This is the VOA Special English Education Report.
Less
than sixty percent of students now entering four-year American colleges are
likely to graduate. The completion rate is lower than for almost any other
wealthy country, and worst for poor and minority students.
A new book about America's public universities explores
the complex causes of the high dropout rate. The book is called "Crossing
the Finish Line."
President
Obama wants the United States to again have the world's highest percentage of
college graduates by two thousand twenty. But to finish college, children first
have to reach the starting line by getting there.
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| President Obama shakes hands with students after speaking at Wakefield High School in Arlington, Virginia |
On Tuesday the president gave a
nationally broadcast speech to students about the importance of staying in
school. He spoke on the first day of classes at a high school in Virginia. He talked
about personal responsibility, and used himself as an example of someone who
overcame difficulties.BARACK OBAMA: "My father left my family when I was
two years old, and I was raised by a single mother who struggled at times to
pay the bills and wasn't always able to give us things the other kids had. There
were times when I missed having a father in my life. There were times when I
was lonely and felt like I didn't fit in."
But he told
students that problems in their own lives should not stop them from learning.
BARACK OBAMA: "That's no excuse for talking back
to your teacher, or cutting class or dropping out of school. That's no excuse
for not trying."
This was not the first presidential
speech to students. Ronald Reagan spoke from the White House in nineteen
eighty-eight. And George H.W. Bush spoke from a school in Washington in nineteen
ninety-one.
But many conservatives criticized
plans for the speech. Some called it "socialized education" or federal
interference in local schools. Others feared it would be too political. Some
schools decided not to show the speech. But the White House released the text
on Monday, and that calmed a lot of critics.
On Sunday, on the CBS program "Face
the Nation," Education Secretary Arne Duncan said thirty percent of
students do not graduate from high school. He called the dropout rate
"staggering." It represents more than a million students every year who
entered ninth grade but did not complete twelfth grade.
The education secretary called the
objections to the president's speech "silly." But he also said one of
the activities suggested for students "wasn't worded quite
correctly." It related to the goal of increasing college graduation rates.
It suggested that students "Write letters to themselves about
what they can do to help the president." But after conservatives objected, the activity was changed to writing about personal
goals.
And
that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. I'm
Steve Ember.