this bill will help prepare students for a diverse fast pace world

    (1) A host of growing challenges--international security, global markets, immigration, world health, the environment, and the emerging educational and material aspirations of the world’s poorest people--are fundamentally altering the international landscape.

    (2) Rapid technological advances and the information age are shrinking the world, exponentially enlarging access of all peoples to essential knowledge, concepts, and ideas, and connecting Americans to their counterparts across the globe.

    (3) The diversity of American workplaces, schools, and communities increasingly parallels the world’s diversity.

    (4) Americans, in the performance of their citizenship roles, are required to make informed judgments about the role of the United States in the world, as well as the impact of other nations and world regions on the United States.

    (5) The place of the United States in the world will depend on whether teachers, citizens, and policymakers of the United States understand how international events shape the lives, politics, economics, and security of the Nation.

    (6) American-based multinational corporations, as well as small businesses, increasingly need employees with knowledge of foreign languages and cultures to market products to customers domestically and around the globe, and to work effectively with foreign employees and partners in other countries.

    (7) It is the primary function of the Nation’s schools to prepare America’s students to meet the requirements of the workplace and to perform citizenship roles in dynamic and rapidly changing domestic and global communities.

    (8) Recent surveys consistently demonstrate the illiteracy of young Americans in geography, economics, and world history, as well as the low priority university students give to learning about other countries and cultures.

    (9) Only rarely do American high school or university students elect to study geography, world history, international relations, or global issues, or to obtain fluency in a foreign language.

    (10) School curricula and university programs of study are not adequately aligned to new international and global realities.

    (11) State educational agencies and local educational agencies must be encouraged to include international education competency as part of teacher credentialing and licensing.

CONTEXT(Help)
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Argumentation and Debate - 62241 »Argumentation and Debate - 62241
Efren Onate »Efren Onate
House of Rep. »House of Rep.
The government should fund foreign lang. and international education  »The government should fund foreign lang. and international education
GENIUS act »GENIUS act
this bill will help prepare students for a diverse fast pace world
funding international education can create a more intelligent worker »funding international education can create a more intelligent worker
the business world has become more culturally intricate.  »the business world has become more culturally intricate.
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