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Some 23 million American adults are
functionally illiterate
by the simplest tests of everyday reading, writing, and
comprehension.
A NATION AT RISK - the official
report.
The Official Report as stated in April of 1983
A r c h i v e d I n f o r m a t
i o n
A Nation At Risk - April 1983
A Nation At Risk
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All, regardless of race or class or economic status, are
entitled to a fair chance and to the tools for developing
their individual powers of mind and spirit to the utmost.
This promise means that all children by virtue of their own
efforts, competently guided, can hope to attain the mature
and informed judgement needed to secure gainful employment,
and to manage their own lives, thereby serving not only
their own interests but also the progress of society itself.
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Our Nation is at risk. Our once unchallenged preeminence in
commerce, industry, science, and technological innovation is
being overtaken by competitors throughout the world. This
report is concerned with only one of the many causes and
dimensions of the problem, but it is the one that undergirds
American prosperity, security, and civility. We report to
the American people that while we can take justifiable pride
in what our schools and colleges have historically
accomplished and contributed to the United States and the
well-being of its people, the educational foundations of our
society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of
mediocrity that threatens our very future as a Nation and a
people. What was unimaginable a generation ago has begun to
occur--others are matching and surpassing our educational
attainments.
If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on
America the mediocre educational performance that exists
today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war. As it
stands, we have allowed this to happen to ourselves. We have
even squandered the gains in student achievement made in the
wake of the Sputnik challenge. Moreover, we have dismantled
essential support systems which helped make those gains
possible. We have, in effect, been committing an act of
unthinking, unilateral educational disarmament.
Our society and its educational institutions seem to have
lost sight of the basic purposes of schooling, and of the
high expectations and disciplined effort needed to attain
them. This report, the result of 18 months of study, seeks
to generate reform of our educational system in fundamental
ways and to renew the Nation's commitment to schools and
colleges of high quality throughout the length and breadth
of our land.
That we have compromised this commitment is, upon
reflection, hardly surprising, given the multitude of often
conflicting demands we have placed on our Nation's schools
and colleges. They are routinely called on to provide
solutions to personal, social, and political problems that
the home and other institutions either will not or cannot
resolve. We must understand that these demands on our
schools and colleges often exact an educational cost as well
as a financial one.
On the occasion of the Commission's first meeting, President
Reagan noted the central importance of education in American
life when he said: "Certainly there are few areas of
American life as important to our society, to our people,
and to our families as our schools and colleges." This
report, therefore, is as much an open letter to the American
people as it is a report to the Secretary of Education. We
are confident that the American people, properly informed,
will do what is right for their children and for the
generations to come.
The Risk
History is not kind to idlers. The time is long past when
American's destiny was assured simply by an abundance of
natural resources and inexhaustible human enthusiasm, and by
our relative isolation from the malignant problems of older
civilizations. The world is indeed one global village. We
live among determined, well-educated, and strongly motivated
competitors. We compete with them for international standing
and markets, not only with products but also with the ideas
of our laboratories and neighborhood workshops. America's
position in the world may once have been reasonably secure
with only a few exceptionally well-trained men and women. It
is no longer.
The risk is not only that the Japanese make automobiles more
efficiently than Americans and have government subsidies for
development and export. It is not just that the South
Koreans recently built the world's most efficient steel
mill, or that American machine tools, once the pride of the
world, are being displaced by German products. It is also
that these developments signify a redistribution of trained
capability throughout the globe. Knowledge, learning,
information, and skilled intelligence are the new raw
materials of international commerce and are today spreading
throughout the world as vigorously as miracle drugs,
synthetic fertilizers, and blue jeans did earlier. If only
to keep and improve on the slim competitive edge we still
retain in world markets, we must dedicate ourselves to the
reform of our educational system for the benefit of all--old
and young alike, affluent and poor, majority and minority.
Learning is the indispensable investment required for
success in the "information age" we are entering.
Our concern, however, goes well beyond matters such as
industry and commerce. It also includes the intellectual,
moral, and spiritual strengths of our people which knit
together the very fabric of our society. The people of the
United States need to know that individuals in our society
who do not possess the levels of skill, literacy, and
training essential to this new era will be effectively
disenfranchised, not simply from the material rewards that
accompany competent performance, but also from the chance to
participate fully in our national life. A high level of
shared education is essential to a free, democratic society
and to the fostering of a common culture, especially in a
country that prides itself on pluralism and individual
freedom.
For our country to function, citizens must be able to reach
some common understandings on complex issues, often on short
notice and on the basis of conflicting or incomplete
evidence. Education helps form these common understandings,
a point Thomas Jefferson made long ago in his justly famous
dictum:
I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the
society but the people themselves; and if we think them not
enlightened enough to exercise their control with a
wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them
but to inform their discretion.
Part of what is at risk is the promise first made on this
continent: All, regardless of race or class or economic
status, are entitled to a fair chance and to the tools for
developing their individual powers of mind and spirit to the
utmost. This promise means that all children by virtue of
their own efforts, competently guided, can hope to attain
the mature and informed judgment needed to secure gainful
employment, and to manage their own lives, thereby serving
not only their own interests but also the progress of
society itself.
Indicators of the Risk
The educational dimensions of the risk before us have been
amply documented in testimony received by the Commission.
For example:
International comparisons of student achievement, completed
a decade ago, reveal that on 19 academic tests American
students were never first or second and, in comparison with
other industrialized nations, were last seven times.
Some 23 million American adults are functionally illiterate
by the simplest tests of everyday reading, writing, and
comprehension.
About 13 percent of all 17-year-olds in the United States
can be considered functionally illiterate. Functional
illiteracy among minority youth may run as high as 40
percent.
Average achievement of high school students on most
standardized tests is now lower than 26 years ago when
Sputnik was launched.
Over half the population of gifted students do not match
their tested ability with comparable achievement in school.
The College Board's Scholastic Aptitude Tests (SAT)
demonstrate a virtually unbroken decline from 1963 to 1980.
Average verbal scores fell over 50 points and average
mathematics scores dropped nearly 40 points.
College Board achievement tests also reveal consistent
declines in recent years in such subjects as physics and
English.
Both the number and proportion of students demonstrating
superior achievement on the SATs (i.e., those with scores of
650 or higher) have also dramatically declined.
Many 17-year-olds do not possess the "higher order"
intellectual skills we should expect of them. Nearly 40
percent cannot draw inferences from written material; only
one-fifth can write a persuasive essay; and only one-third
can solve a mathematics problem requiring several steps.
There was a steady decline in science achievement scores of
U.S. 17-year-olds as measured by national assessments of
science in 1969, 1973, and 1977.
Between 1975 and 1980, remedial mathematics courses in
public 4-year colleges increased by 72 percent and now
constitute one-quarter of all mathematics courses taught in
those institutions.
Average tested achievement of students graduating from
college is also lower.
Business and military leaders complain that they are
required to spend millions of dollars on costly remedial
education and training programs in such basic skills as
reading, writing, spelling, and computation. The Department
of the Navy, for example, reported to the Commission that
one-quarter of its recent recruits cannot read at the ninth
grade level, the minimum needed simply to understand written
safety instructions. Without remedial work they cannot even
begin, much less complete, the sophisticated training
essential in much of the modern military.
These deficiencies come at a time when the demand for highly
skilled workers in new fields is accelerating rapidly. For
example:
Computers and computer-controlled equipment are penetrating
every aspect of our lives--homes, factories, and offices.
One estimate indicates that by the turn of the century
millions of jobs will involve laser technology and robotics.
Technology is radically transforming a host of other
occupations. They include health care, medical science,
energy production, food processing, construction, and the
building, repair, and maintenance of sophisticated
scientific, educational, military, and industrial equipment.
Analysts examining these indicators of student performance
and the demands for new skills have made some chilling
observations. Educational researcher Paul Hurd concluded at
the end of a thorough national survey of student achievement
that within the context of the modern scientific revolution,
"We are raising a new generation of Americans that is
scientifically and technologically illiterate." In a similar
vein, John Slaughter, a former Director of the National
Science Foundation, warned of "a growing chasm between a
small scientific and technological elite and a citizenry
ill-informed, indeed uninformed, on issues with a science
component."
But the problem does not stop there, nor do all observers
see it the same way. Some worry that schools may emphasize
such rudiments as reading and computation at the expense of
other essential skills such as comprehension, analysis,
solving problems, and drawing conclusions. Still others are
concerned that an over-emphasis on technical and
occupational skills will leave little time for studying the
arts and humanities that so enrich daily life, help maintain
civility, and develop a sense of community. Knowledge of the
humanities, they maintain, must be harnessed to science and
technology if the latter are to remain creative and humane,
just as the humanities need to be informed by science and
technology if they are to remain relevant to the human
condition. Another analyst, Paul Copperman, has drawn a
sobering conclusion. Until now, he has noted:
Each generation of Americans has outstripped its parents in
education, in literacy, and in economic attainment. For the
first time in the history of our country, the educational
skills of one generation will not surpass, will not equal,
will not even approach, those of their parents.
It is important, of course, to recognize that the average
citizen today is better educated and more knowledgeable than
the average citizen of a generation ago--more literate, and
exposed to more mathematics, literature, and science. The
positive impact of this fact on the well-being of our
country and the lives of our people cannot be overstated.
Nevertheless, the average graduate of our schools and
colleges today is not as well-educated as the average
graduate of 25 or 35 years ago, when a much smaller
proportion of our population completed high school and
college. The negative impact of this fact likewise cannot be
overstated.
Hope and Frustration
Statistics and their interpretation by experts show only the
surface dimension of the difficulties we face. Beneath them
lies a tension between hope and frustration that
characterizes current attitudes about education at every
level.
We have heard the voices of high school and college
students, school board members, and teachers; of leaders of
industry, minority groups, and higher education; of parents
and State officials. We could hear the hope evident in their
commitment to quality education and in their descriptions of
outstanding programs and schools. We could also hear the
intensity of their frustration, a growing impatience with
shoddiness in many walks of American life, and the complaint
that this shoddiness is too often reflected in our schools
and colleges. Their frustration threatens to overwhelm their
hope.
What lies behind this emerging national sense of frustration
can be described as both a dimming of personal expectations
and the fear of losing a shared vision for America.
On the personal level the student, the parent, and the
caring teacher all perceive that a basic promise is not
being kept. More and more young people emerge from high
school ready neither for college nor for work. This
predicament becomes more acute as the knowledge base
continues its rapid expansion, the number of traditional
jobs shrinks, and new jobs demand greater sophistication and
preparation.
On a broader scale, we sense that this undertone of
frustration has significant political implications, for it
cuts across ages, generations, races, and political and
economic groups. We have come to understand that the public
will demand that educational and political leaders act
forcefully and effectively on these issues. Indeed, such
demands have already appeared and could well become a
unifying national preoccupation. This unity, however, can be
achieved only if we avoid the unproductive tendency of some
to search for scapegoats among the victims, such as the
beleaguered teachers.
On the positive side is the significant movement by
political and educational leaders to search for
solutions--so far centering largely on the nearly desperate
need for increased support for the teaching of mathematics
and science. This movement is but a start on what we believe
is a larger and more educationally encompassing need to
improve teaching and learning in fields such as English,
history, geography, economics, and foreign languages. We
believe this movement must be broadened and directed toward
reform and excellence throughout education.
Excellence in Education
We define "excellence" to mean several related things. At
the level of the individual learner, it means performing on
the boundary of individual ability in ways that test and
push back personal limits, in school and in the workplace.
Excellence characterizes a school or college that sets high
expectations and goals for all learners, then tries in every
way possible to help students reach them. Excellence
characterizes a society that has adopted these policies, for
it will then be prepared through the education and skill of
its people to respond to the challenges of a rapidly
changing world. Our Nation's people and its schools and
colleges must be committed to achieving excellence in all
these senses.
We do not believe that a public commitment to excellence and
educational reform must be made at the expense of a strong
public commitment to the equitable treatment of our diverse
population. The twin goals of equity and high-quality
schooling have profound and practical meaning for our
economy and society, and we cannot permit one to yield to
the other either in principle or in practice. To do so would
deny young people their chance to learn and live according
to their aspirations and abilities. It also would lead to a
generalized accommodation to mediocrity in our society on
the one hand or the creation of an undemocratic elitism on
the other.
Our goal must be to develop the talents of all to their
fullest. Attaining that goal requires that we expect and
assist all students to work to the limits of their
capabilities. We should expect schools to have genuinely
high standards rather than minimum ones, and parents to
support and encourage their children to make the most of
their talents and abilities.
The search for solutions to our educational problems must
also include a commitment to life-long learning. The task of
rebuilding our system of learning is enormous and must be
properly understood and taken seriously: Although a million
and a half new workers enter the economy each year from our
schools and colleges, the adults working today will still
make up about 75 percent of the workforce in the year 2000.
These workers, and new entrants into the workforce, will
need further education and retraining if they--and we as a
Nation--are to thrive and prosper.
The Learning Society
In a world of ever-accelerating competition and change in
the conditions of the workplace, of ever-greater danger, and
of ever-larger opportunities for those prepared to meet
them, educational reform should focus on the goal of
creating a Learning Society. At the heart of such a society
is the commitment to a set of values and to a system of
education that affords all members the opportunity to
stretch their minds to full capacity, from early childhood
through adulthood, learning more as the world itself
changes. Such a society has as a basic foundation the idea
that education is important not only because of what it
contributes to one's career goals but also because of the
value it adds to the general quality of one's life. Also at
the heart of the Learning Society are educational
opportunities extending far beyond the traditional
institutions of learning, our schools and colleges. They
extend into homes and workplaces; into libraries, art
galleries, museums, and science centers; indeed, into every
place where the individual can develop and mature in work
and life. In our view, formal schooling in youth is the
essential foundation for learning throughout one's life. But
without life-long learning, one's skills will become rapidly
dated.
In contrast to the ideal of the Learning Society, however,
we find that for too many people education means doing the
minimum work necessary for the moment, then coasting through
life on what may have been learned in its first quarter. But
this should not surprise us because we tend to express our
educational standards and expectations largely in terms of
"minimum requirements." And where there should be a coherent
continuum of learning, we have none, but instead an often
incoherent, outdated patchwork quilt. Many individual,
sometimes heroic, examples of schools and colleges of great
merit do exist. Our findings and testimony confirm the
vitality of a number of notable schools and programs, but
their very distinction stands out against a vast mass shaped
by tensions and pressures that inhibit systematic academic
and vocational achievement for the majority of students. In
some metropolitan areas basic literacy has become the goal
rather than the starting point. In some colleges maintaining
enrollments is of greater day-to-day concern than
maintaining rigorous academic standards. And the ideal of
academic excellence as the primary goal of schooling seems
to be fading across the board in American education.
Thus, we issue this call to all who care about America and
its future: to parents and students; to teachers,
administrators, and school board members; to colleges and
industry; to union members and military leaders; to
governors and State legislators; to the President; to
members of Congress and other public officials; to members
of learned and scientific societies; to the print and
electronic media; to concerned citizens everywhere. America
is at risk.
We are confident that America can address this risk. If the
tasks we set forth are initiated now and our recommendations
are fully realized over the next several years, we can
expect reform of our Nation's schools, colleges, and
universities. This would also reverse the current declining
trend--a trend that stems more from weakness of purpose,
confusion of vision, underuse of talent, and lack of
leadership, than from conditions beyond our control.
The Tools at Hand
It is our conviction that the essential raw materials needed
to reform our educational system are waiting to be mobilized
through effective leadership:
the natural abilities of the young that cry out to be
developed and the undiminished concern of parents for the
well-being of their children;
the commitment of the Nation to high retention rates in
schools and colleges and to full access to education for
all;
the persistent and authentic American dream that superior
performance can raise one's state in life and shape one's
own future;
the dedication, against all odds, that keeps teachers
serving in schools and colleges, even as the rewards
diminish;
our better understanding of learning and teaching and the
implications of this knowledge for school practice, and the
numerous examples of local success as a result of superior
effort and effective dissemination;
the ingenuity of our policymakers, scientists, State and
local educators, and scholars in formulating solutions once
problems are better understood;
the traditional belief that paying for education is an
investment in ever-renewable human resources that are more
durable and flexible than capital plant and equipment, and
the availability in this country of sufficient financial
means to invest in education;
the equally sound tradition, from the Northwest Ordinance of
1787 until today, that the Federal Government should
supplement State, local, and other resources to foster key
national educational goals; and
the voluntary efforts of individuals, businesses, and parent
and civic groups to cooperate in strengthening educational
programs.
These raw materials, combined with the unparalleled array of
educational organizations in America, offer us the
possibility to create a Learning Society, in which public,
private, and parochial schools; colleges and universities;
vocational and technical schools and institutes; libraries;
science centers, museums, and other cultural institutions;
and corporate training and retraining programs offer
opportunities and choices for all to learn throughout life.
The Public's Commitment
Of all the tools at hand, the public's support for education
is the most powerful. In a message to a National Academy of
Sciences meeting in May 1982, President Reagan commented on
this fact when he said:
This public awareness--and I hope public action--is long
overdue.... This country was built on American respect for
education. . . Our challenge now is to create a resurgence
of that thirst for education that typifies our Nation's
history.
The most recent (1982) Gallup Poll of the Public's Attitudes
Toward the Public Schools strongly supported a theme heard
during our hearings: People are steadfast in their belief
that education is the major foundation for the future
strength of this country. They even considered education
more important than developing the best industrial system or
the strongest military force, perhaps because they
understood education as the cornerstone of both. They also
held that education is "extremely important" to one's future
success, and that public education should be the top
priority for additional Federal funds. Education occupied
first place among 12 funding categories considered in the
survey--above health care, welfare, and military defense,
with 55 percent selecting public education as one of their
first three choices. Very clearly, the public understands
the primary importance of education as the foundation for a
satisfying life, an enlightened and civil society, a strong
economy, and a secure Nation.
At the same time, the public has no patience with
undemanding and superfluous high school offerings. In
another survey, more than 75 percent of all those questioned
believed every student planning to go to college should take
4 years of mathematics, English, history/U.S. government,
and science, with more than 50 percent adding 2 years each
of a foreign language and economics or business. The public
even supports requiring much of this curriculum for students
who do not plan to go to college. These standards far exceed
the strictest high school graduation requirements of any
State today, and they also exceed the admission standards of
all but a handful of our most selective colleges and
universities.
Another dimension of the public's support offers the
prospect of constructive reform. The best term to
characterize it may simply be the honorable word
"patriotism." Citizens know intuitively what some of the
best economists have shown in their research, that education
is one of the chief engines of a society's material
well-being. They know, too, that education is the common
bond of a pluralistic society and helps tie us to other
cultures around the globe. Citizens also know in their bones
that the safety of the United States depends principally on
the wit, skill, and spirit of a self-confident people, today
and tomorrow. It is, therefore, essential--especially in a
period of long-term decline in educational achievement--for
government at all levels to affirm its responsibility for
nurturing the Nation's intellectual capital.
And perhaps most important, citizens know and believe that
the meaning of America to the rest of the world must be
something better than it seems to many today. Americans like
to think of this Nation as the preeminent country for
generating the great ideas and material benefits for all
mankind. The citizen is dismayed at a steady 15-year decline
in industrial productivity, as one great American industry
after another falls to world competition. The citizen wants
the country to act on the belief, expressed in our hearings
and by the large majority in the Gallup Poll, that education
should be at the top of the Nation's agenda.
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