt.
Our schools, too, showed unmistakable signs of crisis. From 1963 to 1981, scholastic aptitude
test scores underwent a virtually unbroken decline. Science achievement scores of 17-year-olds
showed a similar drop. And most shocking, the National Commission on Excellence in Education
reports that more than one-tenth of our 17-year-olds can be considered functionally illiterate.
In the face of all this bad news, our free and hard-working people began for a time to feel almost
helpless. It seemed as though our nation, her schools included, was undergoing a protracted and
inevitable decline.
Well, on this Earth there's no such thing as inevitable; only men and women building our nation's
destiny one day at a time. The American people decided to put a stop to that long decline, and in
the past few years our country has seen a rebirth of energy and freedom -- a great national
renewal. And as I said in my State of the Union Address just 2 weeks ago, ``America is back,
standing tall, looking to the eighties with courage, confidence, and hope.''
We've knocked inflation down, and we can keep it down. The prime rate is about half what it was
when our administration took office. All across this vast land of ours, a powerful economic
recovery is gaining strength. Morale in the military has soared. And once again America is
respected throughout the world as a force for peace and freedom.
Just as our schools were in decline during the bad days, today they're playing their part in the
national renewal. Since our administration put education at the top of the American agenda we've
seen a grassroots revolution that promises to strengthen every school in the country. From Maine
to California, parents, teachers, school administrators, State and local officeholders, and principals
like you have begun vital work to improve the fundamentals -- not fancy budget structures, not
frills in the curriculum, but basic teaching and learning. In the words of Secretary Bell, ``There is
currently in progress the greatest, most far-reaching, most promising reform and renewal of
education we have seen since the turn of the century.''
When our administration took office only a handful of States had task forces on education. Today
they all do. In addition, 44 States are increasing graduation requirements, 42 are studying
improvements in teacher certification, and 13 are establishing master teacher programs. With
school reform, as with so many other challenges again and again in our nation's history, the
American people are showing it can be done.
We've traveled far in improving our schools, but I don't believe there's one principal in this room
who wouldn't agree that our journey has just begun.
Now, some insist there's only one reform that would make any real difference -- more money. But
that's been tried. Total expenditures in our nation's schools this year, according to the National
Center for Educational Statistics, will total $230 billion. That's up almost 7 percent from last year,
about double the rate of inflation, and more than double what we spent on education just 10 years
ago.
So, if money alone were the answer the problem would have been shrinking, not growing. And
those who constantly call for more money are the same people who presided over two decades of
unbroken education decline.
James Coleman, a top education expert, argues in his recent book, ``High School Achievement,''
that we need to focus on the factors that truly matter. He states, ``Characteristics of schools [that]
are related to achievement can be divided into two areas: academic demands and discipline.''
Well, I think he's right, and I'd like to talk to you today about these two school characteristics --
academic expectations and discipline.
On academic expectations, it's clear that we must expect our students to perform to higher
standards. Our children need to do more work and better work, and that includes homework.
Indeed, in her well-known study, Barbara Lerner found that the amount of homework assigned in
a school is the single most reliable predictor of how well the students in that school will perform
on national tests.
Now, none of this is a prescription for gloomy students. We've learned that when students know
their parents and teachers have confidence in their abilities the students gain self-esteem, enjoy
their work, and live up to those high expectations.
We must also expect our students to learn the basics. Too many are allowed to abandon
vocational and college prep courses for general ones, so when they graduate, they're prepared for
neither work nor higher education. Stories abound of students who leave school unable to read
and write at an adult level. In 1980, 35 States required only 1 year of math for a high school
diploma; 36 required only 1 year of science.
Compare that to the case in other industrialized countries. In Japan, specialized study in
mathematics, biology, and physics starts in sixth grade. In the Soviet Union, students learn the
basic concepts of algebra and geometry in elementary school. So, it's not surprising that Japan,
with a population only about half the size of ours, graduates from college more engineers than we
do, while the Soviet Union graduates from college almost five times more engineering specialists
than we do.
We cannot allow our children to continue falling behind. Instead, we must insist that all American
students master the basics -- math, science, history, reading, and writing -- that have always
formed the core of our civilization.
If I can interject, there is an article recently put out by Benjamin Stein. And it seems that he has
made contact with a number of young, not only high school graduates, but now enrolled in some
of our better universities -- and has regular contact with them. And it was almost horrifying to
read his article, when he found that most of those students -- as high as juniors in universities --
did not know when World War II was fought or who was the enemy whom we were fighting.
There were other examples that were equally glaring of the lack of knowledge of our nation's
history.
But no learning can take place without good order in the classroom, and that means restoring
good old-fashioned discipline. In too many schools, teachers lack authority to make students take
tests, hand in homework, or even quiet down in class. And in some schools, teachers suffer verbal
and even physical abuse.
According to a 1978 report by the National Institute of Education, each month over 2 million
secondary schoolchildren were victims of in-school crime. Not ordinary highjinks -- crime. In
1981, during a 5-month period in California, there were at least 100,000 incidents of violence. A
study of Boston high schools showed that during 1982 more than one-sixth of female students
and more than one-third of male students carried weapons to school. And a 1983 survey of
Michigan schools shows that one in five Michigan teachers has been struck by a student.
As long as one teacher is assaulted, one classroom is disrupted, or one student is attacked, then I
must and will speak out to give you the support you need to enforce discipline in our schools. For
too long, courts and others have concentrated on protecting the rights of the disruptive few. Well,
it's high time we paid some attention to the rights of the well-behaved students who want to
learn.
I can't say it too forcefully: To get learning back into our schools, we must get crime and violence
out. [Applause]
Thank you.
Now, I'm not talking about establishing order only in our classrooms and hallways, but in our
students' hearts and minds. We're training our children for life in a democracy, so we must teach
them not only discipline but self-discipline. And if it's sometimes difficult to assert rightful adult
authority, we must ask: ``Who should correct the child's arithmetic? His math teacher? Or years
later, his boss? Who should teach the child respect for rules? His principal? Or some day, law
officers?''
We must teach our sons and daughters a proper respect for academic standards, for codes of
civilized behavior, and for knowledge itself -- not for the sake of those standards, not for the sake
of those codes, not even for the sake of that knowledge, but for the sake of those young human
beings.
Now, the Federal Government can support these reforms and do so without recycling still more
tax dollars or imposing still more regulations. And our administration is doing just that. We're
working to restore our nation's parents, State and local officials, teachers, school administrators,
and principals to their rightful place in the educational process.
Our administration has replaced 29 narrow categorical education programs with one broad block
grant to give State and local officials greater freedom. And in the budget I submitted to Congress
last week I called for that grant to be increased by $250 million. We've instituted major regulatory
reforms to dig educators out from under mountains of redtape. And because parents should have
the right to choose the schools they know are best for their children, we've proposed education
vouchers and tuition tax credits -- concepts the American people support overwhelmingly.
In October I signed a proclamation that named this school year the National Year of Partnerships
in Education. The proclamation urged businesses, labor unions, and other groups of working
people to form partnerships with schools in their communities. Since then, partnerships in
education have increased around the country dramatically. And in December, I announced a new
program to recognize outstanding students -- the President's Academic Fitness Awards.
To promote good order in our schools, the Department of Education is studying ways to combat
school violence, and the Department is continuing its joint project with the National Institute of
Justice to find better ways for localities to use their resources to prevent school crime.
The Department of Justice is establishing a National School Safety Center to inform teachers and
other officials of their legal rights and to provide a computerized national clearinghouse for school
safety resources. In addition, the Justice Department will file friend-of-court briefs in appropriate
cases to support the rights of school administrators to enforce discipline. And right now, the
Department of Justice is studying possible amendments of Federal law that would help principals
and others reestablish good order in our schools.
Now there's one more effort that we're making at the Federal level that I want to mention, and I'm
absolutely determined to see it through even though it may be sneered at in some supposedly
sophisticated circles. The God who blessed us with life, gave us knowledge, and made us a good
and caring people should never have been expelled from America's schools. [Applause]
You don't know how happy I am to hear that from you.
As we struggle to teach our children the fundamental values we hold so dear, we dare not forget
that our civilization was built by men and women who placed their faith in a loving God. If the
Congress can begin each day with a moment of prayer and meditation, so then can our sons and
daughters.
I'll try hard now not to be tempted to tell the story of the father and son in the gallery of the
Congress one day, and the son asked who that was. And it was the chaplain. And the father
explained. And the boy said, ``He's praying for the Congress?'' And he said, ``No, he's praying for
the people.'' [Laughter]
Despite the importance of these initiatives at the national level, the main responsibility for
education rests with our States and communities, and they're moving ahead. State by State, the
success stories are mounting.
Indiana has increased high school graduation requirements and initiated a basic skills program for
early grades. In Iowa the State is putting together a program of incentives for students who take
upper-level math and science courses. States from Tennessee to Florida have begun work on pay
incentives for instructors because they know that to promote good teaching we must reward good
teachers. And polls show that merit pay for teachers has the support of 61 percent of the NEA
teachers, 62 percent of the AFT teachers, and 70 percent of independent teachers.
At the local level parents have begun to give schools new support in ways that range from helping
out on field trips to raising money for special projects. School boards have begun to write stricter
discipline codes and rewrite curriculums to stress the basics. And in community after community,
principals have turned schools around.
I don't have time to tell you all the stories I've heard about principals who've made a critical
difference, but there is one that I want to share. Just 5 years ago, George Washington High
School suffered from all the ills that afflict so many inner-city schools -- drugs, violence, gangs.
The school had a 28-percent absentee rate and one of the lowest academic ratings in Los Angeles
County. Then George McKenna became principal.
He designed this compact for both applicants and their parents to sign. It states in part: ``Defiance
of the authority of school personnel, either by behavior, verbal abuse, or gestures, is not
permitted. Homework is given every day, and students are expected and required to complete all
assignments. Parents are expected to participate in workshops, conferences, meetings, and
cooperate with the school in supporting specific activities.''
Today the absenteeism rate at Washington High School has been cut to 11 percent, and
enrollment has risen from 1,700 to 2,600 plus a waiting list. Five years ago, 42 percent of
Washington High's students said they might go on to college. Last year 80 percent did go on to
college. And all this because of one determined principal, a hero with faith in the commonsense
values which have never failed us when we've had the courage to live up to them.
As principals you have an enormous responsibility. Perhaps more than any other Americans, you
hold our nation's future in your hands. I know that you're determined to go on with the great
work of making certain our schools give our sons and daughters the quality education they
deserve. And I'm convinced that with your help America's future will be bright beyond our
dreams.
Thank you, and God bless you all.
Note: The President spoke at 10:53 a.m. in the Rotunda at the Las Vegas Convention Center. He
was introduced by Robert Howe, president of the association.