[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1998, Book I)]
[February 5, 1998]
[Pages 179-180]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 179]]



Remarks at Montgomery Blair High School in Silver Spring, Maryland
February 5, 1998

    The President. Thank you. Let's give the band a hand. Are they good 
or what? [Applause] Thank you. Thank you very much.
    First of all. I want to thank Elizabeth for her introduction, and Nikole for her introduction of Prime Minister Blair. Weren't you proud of your fellow students today? 
[Applause] They were great.
    Governor, Senator, Members of Congress, Nancy, all the faculty and administration staff here at 
Montgomery Blair High School, we are very glad to be here. I want to 
paraphrase something President Kennedy said when he and his wife went to 
Paris: I now will go down in history as the man who accompanied Tony 
Blair to Montgomery Blair High School.
    I want all of you to know that in years to come you will be very 
glad you were here for many reasons. But one of them is that Hillary and 
I are convinced, based on our friendship with Prime Minister 
Blair and his wonderful wife, Cherie, that they are going to make truly historic 
contributions to the world of the 21st century, and you are a part of 
that because you invited him here today, and I thank you for that.
    I want to just say a couple of things very briefly about this whole 
issue of education. You know that we just were in your computer room and 
we were E-mailing students in England. And I was thinking about how the 
first time I went to England, 30 years ago this year, I went on a ship 
and it took me 6 days. Now, people can look at me over a computer, and 
we can communicate in a matter of seconds.
    One of the biggest questions we have to face as a people, and one of 
the great questions they're facing in Great Britain, is whether or not 
this new technology-driven, information-driven, scientifically exploding 
world all of you will live in will work to the benefit of all of our 
people without regard to their racial, their ethnic, their religious 
background, their income, or will it just benefit even more people who 
are privileged by birth to have a high income and then can get a good 
education? I am committed to making sure that every single American 
child is a part of the 21st century revolution.
    And I just want to say that the first thing that I tried to do was 
to open the doors of college to everyone who would work for it. And I 
believe I can look at every one of you today and say, because of the 
HOPE scholarship, a $1,500 tax credit for the first 2 years of college, 
because of the lifetime learning credit, because of more Pell grants and 
more work study positions and more national service positions and better 
student loans with better repayment terms--if you will work for it, you 
can go to college in American today. You can do it, and that's 
important.
    And now what we have to do in our country----
    Audience member. We love you!
    The President. Thank you.
    What we've got to do is to make sure that every American has access 
to the best elementary and secondary education in the world. And in 
order to do that, we have to do a lot of things. If you saw the State of 
the Union the other night, I talked about it. I want to lower class 
sizes in the first 3 grades to 18. I want to help build new classrooms 
or remodel them in 5,000 schools so we can deal with the problems of 
overcrowding. I want to help to lift standards in the poorest school 
districts in America. And I want to make sure we hook up every classroom 
and library in every school in America to the Internet by the year 2000.
    There are two things I want to say about this, and one of them you 
know I'm accurate about. The first thing is, it's one thing to say we 
can hook up the schools and the classrooms and another thing for the 
schools to be able to afford it. So the Federal Communications 
Commission--and we have some members here from the FCC--have given a $2 
billion education discount to the schools of America so all our schools 
can afford to be on the Internet by the year 2000.
    And the second thing I want to say is that a lot of school teachers 
are like the President; they're sort of technologically challenged. 
[Laughter] And there are a lot of classes in America where the kids know 
a whole lot more about the Internet than their teachers do, right? So 
now we can laugh about it and have a lot

[[Page 180]]

of fun, but if our objective is to make sure that every single child can 
tap the full potential of the information age, then every single teacher 
must be in a position to know all he or she needs to know. So we are 
also investing to make sure that from now on, every newly certified 
teacher will be trained to know at least as much, if not more, about 
those computers and the Internet and communications as the students in 
the classroom. That is important.
    I want to make this last point. Prime Minister Blair complimented you on your school spirit, and we loved it 
when you cheered when we came in, all of you, and we thank you. But look 
around this room, look around, look at each other. This is a picture of 
America in the 21st century, people from all backgrounds, all walks of 
life, all--[applause]--and what you have to believe with all your heart 
and soul is that if you get an education, you can live out your dreams. 
And if all of you get an education, we can prove that America can 
accommodate all this diversity and grow stronger by the values we have 
in common; that we will only grow stronger and more prosperous and give 
more opportunities to more people to live out their dreams if we can 
give everybody a good education and then we prove that we can get along, 
across the lines that divide us, as one America. That's the America I 
want you to help me build for the new century.
    Thank you, and God bless you all. Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 3:50 p.m. in the gymnasium. In his remarks, 
he referred to Elizabeth O'Brien, student, and Nikole Sara Bender, vice 
president, student government, Montgomery Blair High School; Gov. Parris 
N. Glendening of Maryland; Senator Barbara A. Mikulski; and Nancy J. 
King, president, Montgomery County board of education. The transcript 
made available by the Office of the Press Secretary also included the 
remarks of Prime Minister Tony Blair of the United Kingdom.