时间:2019-01-26 作者:英语课 分类:美国总统每日发言


英语课

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Remarks by the President to The Hispanic Chamber of commerce on a complete and competitive American education


Washington Marriott Metro Center


Washington, D.C.


9:54 A.M. EDT



THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. (Applause.) Si se puede.


AUDIENCE: Si se puede! Si se puede! Si se puede!


THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you so much. Please, everybody have a seat. Thank you for the wonderful introduction, David. And thank you for the great work that you are doing each and every day. And I appreciate such a warm welcome. Some of you I've gotten a chance to know; many of you I'm meeting for the first time. But the spirit of the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, the desire to create jobs and provide opportunity to people who sometimes have been left out -- that's exactly what this administration is about. That's the essence of the American Dream. And so I'm very proud to have a chance to speak with all of you.


You know, every so often, throughout our history, a generation of Americans bears the responsibility of seeing this country through difficult times and protecting the dream of its founding for posterity. This is a responsibility that's fallen to our generation. Meeting it will require steering our nation's economy through a crisis unlike anything that we have seen in our time.


In the short term, that means jump-starting job creation and restarting lending, and restoring confidence in our markets and our financial system. But it also means taking steps that not only advance our recovery, but lay the foundation for lasting, shared prosperity.


I know there's some who believe we can only handle one challenge at a time. And they forget that Lincoln helped lay down the transcontinental railroad and passed the Homestead Act and created the National Academy of Sciences in the midst of civil war. Likewise, President Roosevelt didn't have the luxury of choosing between ending a depression and fighting a war; he had to do both. President Kennedy didn't have the luxury of choosing between civil rights and sending us to the moon. And we don't have the luxury of choosing between getting our economy moving now and rebuilding it over the long term.


America will not remain true to its highest ideals -- and America's place as a global economic leader will be put at risk -- unless we not only bring down the crushing cost of health care and transform the way we use energy, but also if we do -- if we don't do a far better job than we've been doing of educating our sons and daughters; unless we give them the knowledge and skills they need in this new and changing world.


For we know that economic progress and educational achievement have always gone hand in hand in America. The land-grant colleges and public high schools transformed the economy of an industrializing nation. The GI Bill generated a middle class that made America's economy unrivaled in the 20th century. Investments in math and science under President Eisenhower gave new opportunities to young scientists and engineers all across the country. It made possible somebody like a Sergei Brin to attend graduate school and found an upstart company called Google that would forever change our world.


The source of America's prosperity has never been merely how ably we accumulate wealth, but how well we educate our people. This has never been more true than it is today. In a 21st-century world where jobs can be shipped wherever there's an Internet connection, where a child born in Dallas is now competing with a child in New Delhi, where your best job qualification is not what you do, but what you know -- education is no longer just a pathway to opportunity and success, it's a prerequisite for success.


That's why workers without a four-year degree have borne the brunt of recent layoffs, Latinos most of all. That's why, of the 30 fastest growing occupations in America, half require a Bachelor's degree or more. By 2016, four out of every 10 new jobs will require at least some advanced education or training.


So let there be no doubt: The future belongs to the nation that best educates its citizens -- and my fellow Americans, we have everything we need to be that nation. We have the best universities, the most renowned scholars. We have innovative principals and passionate teachers and gifted students, and we have parents whose only priority is their child's education. We have a legacy of excellence, and an unwavering belief that our children should climb higher than we did.


And yet, despite resources that are unmatched anywhere in the world, we've let our grades slip, our schools crumble, our teacher quality fall short, and other nations outpace us. Let me give you a few statistics. In 8th grade math, we've fallen to 9th place. Singapore's middle-schoolers outperform ours three to one. Just a third of our 13- and 14-year-olds can read as well as they should. And year after year, a stubborn gap persists between how well white students are doing compared to their African American and Latino classmates. The relative decline of American education is untenable for our economy, it's unsustainable for our democracy, it's unacceptable for our children -- and we can't afford to let it continue.


学英语单词
abreast with the times
afrothere
alja
aluminium oxide cloth
amplitude modulation factor
animal companion
apoastron
ashtoret maculata
audioline
autochthonous fossil
baby bloomer
bay yarns
bench-scale reactor
beruna
black tamarind
bombee
bottom hole temperature bomb
Bridgnorth
Bullerfish
charles v
chemical engineering thermodynamics
chlorine log
chronic mastoiditis
class chilopodas
cold storage plant
come to a period
companionship family
copy with
czambrano
Dannhausen
deadman's brakes
dig angle
downcomer filling
effective memory address
feature-based manufacturing
fix on
flammiferum
flee to the bent
flight measurement
fly page
forjudging
gilles de la tourettes
half duplex
heat value unit
Heinrich Schliemann
histoiy
imino compound
impersonalities
inverse reaction
ionic theory
isograd(e)
kephalo
legume families
logical record deletion
Longlac
mass indicator
maxillary rampart
memory metals
mercantile fleet
microprojectiles
naggiest
Næstved
oscilligh
perfick
picomols
predicated-wave signaling
private certificate services
proof reading program
quasineutrons
Quitman
radar presentation
rated output voltage for constant voltage controlgear
recoverable drone
reinstrument
sabotaging
seal end plate
second-sets
sheroots
short-sleeved
sight bills
Sihora
silicon earth
single acting control valve
smallnesses
soda-lime glass
Somali shilling
stall of motor
Switched Fabric
tap-taps
tell-talest
this too shall pass
throat instruments
Tongues are wagging.
transcriptionist code/name
Treorchy
trifluoro-acetic fluoride
underbearing
vagetarian
variational series
walk out on sth
weathered escarpment
zero drift error