Tillbaka till svenska Fidonet
English   Information   Debug  
UFO   0/40
UNIX   0/1316
USA_EURLINK   0/102
USR_MODEMS   0/1
VATICAN   0/2740
VIETNAM_VETS   0/14
VIRUS   0/378
VIRUS_INFO   0/201
VISUAL_BASIC   0/473
WHITEHOUSE   0/5187
WIN2000   0/101
WIN32   0/30
WIN95   0/4277
WIN95_OLD1   0/70272
WINDOWS   0/1517
WWB_SYSOP   0/419
WWB_TECH   0/810
ZCC-PUBLIC   0/1
ZEC   4

 
4DOS   0/134
ABORTION   0/7
ALASKA_CHAT   0/506
ALLFIX_FILE   0/1313
ALLFIX_FILE_OLD1   0/7997
ALT_DOS   0/152
AMATEUR_RADIO   0/1039
AMIGASALE   0/14
AMIGA   0/331
AMIGA_INT   0/1
AMIGA_PROG   0/20
AMIGA_SYSOP   0/26
ANIME   0/15
ARGUS   0/924
ASCII_ART   0/340
ASIAN_LINK   0/651
ASTRONOMY   0/417
AUDIO   0/92
AUTOMOBILE_RACING   0/105
BABYLON5   0/17862
BAG   135
BATPOWER   0/361
BBBS.ENGLISH   0/382
BBSLAW   0/109
BBS_ADS   0/5290
BBS_INTERNET   0/507
BIBLE   0/3563
BINKD   0/1119
BINKLEY   0/215
BLUEWAVE   0/2173
CABLE_MODEMS   0/25
CBM   0/46
CDRECORD   0/66
CDROM   0/20
CLASSIC_COMPUTER   0/378
COMICS   0/15
CONSPRCY   0/899
COOKING   28498
COOKING_OLD1   0/24719
COOKING_OLD2   0/40862
COOKING_OLD3   0/37489
COOKING_OLD4   0/35496
COOKING_OLD5   9370
C_ECHO   0/189
C_PLUSPLUS   0/31
DIRTY_DOZEN   0/201
DOORGAMES   0/2014
DOS_INTERNET   0/196
duplikat   6000
ECHOLIST   0/18295
EC_SUPPORT   0/318
ELECTRONICS   0/359
ELEKTRONIK.GER   1534
ENET.LINGUISTIC   0/13
ENET.POLITICS   0/4
ENET.SOFT   0/11701
ENET.SYSOP   33805
ENET.TALKS   0/32
ENGLISH_TUTOR   0/2000
EVOLUTION   0/1335
FDECHO   0/217
FDN_ANNOUNCE   0/7068
FIDONEWS   23541
FIDONEWS_OLD1   0/49742
FIDONEWS_OLD2   0/35949
FIDONEWS_OLD3   0/30874
FIDONEWS_OLD4   0/37224
FIDO_SYSOP   12847
FIDO_UTIL   0/180
FILEFIND   0/209
FILEGATE   0/212
FILM   0/18
FNEWS_PUBLISH   4193
FN_SYSOP   41525
FN_SYSOP_OLD1   71952
FTP_FIDO   0/2
FTSC_PUBLIC   0/13584
FUNNY   0/4886
GENEALOGY.EUR   0/71
GET_INFO   105
GOLDED   0/408
HAM   0/16053
HOLYSMOKE   0/6791
HOT_SITES   0/1
HTMLEDIT   0/71
HUB203   466
HUB_100   264
HUB_400   39
HUMOR   0/29
IC   0/2851
INTERNET   0/424
INTERUSER   0/3
IP_CONNECT   719
JAMNNTPD   0/233
JAMTLAND   0/47
KATTY_KORNER   0/41
LAN   0/16
LINUX-USER   0/19
LINUXHELP   0/1155
LINUX   0/22012
LINUX_BBS   0/957
mail   18.68
mail_fore_ok   249
MENSA   0/341
MODERATOR   0/102
MONTE   0/992
MOSCOW_OKLAHOMA   0/1245
MUFFIN   0/783
MUSIC   0/321
N203_STAT   900
N203_SYSCHAT   313
NET203   321
NET204   69
NET_DEV   0/10
NORD.ADMIN   0/101
NORD.CHAT   0/2572
NORD.FIDONET   189
NORD.HARDWARE   0/28
NORD.KULTUR   0/114
NORD.PROG   0/32
NORD.SOFTWARE   0/88
NORD.TEKNIK   0/58
NORD   0/453
OCCULT_CHAT   0/93
OS2BBS   0/787
OS2DOSBBS   0/580
OS2HW   0/42
OS2INET   0/37
OS2LAN   0/134
OS2PROG   0/36
OS2REXX   0/113
OS2USER-L   207
OS2   0/4785
OSDEBATE   0/18996
PASCAL   0/490
PERL   0/457
PHP   0/45
POINTS   0/405
POLITICS   0/29554
POL_INC   0/14731
PSION   103
R20_ADMIN   1117
R20_AMATORRADIO   0/2
R20_BEST_OF_FIDONET   13
R20_CHAT   0/893
R20_DEPP   0/3
R20_DEV   399
R20_ECHO2   1379
R20_ECHOPRES   0/35
R20_ESTAT   0/719
R20_FIDONETPROG...
...RAM.MYPOINT
  0/2
R20_FIDONETPROGRAM   0/22
R20_FIDONET   0/248
R20_FILEFIND   0/24
R20_FILEFOUND   0/22
R20_HIFI   0/3
R20_INFO2   2789
R20_INTERNET   0/12940
R20_INTRESSE   0/60
R20_INTR_KOM   0/99
R20_KANDIDAT.CHAT   42
R20_KANDIDAT   28
R20_KOM_DEV   112
R20_KONTROLL   0/13063
R20_KORSET   0/18
R20_LOKALTRAFIK   0/24
R20_MODERATOR   0/1852
R20_NC   76
R20_NET200   245
R20_NETWORK.OTH...
...ERNETS
  0/13
R20_OPERATIVSYS...
...TEM.LINUX
  0/44
R20_PROGRAMVAROR   0/1
R20_REC2NEC   534
R20_SFOSM   0/340
R20_SF   0/108
R20_SPRAK.ENGLISH   0/1
R20_SQUISH   107
R20_TEST   2
R20_WORST_OF_FIDONET   12
RAR   0/9
RA_MULTI   106
RA_UTIL   0/162
REGCON.EUR   0/2055
REGCON   0/13
SCIENCE   0/1206
SF   0/239
SHAREWARE_SUPPORT   0/5146
SHAREWRE   0/14
SIMPSONS   0/169
STATS_OLD1   0/2539.065
STATS_OLD2   0/2530
STATS_OLD3   0/2395.095
STATS_OLD4   0/1692.25
SURVIVOR   0/495
SYSOPS_CORNER   0/3
SYSOP   0/84
TAGLINES   0/112
TEAMOS2   0/4530
TECH   0/2617
TEST.444   0/105
TRAPDOOR   0/19
TREK   0/755
TUB   0/290
Möte WHITEHOUSE, 5187 texter
 lista första sista föregående nästa
Text 854, 192 rader
Skriven 2005-04-28 23:32:58 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0504283) for Thu, 2005 Apr 28
====================================================
===========================================================================
Mrs. Bush's Remarks on Helping America's Youth in Alameda, California
===========================================================================

For Immediate Release
Office of the First Lady
April 28, 2005

Mrs. Bush's Remarks on Helping America's Youth in Alameda, California
Chipman Middle School
Alameda, California




10:17 A.M. PDT

MRS. BUSH: Thank you all. Jorge, thank you very much. Thank you for that
introduction. Thank you for telling us your story and how you like to read
now. I think that's so terrific.

I especially want to recognize the Principal, Ms. Laurie McLachlan. Thank
you very much. Thank you for your leadership. (Applause.) In a roundtable I
was in earlier with teachers from the school and some students, one of the
things I learned is how important Ms. McLachlan is to her school, how
important it is to have as your principal somebody who really understands
instruction, but also who builds everybody, and thank you very much for
doing that. (Applause.)

Also the Superintendent, Dr. Allen Nishino is here. Thank you very much,
Superintendent, for joining us. I don't see him right here, I think he's --
here he is, right over here. Thank you very, very much. (Applause.)

And I especially want to thank all of the teachers who are here. All of us
are grateful for all that you do to help our sons and daughters succeed.
Thank you for choosing teaching and thank you for devoting your lives to
children. Thank you very much for that. (Applause.)

And of course, the real reason I'm here is because of all the students.
Thank you all. Thank you for your hard work. I want to wish you the very
best. (Applause.)

Teaching and education are critical components of a new initiative called
Helping America's Youth. The goal of Helping America's Youth is to help
children make good decisions in their lives so that they can grow up to be
healthy, successful adults. The initiative calls for action in the three
most important parts of a child's life: a child's family, a child's school
and a child's community. We're emphasizing the needs of boys because
statistics show us that boys are more likely to fall behind girls in
school, they're more likely --

STUDENTS: Awww.

MRS. BUSH: The girls might not be unhappy about that. (Laughter.) They're
more likely to drop out of school, and today in America, fewer boys than
girls go to college or go on to graduate school.

We all know that boys and girls, as they reach their teen years, face
hazards. Smoking and drinking may look appealing to children when they see
older kids doing it. Drugs are a temptation. Young people often feel
pressured to have sex. Gangs and violence are a regular presence in many
neighborhoods.

These challenges aren't limited to any one part of the country or to any
one segment of society. Every child has to make choices between healthy
behaviors that lead to success and risky behaviors that can lead down a
road to bad outcomes. Our responsibility as adults is to help children
resist negative pressures and then to help them excel in every part of
their lives.

Schools are central to a child's life. For at least six hours a day, boys
and girls come here to learn the knowledge and the skills that they'll need
to become intelligent and discerning adults. We also want them to learn to
respect themselves and to respect others. We want them to learn that
they're responsible for the choices they make in life. Students who do well
academically and socially are more likely to stay interested in their
schoolwork, to avoid negative behaviors and to graduate from high school
and go on to college.

Researchers in Baltimore found out that children have to be taught how to
be good students; it's not just intuitive. And really, I think that's what
you're doing with your life skills. You're teaching children how to be good
students and what they need, what characteristics they need to be good
students.

In [Baltimore], they devised a program called the Good Behavior Game that
helps first graders learn how to behave in the classroom. Studies show that
the first graders in Baltimore public schools who participated in the Good
Behavior Game are better behaved and less disruptive in class all the way
through high school. In fact, 86 percent of the children who participated
in the Good Behavior Game graduated from high school, compared to just 19
percent of their peers.

In Atlanta, middle school students are learning how to debate. The Computer
Assisted Debate project -- or CAD -- is helping children from the city's
housing projects improve their vocabulary and their language skills, which
makes it more likely they'll complete high school and go on to college. CAD
also helps students find their voice. Rather than turn to violence and
anger as a means of expression, debate is a healthier option, safer for
children and for their community.

Here at Chipman, you're preparing students for a lifetime of success by
helping them develop a strong character, and at the same time, by helping
them improve their reading and language and math abilities. In every class,
students learn life skills and lifelong guidelines that reinforce the
importance of being responsible, caring and trustworthy. These lessons lay
the foundation for a safer school environment in which students treat each
other and their teachers with respect.

All of Chipman's students spend several periods a day in classes that
incorporate language arts, because reading is the essential skill for a
child. Boys and girls who get to high school without sound reading skills
are at a greater risk of bad behavior, depression, substance abuse and
violence. And of course, they're the ones who drop out of school.

Teenagers who have reading problems have told researchers at the National
Institute of Health that they hate to read, primarily because it's such
hard work, and their reading is so slow and laborious. One teenager said,
"I would rather have a root canal than read." (Laughter.)

Education research now gives us a better understanding of how people at
different ages respond to different methods of teaching. What works for a
student in the third grade won't necessarily work for a student in the
sixth grade or the eighth grade. And when students are learning English as
a second language, like Jorge, they have even greater challenges. Students
at Chipman speak 26 different languages. Teachers have the skills and the
reading programs to help all students improve their reading ability and to
motivate children to communicate well in English.

This morning, I met Dominique. Dominique is in the eighth grade, and when
he came to Chipman, he had trouble reading. He was placed in the program
called REACH. Dominique worked very hard and made great progress. At the
end of last year he walked through the office at Chipman demonstrating all
the big words he could read. Seeing a child who is beaming with pride at
his academic success warms the heart of every teacher and every parent.
Dominique is a great example of the excitement and the confidence that
children gain when they improve their reading skills. Dominique, would you
please stand and be recognized? (Applause.)

I know that Dominique and Jorge are not the only students at Chipman with
great success stories. Congratulations to every one of you who's working
hard to become a better reader.

The Striving Readers program, which is part of Helping America's Youth,
helps school districts implement research-based reading programs like
REACH. As more schools use programs that are proven to work, more students
will have the chance to improve their reading skills. They'll be more
likely to stay in school and gain the education and the confidence they
need to become successful adults. Last year, Striving Readers was
introduced with $25 million in federal funding. For 2006, President Bush
has requested $200 million to help more students improve their reading
skills.

The President has also requested more than $24 million for a Character
Education Initiative to encourage schools to teach strong values, promote
good character and help children develop a sense of responsibility to their
families and to their communities. And he's proposed a new three-year $150
million initiative to help children avoid gang involvement and gang
violence.

One of the most important ways the federal government can help local
communities is by fostering good connections between people who are running
good programs and people who want to get started. This fall, we'll convene
a White House Summit on Helping America's Youth to discuss some of the best
practices to help children avoid risky behaviors and become responsible,
healthy adults. The conference will introduce a new assessment tool so that
communities can identify the challenges that they face and the services
they already have to meet those challenges. Then community leaders can
integrate federal and local programs to create seamless efforts for the
children in their communities.

Helping America's Youth depends on partnership within communities, and on
the individual commitment of every American. The time between childhood and
adulthood is all too short -- as George and I can attest -- and every
moment in a child's life is precious. After I visited a program in Detroit,
a newspaper reporter asked one of the little boys I met what he thought of
my visit, and I was moved when he said, "I wish she could stay here."
Children want us in their lives and children need us in their lives. And as
I've learned from the remarkable men and women I've met here today, each of
us has the power to make the difference in the life of a child.

Thank you all very, very much. Congratulations to all the students who are
working hard and thanks to your great teachers. Thank you very much.
(Applause.)

END 10:29 A.M. PDT

===========================================================================
Return to this article at:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2005/04/20050428-3.html

 * Origin: (1:3634/12)