星期二, 5月 03, 2016

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT THE 2016 NATIONAL TEACHER OF THE YEAR CELEBRATION


REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE 2016 NATIONAL TEACHER OF THE YEAR CELEBRATION

East Room


4:35 P.M. EDT

     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Well, welcome to the White House.  (Applause.)  And thank you, Jahana, for that wonderful introduction.  Everybody please give the National Teacher of the Year a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  It’s a little surprising that she got this award because you can tell she’s a little shy -- (laughter) -- and lacks enthusiasm.  (Laughter.)  And yet somehow she seems to be performing pretty well in the classroom.  (Laughter.)  Look at that smile.

So for seven years, I’ve stood in the White House with America’s finest public servants and private-sector innovators and our best advocates and our best athletes and our best artists, and I have to tell you there are few moments that make me prouder than this event when I stand alongside our nation’s best educators.  (Applause.)

Every year on this day, we say publicly as a country what we should be eager to say every day of the year, and that is:  Thank you.  That’s what this event is about.  That's why it’s one of my favorites.  It’s a good day with all of you guys here in Washington to say thank you for the extraordinary work that teachers do all across the country.  It’s also, I guess, a pretty good day for substitute teachers because we got a lot of folks -- (laughter) -- we got a lot of folks playing hooky today.  (Laughter.)  This is a school day.  (Laughter.) 

MS. HAYES:  It’s a learning opportunity.  (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT:  It’s a field trip. 

Now, among our country’s best educators happens to be our Secretary of Education, Dr. John King, Jr.  (Applause.)  John is someone who, like Jahana, found refuge in school as a youngster.  And he found role models in the classroom at a time when he needed them most.  And that experience instilled in him the empathy that makes him such a powerful voice for students and for teachers and for principals and superintendents and educators all across the country. 

I also want to acknowledge Jahana’s senator from Connecticut, Chris Murphy.  He’s around here somewhere.  There he is.  (Applause.)  He’s proud of you, too. 

I want to welcome her fellow Teachers of the Year from all 50 states, D.C., and our territories.  (Applause.)  And we want to welcome the hundreds of distinguished educators from all across the country that joined us this afternoon.  So thank you.  (Applause.)

I figured this is the last time I was going to do this, so I wanted to invite as many of you as possible -- (applause) -- because you are people who are inspiring at every grade level, who are opening minds to math and music; to basic literacy but classic literature; to social studies and science, Spanish, and special education.  (Applause.)

In their daily lives, the men and women who teach our children fulfill the promise of a nation that's always looking forward, that believes each generation has a responsibility to help the next in building this great country of ours and making the world a better place.

President Kennedy said, “Our progress as a nation can be no swifter than our progress in education.”  Now, the school where Jahana teaches happens to bear President Kennedy’s name.  And it’s fitting then that the perspective, that approach that she brings to the classroom suits the philosophy that he articulated.

This is what Jahana said about how she approaches her responsibility: “It doesn’t matter how bright a student is or where they rank in a class, or what colleges they have been accepted to if they do nothing with their gift to improve the human condition.”  And Jahana cares about the example she sets as much as the exams that she scores.  (Applause.)  

All right, you just need to settle down.  (Laughter.)  This is what makes her a great teacher.  You can't be great if you're not enthusiastic.  (Laughter.)  You got to love what you do -- and she loves what she does. 

And what’s remarkable about Jahana’s natural talent in the classroom is that when she was growing up in Waterbury, Connecticut, being a teacher was the furthest thing from her mind.  In fact, there were times where she didn’t even want to be a student.

No one in Jahana’s family had gone to college.  No one at home particularly encouraged education.  She lived in a community full of poverty and violence, high crime and low expectations.  And drugs were more accessible than degrees.  As a teenager, Jahana became pregnant and wanted to drop out of school.  But her teachers saw something.  They saw something in her.  And they gave her an even greater challenge, and that was to dream bigger and to imagine a better life.  And they made her believe she was college material and that she had the special gift to improve not only her own condition, but those around her.

And today, Jahana’s principal at Kennedy High says she gets through to her students precisely because she remembers what it’s like to be one of them.  And she doesn't forget that everyone in her class brings their own different and sometimes difficult circumstances.  And she meets them where they are.  And she sees a grace in them, and she sees a possibility in them.  And because she sees it, they start seeing it.

And that’s what makes Jahana more than a teacher; she’s a counselor and a confidant.  That’s how a woman who became a teenage mom is now a mentor to high schoolers in the same city where she grew up.

And meanwhile, outside of the classroom, Jahana has been a leader in the afterschool theater program.  She put together a “Teen Idol” singing show.  (Laughter.)  She won the school’s “Dancing with the Stars” competition.  (Laughter.)  I wish I had met you before I started tangoing in Argentina.  (Laughter.)  Could have given me some tips. 

And this is something that I think is particularly remarkable:  Jahana inspires her students to give back.  I think she understands that actually sometimes the less you have, the more valuable it is to see yourself giving, because that shows you the power and the influence that you can bring to bear on the world around you.

One year, she had been assigned to a group that seemed unmotivated, so she found out what was distracting them.  Seven students in one class had recently lost a parent to cancer.  So she organized a Relay for Life team through the American Cancer Society, and it became an annual event.

Last year, when Jahana went online to register her team, she noticed not one, not two, but fourteen teams led by former students had already signed up.  She organized her students to walk for autism, to feed the homeless, to donate clothes, to clean neighborhoods, and even to register voters.  And so it takes a unique leader to get students who don’t have a lot to give of themselves.  But because Jahana understood those kids, she knew not to set low expectations, but to set high ones and to say to them, you can make a difference.

And that's the kind of leader our Teacher of the Year is.  She knows that if students learn their worth, then the class rank and the college acceptances and the exam scores will follow.

Now, if there’s one thing Jahana wishes she had in school, it was more teachers who looked like her, as she already mentioned.  And so she wrote and won a state grant to inspire more students to become teachers –- but especially to recruit more black and Latino teachers in her district.  (Applause.)  And that's important. 

Not one of the teachers standing behind me or in front of our children’s classrooms chose this profession because they were promised a big payday or a short workday.  (Laughter.)  Although, you all do need to be paid better.  (Applause.)  That I believe.  But the main reason teachers do what they do is because they love kids.  They love our kids.  And yes, we should pay teachers more because what they do is invaluable and essential.  And the teachers here, though, will tell you that what would be most helpful, in addition to a little financial relief, would be people understanding how important the work you do is -- (applause) -- and to appreciate it, and not take it for granted.

And so part of the reason this event is so important is for us to be able to send a message to future generations of teachers, to talented young people all across the country to understand this is a dream job; that this is an area where you will have more influence potentially than any other profession that you go into.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Say it again!  (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT:  This is a profession where you have the potential to make more of a difference than just about anything you can go into.  (Applause.)

So over the past seven years, we’ve looked at every element of our education system with an eye towards boosting the teaching profession.  And thanks to our educators and the opinions you’ve voiced and the leadership that you’ve shown, we’ve come a long way since we came into office.

One of the first things we did, in the middle of the worst economic crisis in generations, when states and cities were slashing budgets, was to keep more than 300,000 educators in our kids’ classrooms.  That was part of the Recovery Act.

We’ve taken the first steps towards making sure every young person in America gets the best start possible.   And keep in mind that in 2009, when I started here, only 38 states had their own preschool programs.  Today, all but four have.  We've expanded Head Start programs for tens of thousands of kids who need it.  (Applause.)

We made turning around America’s low-performing schools a national priority.  The year before I took office, a quarter of our high school students didn’t graduate on time.  More than a million didn’t finish high school at all.  And today, high school graduations rates have never been higher, dropout rates have gone down.  We’re transforming hundreds of America’s lowest-performing schools. 

We’re also bringing new technology and digital tools to our classrooms to modernize and personalize learning.  Three years ago, less than a third of all school districts could access high-speed Internet, and a lot of low-income communities were left behind.  Today, 20 million more students and most of our school districts have fast broadband and wireless in the classroom.  And by 2018, we’re going got make sure that we reach the goal I set:  99 percent of our students will have high-speed Internet.  (Applause.)

We're making remarkable progress towards my pledge to train 100,000 STEM teachers by 2021 thanks to the great work of “100K in 10” –- which, with new commitments to prepare 70,000 more teachers, I want to just announce today this is a goal that we are going to achieve on time.  We're on our way. 

And we unleashed a race to the top, convincing every state to raise its standards so students are prepared for success in college and for future careers.  And we listened to parents who wanted subjects like computer science taught in our schools.  And we listened to teachers who have shown why cookie-cutter solutions don’t always work.  We’re empowering states and communities to set their own standards for progress with accountability.  And because nobody thinks our students need to spend more time filling in bubbles on standardized tests, we’re starting to give educators like those behind me the flexibility to spend more time teaching creatively than they're spending teaching to a test.  (Applause.) 

Now, that doesn’t mean that all our problems are solved.  You know it better than I do.  In too many states, we are underfunding public education.  And it is the job of state legislators and of governors to recognize that the wellbeing of their state and their communities and their families and their kids requires them to step up.  (Applause.)  In too many school districts, we still have schools that, despite great efforts by a lot of great teachers, are still not getting our kids prepared the way they need to be prepared.  And we've got to be willing to be honest when something is not working and say, all right, let’s try something different.  And sometimes, we won't necessarily get it right the first time. 

But the reason I think -- I want to bring this up.  This wasn’t in my prepared remarks -- (laughter) -- but I think it's important.  So often now, the debate swings back and forth.  You got some folks who say resources and money don’t make a difference, and the problem is all the teachers' unions and they want to break up the schools, and they think vouchers are all the answer, or some other approach.  And then on the other side you got folks who just know that argument is wrong, but too often it sounds like it's just a defense of the status quo.

And the fact of the matter is, is that we do have to do better in too many of our schools.  We need more teachers like this in all of you.  We've got to make the profession more attractive.  We do have to have accountability in the classroom.  That doesn’t mean forcing you to teach to the test, but we've got to come up with measures that are meaningful, so that if somebody doesn’t have the skills that Jahana or these other teachers have, that they can start developing it and we know what to look for.  We've got to make sure that we're setting our sights high.

And although I am very proud of the work that we've done, I know we're not there yet.  And we may have replaced No Child Left Behind, which was a relief for a lot of folks, but the absence of something that wasn’t working as well as it should is not the presence of the kind of work that remains to be done. 

So, in our country, it's a little harder than in some other countries, because we've got diverse populations, and we got folks coming from different backgrounds and starting off in tougher circumstances.  But our Teacher of the Year here stands as proof that you can't set expectations high enough for our kids.  There's magic in those kids.  We just have to find it.  We have to unleash it.  We have to nurture it.  We have to support it.  We have to love them.  And then we have to tell them precisely because we love you, you're going to work harder, and you're going to do better.  And we're going to stay on you.

That's what we have to do.  And we can't just leave it to the teachers -- because if our notion is we drop off our kids and then the teacher is doing everything, and then our job is done, it's not going to work. 

So this is why my administration launched Teach to Lead -- (applause) -- to give teachers a greater voice in the policies that affect them every day. 

And I'm going to close by just talking about a letter I received at the beginning of this school year from a teacher in central Virginia named Danny Abell.  There's Danny.  (Applause.)  There's a reason why he got a good spot -- (laughter) -- because he knew I was going to talk about him.  So Danny asked his students if any of them wanted to be a teacher when they grew up.  And no one raised their hands.  And that worried him.  So he wrote me to ask what I’d say if one of my daughters told me she wanted to become a teacher.  And I mean this -- this is the God's honest truth -- if Sasha or Malia wanted to be teachers, I will tell them I could not be prouder of what you've done.  (Applause.)  And I'd tell them to be the kind of teachers who don't just show her students how to get the correct answer, but how to be curious about the world and how to care for the people around her, and how to analyze facts and evidence, and how to tell stories, and how to believe in their ability to shape their own destiny.

In other words, I’d tell her to be like Jahana and to be like each of the educators behind us here today, and the kinds of teachers that you see in classrooms in every state and every territory, and the District of Columbia.  I'm so proud of all of you for the high standards you set for your students, for your fellow teachers.  Thank you for making our nation stronger. 

And now, Jahana, please join me to accept this award from America’s educators –- the crystal apple -– as the National Teacher of the Year.  (Applause.)

CITY OF BOSTON RELAUNCHES HUBWAYBIKESHARE SYSTEM, ANNOUNCES EXPANSION OF SERVICE STATIONS

CITY OF BOSTON RELAUNCHES HUBWAYBIKESHARE SYSTEM, ANNOUNCES EXPANSION OF SERVICE STATIONS
Boston Announces Plans for New Bike Stations in Roxbury and North Dorchester
BOSTON - Thursday, April 28, 2016 - The Boston Transportation Department/Boston Bikes today officially re-launched the full New Balance
"The Hubway bike-share system offers residents and visitors a healthy, affordable way to travel throughout our city and I am excited that this year we are expanding the service to reach even more neighborhoods," said Mayor Martin J. Walsh. "As demand continues to grow, I look forward to working with our partners to explore additional opportunities to provide this active transportation service to the people of Boston."

A celebration of the return of the Hubway bikes was held today at the Hubwaystation in front of the New Balance Experience Store on Boylston where Commissioner Fiandaca of the Boston Transportation Department joined Matt LeBretton, New Balance Vice President for Public Affairs. The popular bike-share system recently recorded the four millionth trip taken by Hubway users since the system's launch in 2011.

"We look forward to New Balance Hubway's strongest season ever, with 10 new stations planned for Roxbury and North Dorchester in 2016, a fifth birthday celebration this summer, and our 5 millionth trip anticipated for this Fall," said Boston Transportation Commissioner Fiandaca. "With these new stations, Boston continues to be a national leader in its commitment to equity in bike-share. The City of Boston would like to thank the Barr Foundation for supporting the establishment of these new stations with a $525,000 grant, as well as for partnering with us to ensure that Boston is a sustainable and vibrant city for all residents and visitors."

"From its first to its four millionth ride," said Mary Skelton Roberts, Senior Program Officer at the Barr Foundation. "New Balance Hubway has demonstrated that Boston can lead, and that Bostonians will embrace new, innovative ways to close transportation gaps, and to enhance mobility for residents and visitors. It is our privilege to be able to support this latest expansion into Roxbury and North Dorchester, to better connect more people to more places they want and need to go for work, school, and play throughout the region."

The Boston Transportation Department will hold community workshops to invite public input into the plans for the new stations. Following the workshops, crews from local youth-based organizations will conduct surveys of possible locations for new stations, with opportunities for residents to participate by text message, online and in-person. These participation options are being providing in an effort to engage as many people in the community as possible in the process.  Public planning for the new stations will conclude with an Open House on June 9 and 11.

Below is more information about the workshops and open houses:
  • Community Workshop - May 12, 6:30 - 8:00 p.m., Roxbury YMCA
  • Community Workshop - May 14, 10:00 - 11:30 a.m., Dudley Sq. Library
  • Community Open House - June 9, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m., Roxbury YMCA
  • Community Open House - June 11, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., Grove Hall Library
The New Balance Hubway system is regional public transportation by bike, owned by the municipalities of Boston, Brookline, Cambridge and Somerville.  Since opening in 2011, Hubway users have logged over six million bicycle miles, burning 168 million calories and offsetting nearly 2,000 tons of CO2 emissions.  Hubway has nearly 13,000 annual members and last year sold more than 91,000 24-Hour subscriptions, 8,700 72-Hour subscriptions, and 3,400 monthly subscriptions. In 2015 alone, Hubway riders took 1,122,475 trips and pedaled approximately 2.1 million miles.

About Hubway:
New Balance Hubway is metro-Boston's bike-sharing system with more than 1,600 bikes at 160 stations in Boston, Cambridge, Brookline and Somerville.  The City of Boston has the longest-running subsidized bike-share membership program in the country, offering Hubway memberships to low-income residents for just $5 per year.  For more information about subsidized memberships please visit http://www.bostonbikes.org/ or call #617-635-1470.  Find out more about the New Balance Hubway system, station expansions, deployments, and outages/closures at www.thehubway.com, on Twitter and on Facebook at  www.facebook.com/Hubway.

RED SOX TO HOST MOTHER’S DAY “WALK IN THE PARK” SUNDAY

RED SOX TO HOST MOTHER’S DAY
“WALK IN THE PARK” SUNDAY
Annual Mother’s Day Celebration Presented by Bank of America;
Photos with Steve Lyons and Family-friendly Activities from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.;
Free Tours of Fenway Park for Moms on Mother’s Day


BOSTON, MA – The Boston Red Sox will once again open Fenway Park for a Mother’s Day “Walk in the Park,” presented by Bank of America, on Sunday, May 8, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Additionally, mom’s can enjoy free tours of Fenway Park on Mother’s Day, which take place every hour on the hour from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The annual celebration of Mother’s Day at Fenway Park gives fans the opportunity to walk around the warning track, sit inside the visitor and home dugouts, take photos with a Red Sox alumnus, and participate in other family-friendly activities. The event is free. 

Fans can enter the ballpark through Gate C. Red Sox alumnus and NESN broadcaster Steve Lyons will take photos and meet fans outside of the Red Sox dugout, and the three World Series Trophies will be placed behind home plate for photos.

Wally the Green Monster and his mom, Wanda, will be on hand, accompanied by a balloon artist, face painter, caricature artist, juggler, stilt walker, and magician. 

To highlight the memories made at this event, Bank of America is inviting participants to share their favorite moments from the day using #MLBmemorybank.

Ballpark concessions will be available at a discounted price. The event will take place rain or shine.

星期一, 5月 02, 2016

廣教學校慶建校一百週年 陳毓禮,黃麗蓉獲終生成就獎

(Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導)中華廣教學校429日晚在五百人到賀,麻州州長查理貝克(Charlie Baker)夫婦連袂出席的隆重中,假波士頓瑪麗奧酒店慶祝建校100週年,頒發終身成就獎表揚校董陳毓禮、黃麗蓉夫婦。
駐波士頓台北經文處處長賴銘琪,僑教中心主任郭大文依序代表中華民國及僑委會委員長陳士魁,送上捐款一萬元,“功宏僑教”牌匾一塊。
麻州州長查理貝克(右)頒發表揚狀給陳毓禮(左)。(周菊子攝)
麻州眾議員黃子安也送上表揚狀一紙,誌記這一盛事。
會上嘉賓雲集,社區僑領齊聚,捐款五萬元以上的陳仕維及陳鍾佩玲夫婦,李壽泮,李曹秀萍夫婦,譚柏林,譚陳笑屏夫婦,黃余金遇及黃高秀基金,塔芙茨醫療中心等個人及機構代表,理所當然地坐在首席觀禮。
麻州州長查理貝克(Charlie Baker)。(周菊子攝)
麻州州長查理貝克在致詞時指出,一百年的確是很長的一段時間,僅只是想想這一百年間發生的所有事情,以及社會在經濟,科技,文化,政治上的變遷,就知道人們及社區必須因應的事物有多複雜,許多很好的社區組織,都消失了,中華廣教學校卻在整個社區的扶持中,把中華文化,歷史等核心價值,代代傳承下來,非常不容易。
麻州州長查理貝克頒發表揚狀給中華廣教學校。(周菊子攝)
查理貝克坦言,他早年在麻州州政府工作時,就曾經從時任州長的威廉威爾德(William Weld),保羅瑟祿奇(Paul Celluci),以及當年的波士頓市長萬寧諾(Tom Menino)等許多人那兒聽到過有關陳毓禮的事,笑說聽過那許多故事的人,大概都會覺得陳毓禮是個身高十呎,胸前繡著S的超人,但陳毓禮,黃麗蓉夫婦最讓人動容的是儘管他們幫助過許多人,卻十分謙虛,和他晤談時也未掄起拳頭,提高聲音的要求這,要求那,只是形容給他聽,教育他有關華人社區的點點滴滴,讓他迄今仍記得,從陳毓禮那兒踏出門時,心裡升起了“這是一個很特別的人”這念頭。
但他和陳毓禮的直接交往,要從伍沅媚說起。
麻州州長查理貝克(右)頒發表揚狀給陳毓禮(左)。(周菊子攝)
他認識伍沅媚其實很多年了,但直到上次競選州長時,才因為應邀到華埠和她及陳毓禮共用點心,得以從非記者角度見到伍沅媚的另一面,並體會到中華傳統,文化是華埠,華人的根本,諸如廣教這樣的學校,對華人社區來說有多重要。
查理貝克直指偉大的州是建築在偉大的社區之上,而華人代表了麻州,波士頓市內有如閃耀之星的一個社區。
查理貝克致詞時,還又再說了一次,他每天都把那象徵好運的“利是封”,揣在西裝口袋裡,全因為珍惜社區給他的那份溫暖,以及隨之帶來的安全,樂觀感覺。
在慶祝會中,廣教學校董事長蔡倩婷,校長曾秀萍還頒發榮譽畢業證書給和廣教學校有著淵遠流長關係的雷根傳播公司董事長,喬治雷根(George Regan),波士頓市議會議長吳弭 ( Michelle Wu)代表因身體病痛未能出席的波士頓市長馬丁華殊(Martin Walsh)頒發終生成就獎給陳毓禮,黃麗蓉夫婦。
根據廣教學校當晚派發的場刊,在慶祝100週年大會舉行之前,分五萬元,一萬五到二萬五,五千到一萬五等三個級別的各界捐款,總額已不下40萬元,會上另有由Susan Wornick主持的古董瓷器,王蟹宴,紅襪隊球賽門票,上海遊等現場拍賣。


波士頓市議會議長吳弭(左ㄧ起)頒發終生成就獎給陳毓禮,
黃麗蓉夫婦。(周菊子攝)


麻州州議員黃子安為頒發表揚狀致詞。(周菊子攝)



駐波士頓經文處處長賴銘琪(右一)送上捐款一萬元給廣教學校。


波士頓華僑文教中心主任郭大文(右一),經文處處長賴銘琪(右三)
代表強委會委員長陳士魁,送上“功宏僑教”牌匾,廣教學校校長曾秀萍
(右二),副董事長雷國輝,董事長蔡倩婷(左一)等人代表領取。
(周菊子攝)

雷根公關公司董事長喬治雷根穿上廣教學校畢業服,領榮譽證書。
(周菊子攝)



陳毓禮(中)和多年好友,Harbour Food公司董事長公司董事長
Horald Kallck(右一)開心敘舊。(周菊子攝)

陳毓璇(右起),黃景佩夫婦,羅燕玲,Harbour Food董事長
Harald Kallck相識多年。(周菊子攝)

廣教學校揚琴老師李平親自上場演奏。(周菊子攝)

廣教慶祝百週年的表演,還包括現代舞。(周菊子攝)





波士頓市議會議長吳弭(右)和拍賣主持人Susan Wornick。
(周菊子攝)

陳毓璇(後右起)和曾任廣教學校校長陶志剛的女兒,以及曾任廣教
學校董事長的李伍綺蓮等人敘舊。(周菊子攝)

阮陳金鳳(右起),黃景佩,陳毓璇夫婦,陳毓禮(左一)等一家人
和中華表演藝術協會會長譚嘉陵(左二)。(周菊子攝)

駐波士頓經文處副處長陳銘俊(右一),波士頓華僑文教中心主任
郭大文(左一)和帝苑大酒樓老闆黃官羨,羅雅儀夫婦在廣教學校
百週年慶祝大會上巧遇。(周菊子攝)


東海集團董事長梁國忠(左)恭喜陳毓禮(右)獲獎。(周菊子攝)




濠江芽菜老闆譚柏林夫婦慷慨贊助廣教學校。(周菊子攝)

鳳倫公所主席司徒宗達(左一),關麗莎(左二)等人出席盛會。



華美福利會董事長陳美霞(左起)與該會義工郭慧明。

亞裔青年中心行政主任梁素英(左一)。

波士頓市議員林乃肯的幕僚長陳偉民(左)恭喜陳毓禮(右)獲獎。


黃氏宗親會組團到賀。



王氏青年會行政主任Patricia Barnwell(左)和發展主任陳魯誠(右)。


中華廣教學校百週年慶祝會五百多人出席。(周菊子攝)