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Remarks By
JOHN H. GIBBONS
Assistant to the President for Science and Technology
The Presidential Award for Excellence in
Science, Math, and Engineering
Mentoring Awards Ceremony
Room 450, Old Executive Office Building
Washington, DC
September 25, 1996
The Significance of the Presidential Mentoring Program
I am very pleased to be here today to present the Presidential
Awards for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering
Mentoring.
You are the first group of awardees in this program. The
President intends the program to recognize outstanding mentoring
efforts and programs that have served to encourage minorities,
women, and persons with disabilities to study and to succeed in
science, mathematics, and engineering. By the turn of the
century, and the millennium, oneªthird of the American nation
will be composed of minorities. In the highly competitive,
knowledge-rich, information©intensive, global economy, every
individual, no matter what gender, color of skin, or disability,
must be provided the opportunity and indeed encouraged to pursue
their interests and to develop their talents in science and
technology whether it be as a career choice, or to be able to
exercise full citizenship in the technology and information age
we have entered. Our nation can no longer afford to underinvest
in their potential or to have science and technology-illiterate
citizens in its democracy.
The President has made education a major foundation of his
bridge into the twentyªfirst century. He recognizes that role
modeling and mentoring are critical ingredients in the nourishing
of talent. Every one of us here today have benefitted
throughout the years starting as young children, through our
grade school and into undergraduate and graduate years from
demanding, thoughtful, and caring mentors who have made such
an enormous difference in our accomplishments. The mentoring
program recognizes this basic fact in the professional
development of scientists and engineers and seeks to ensure
that individuals who have not had these same opportunities will
have better access to them in the future.
The President established this award based on a recommendation
made by the National Science and Technology Council. The award is
jointly administered by the White House Office of Science and
Technology Policy and the National Science Foundation. The
award tangibly demonstrates the President's commitment to
ensuring that all of our nation's citizens have the opportunity
to spread their wings and for some to pursue careers in science
and technology.
I congratulate each of you for the contributions you have made to the lifting of people's sights; to the kindling of excitement
about learning; and to the nourishing of spreading wings.
You are strengthening the scientific and technological
foundations of our universities and industries and therefore
of our Nation. You are paying back your debt to those
mentors, like our parents, scout masters, teachers, coaches,
professors, and colleagues, who nurtured you and me in the
past. And you stand as excellent examples of the very kind of
service to others that the President seeks to recognize. Our
nation deeply appreciates your service.
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