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Continued - Clinton Memo |
MEMORANDUM FOR THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND
AGENCIES
THE WHITE HOUSE April 19, 2000 Office of the Press
Secretary (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)
MEMORANDUM FOR THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND
AGENCIES SUBJECT: International Education Policy
To continue to compete successfully in the global economy and
to maintain our role as a world leader, the United States needs to
ensure that its citizens develop a broad understanding of the
world, proficiency in other languages, and knowledge of other
cultures. America's leadership also depends on building ties with
those who will guide the political, cultural, and economic
development of their countries in the future. A coherent and
coordinated international education strategy will help us meet the
twin challenges of preparing our citizens for a global environment
while continuing to attract and educate future leaders from
abroad.
Since World War II, the Federal Government, in partnership with
institutions of higher education and other educational
organizations, has sponsored programs to help Americans gain the
international experience and skills they will need to meet the
challenges of an increasingly interdependent world. During this
same period, our colleges and universities have developed an
educational system whose reputation attracts students from all
over the world. But our work is not done. Today, the defense of
U.S. interests, the effective management of global issues, and
even an understanding of our Nation's diversity require
ever-greater contact with, and understanding of, people and
cultures beyond our borders.
We are fortunate to count among our staunchest friends abroad
those who have experienced our country and our values through
in-depth exposure as students and scholars. The nearly 500,000
international students now studying in the United States at the
postsecondary level not only contribute some $9 billion annually
to our economy, but also enrich our communities with their
cultures, while developing a lifelong appreciation for ours. The
goodwill these students bear for our country will in the future
constitute one of our greatest foreign policy assets.
It is the policy of the Federal Government to support
international education. We are committed to:
- encouraging students from other countries to study in the
United States;
- promoting study abroad by U.S. students;
- supporting the exchange of teachers, scholars, and citizens
at all levels of society;
- enhancing programs at U.S. institutions that build
international partnerships and expertise;
- expanding high-quality foreign language learning and
in-depth knowledge of other cultures by Americans;
- preparing and supporting teachers in their efforts to
interpret other countries and cultures for their students; and
- advancing new technologies that aid the spread of knowledge
throughout the world.
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The Federal Government cannot accomplish these goals alone.
Educational institutions, State and local governments,
non-governmental organizations, and the business community all
must contribute to this effort. Together, we must increase and
broaden our commitment. Therefore, I direct the heads of executive
departments and agencies, working in partnership with the private
sector, to take the following actions:
- The Secretaries of State and Education shall support the
efforts of schools and colleges to improve access to
high-quality international educational experiences by increasing
the number and diversity of students who study and intern
abroad, encouraging students and institutions to choose
nontraditional study-abroad locations, and helping
under-represented U.S. institutions offer and promote
study-abroad opportunities for their students.
- The Secretaries of State and Education, in partnership with
other governmental and nongovernmental organizations, shall
identify steps to attract qualified post-secondary students from
overseas to the United States, including improving the
availability of accurate information overseas about U.S.
educational opportunities.
- The heads of agencies, including the Secretaries of State
and Education, and others as appropriate, shall review the
effect of U.S. Government actions on the international flow of
students and scholars as well as on citizen and professional
exchanges, and take steps to address unnecessary obstacles,
including those involving visa and tax regulations, procedures,
and policies.
- The Secretaries of State and Education shall support the
efforts of State and local governments and educational
institutions to promote international awareness and skills in
the classroom and on campuses. Such efforts include
strengthening foreign language learning at all levels, including
efforts to achieve bi-literacy, helping teachers acquire the
skills needed to understand and interpret other countries and
cultures for their students, increasing opportunities for the
exchange of faculty, administrators, and students, and assisting
educational institutions in other countries to strengthen their
teaching of English.
- The Secretaries of State and Education and the heads of
other agencies shall take steps to ensure that international
educational exchange programs, including the Fulbright program,
are coordinated through the Interagency Working Group on United
States Government-Sponsored International Exchange and Training,
to maximize existing resources in a nonduplicative way, and to
ensure that the exchange programs receive the support they need
to fulfill their mission of increased mutual understanding.
- The Secretary of Education, in cooperation with other
agencies, shall continue to support efforts to improve U.S.
education by developing comparative information, including
benchmarks, on educational performance and practices. The
Secretary of Education shall also share U.S. educational
expertise with other countries.
- The Secretaries of State and Education shall strengthen and
expand models of international exchange that build lasting
cross-national partnerships among educational institutions with
common interests and complementary objectives.
- The Secretary of Education and the heads of other agencies,
in partnership with State governments, academic institutions,
and the business community, shall strengthen programs that build
international expertise in U.S. institutions, with the goal of
making international education an integral component of U.S.
undergraduate education and, through graduate and professional
training and research, enhancing the Nation's capacity to
produce the international and foreign-language expertise
necessary for U.S. global leadership and security.
- The Secretaries of State and Education, in cooperation with
other agencies, the academic community, and the private sector,
shall promote wise use of technology internationally, examining
the implications of borderless education. The heads of agencies
shall take steps to ensure that the opportunities for using
technology to expand international education do not result in a
widening of the digital divide.
- The Secretaries of State and Education, in conjunction with
other agencies, shall ensure that actions taken in response to
this memorandum are fully integrated into the Government
Performance and Results Act (GPRA) framework by means of
specific goals, milestones, and measurable results, which shall
be included in all GPRA reporting activities, including
strategic plans, performance plans, and program performance
reports.
Items 1-10 of this memorandum shall be conducted subject to the
availability of appropriations, consistent with the agencies'
priorities and my budget, and to the extent permitted by law.
The Vice President shall coordinate the U.S. Government's
international education strategy. Further, I direct that the heads
of agencies report to the Vice President and to me on their
progress in carrying out the terms of this memorandum.
This memorandum is a statement of general policy and does not
confer a private right of action on any individual or
group.
WILLIAM J. CLINTON | |