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Obama's Speech To Students Inspire Many WHO WATCHED THE SPEECH TODAY??

#1 User is offline   I.said.hi 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 02:53 PM

QUOTE
PHILADELPHIA On the very first day of the school year, 12-year-old Mileena Rodriguez was reminded by President Barack Obama himself that hard work can take you places. Mileena listened to Obama's plea to study hard and stay in school Tuesday, watching along with several of her classmates at Thurgood Marshall Elementary School and students across the country. For all the hubbub among adults over the back-to-school speech, many youngsters took the president's message to heart.

"He said that we're the future, and he's right," said Mileena, who wants to be a forensic scientist. "That's a president telling you, `I care about you getting your education.' Just imagine what kids like us can do if we actually listen."

Schoolchildren from coast to coast watched on classroom TVs and computer screens. Others did not hear the message at all, either because their parents pulled from them from class or their schools refused to carry the speech over complaints from conservative groups and others that it smacked of political indoctrination.

In his speech, which aired on C-SPAN and the White House Web site, Obama used examples from his own life to urge students to study hard. He told them to stop chasing dreams of being athletes or reality TV stars.

"The truth is, being successful is hard. You won't love every subject you study. You won't click with every teacher. Not every homework assignment will seem completely relevant to your life right this minute. And you won't necessarily succeed at everything the first time you try," Obama said.

Other presidents, including Republicans Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, delivered similar speeches to students, but some conservatives accused Obama of trying to promote his policies, and they urged schools and parents to boycott the address. Florida Republican Party chairman Jim Greer initially called the speech an attempt to "spread President Obama's socialist ideology."

The Department of Education was also criticized for proposed lesson plans distributed to accompany the speech, including a section later changed that asked students to write about how they could help the president.

Schools were not required to show the speech, and the White House posted an advance transcript on its Web site on Monday. After they got a look at the text, many critics, including Greer, backed off, and some schools agreed to show the speech after all.

Still, others were glad they kept their kids out of class.

"They don't need to be told by the president what their responsibilities are. It's the parents' responsibility to teach them that, not the government," said Ryan Christensen, a carpet cleaner who asked that his 10-year-old daughter be pulled from a fifth-grade class watching the speech in Caldwell, Idaho.

In Marietta, Ga., the elementary school that Mollie Cushing's two daughters attend chose not to air the president's address. And that was just fine with Cushing.

"We're not really happy with the way the country is right now, so I don't have real warm fuzzies about the whole thing," said Cushing, a stay-at-home mom and Republican. "I don't think there's going to be anything he will touch on that will be important."

The uproar followed Obama to Wakefield High School in Arlington, Va., where he delivered the speech. A small band of protesters greeted his motorcade when it arrived at the school outside the nation's capital. One carried a sign reading: "Mr. President, stay away from our kids."

Karen Miller, a former PTA official and a longtime education activist in the Houston area, said she initially had concerns about the speech and accompanying lesson plans. "Whenever a political figure goes to a public school, one has to be very cautious," she said.

After hearing the speech, however, Miller said she found it inspiring.

"The message he gave to children was so appropriate, that you shape your destiny no matter the hand you're dealt," she said. "The message was absolutely on target. I had chills."

All schools in the 163,000-student Philadelphia district were encouraged to show the speech, which coincided with the first day of school.

Missouri Lt. Governor Peter Kinder, a Republican, had originally criticized the speech and its suggested lesson plans as "steps never before seen by any presidency in the realm of government intervention." But he said his concerns eased after some of the lesson plans were changed.

"It was perfectly innocuous and a praiseworthy message," he said Tuesday.

At Thomas Jefferson High School in Federal Way, Wash., a racially and economically diverse district outside Seattle, sophomores in an English class listened attentively to the address. Fifteen-year-old Ariana Steele said the message connected with her.

"When you see someone of such power saying what your parents say or your teachers have said, like all your life, it really makes it more powerful to you and it really makes you want to try more," she said.

And William Geist, a San Francisco fifth-grader who likes to sleep late, listened closely to Obama's story of studying with his mother at 4:30 a.m.

"Now since I heard this speech, I'm like, `Man, I've got to get up early in the morning. I've got to get ready for school. I've got to do this,'" William said.

___

Associated Press writers Dorie Turner, Donna Blankinship, Jessie L. Bonner, Terence Chea and Alan Zagier contributed to this report.


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did anyone watch it today?

i'm a senior in high school... we watched it in 2nd period.

it's pretty annoying when the president loses all rights to speak to the children.. not about politics... BUT ABOUT DOING WELL IN SCHOOL.

very frustrating.
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#2 User is offline   Mannosuke 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 03:09 PM

QUOTE
"They don't need to be told by the president what their responsibilities are. It's the parents' responsibility to teach them that, not the government," said Ryan Christensen, a carpet cleaner who asked that his 10-year-old daughter be pulled from a fifth-grade class watching the speech in Caldwell, Idaho.


Did they mention his profession just to troll him?
It sounds like a motivation speech, seeing how some kids actually want to go to school.
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#3 User is offline   naly26 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 03:28 PM

oh i wished they showed that in my school.i'll go stream it later.

im glad Obama is using his power as president to actually get people to listen to him. kids nowadays have gone haywire and really don't strive to do anything but waste away their life on games, drugs, sex,and booze. I dont see it as the government intervening but a famous dad talking to kids. Atleast obama has the credentials to talk to kids about their future and to work hard.
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#4 User is offline   Yunho<3 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 03:29 PM

We watched it in 3rd period.
pretty inspiring.

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#5 User is offline   MIMsy 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 03:36 PM

It's amazing how a President's address to students can create hostility and even accusations of socialism.
It's not like President Obama discussed politics with students, he just gave a motivation speech to students to
stay in school even when times get rough. People need to stop overexeraggerating every move he makes and
listen. His speech wasn't about persuading students to become a liberal or advocate a new health care reform,
he was merely talking about staying in school. Even teachers talk about staying in school.

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#6 User is offline   lovefool 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 04:24 PM

i didn't realize the speech was going to be on tv! i thought it was just a speech to classrooms. I'm glad he is reiterating the message of hardwork. While he may not be putting forth a political agenda in this speech....his opponents seem to be. And its silly that some people are pulling their kids out of school just because of the speech...as i've learned from missing plenty of school days, its crucial to go to school everyday!! (unless you are really sick).
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#7 User is offline   MangoStar 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 05:30 PM

If Obama was 100% White, he wouldn't have these problems with parents getting upset over stupid
ish.
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#8 User is offline   Flemzy 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 05:44 PM

Unfortunatly I didn't have school today (teacher/faculty retreat or something) so we didn't get to see it
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#9 User is offline   dreamingbabe 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 06:06 PM

Yep, the teacher showed us in English. smile.gif

I don't get it though. How does the speech, in any way, promote socialist ideology?
A lot of it is what we (should) already know, so I don't really understand why he should be criticized for this. Even if people say it was unimportant, you never know. It could have an impact on some kids.
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#10 User is offline   mintcracker 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 06:11 PM

darn PC ppl sleep.gif


Wanna hear the speech lol.
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#11 User is offline   azn099 

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Posted 08 September 2009 - 06:41 PM

we watched it during 4th period which was my economics class. i thought his speech was pretty good.

all students had a chance to opt-out. you weren't made to watch it. i don't see what the big deal is.
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#12 User is offline   inyeon. 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 05:13 PM

QUOTE (naly26 @ Sep 8 2009, 04:28 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
oh i wished they showed that in my school.i'll go stream it later.

im glad Obama is using his power as president to actually get people to listen to him. kids nowadays have gone haywire and really don't strive to do anything but waste away their life on games, drugs, sex,and booze. I dont see it as the government intervening but a famous dad talking to kids. Atleast obama has the credentials to talk to kids about their future and to work hard.

sleep.gif

Teens in the 60s and 70s were probably worse than the generation today. People seem to have fun picking on this generation, when honestly, things were not any different back then .Yeah, you hear more bad news about kids these days, but thats only because people like to publicize them more than adults committing crimes. And teen pregnancy rates were even higher back in the day, you know. u_u

Why do people like stereotyping and picking on this generation? Its so ignorant and stupid.
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#13 User is offline   beta_shen 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 05:47 PM

i really wanted to watch it
but our school is like technologically backwards and doesnt have the capability to show tv stuff in every room
so only a random few classes got to see the speech

living in a republican state is not fun for a democratic county
& even though my county is democratic our principle got a lot of sht from parents

meh w/e im gonna go find this speech online or read the txt somewhere
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#14 User is offline   ♥cheri♥ 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 06:12 PM

i watched this during 2nd period yesterday smile.gif

and, LOL, i didn't think a simple speech from the President about education was gonna make tons of parents go crazy mad. xD i heard that there was this one woman who burst into tears 'cause she didn't want her daughter to have to listen to the speech. i mean, dramatic much? o_O it's just an inspiring speech about motivating students to go to school.

it's kind of funny how when someone with a political background makes even a simple speech, adults have to drag it into some crazy huge political thing or some argument or something. makes no sense.
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#15 User is offline   sugarplum892 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 06:26 PM

=.= our school didn't even let us watch it...or mention it
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#16 User is offline   maharu. 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 06:27 PM

I watched a little bit of his speech and I actually liked it.
His words and ideas really apply to the students and it felt as if someone like a close relative was telling about how school's important.

I seriously don't get why people need to go against him for a speech like this (Are they still bitter about McCain losing?).
The conservatives are harming their own kids by not allowing them to experience different opinions.
Sucks that parent's ego destroyed a child to be able to see the speech.

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#17 User is offline   STAR_x. 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 06:39 PM

lol my feeling's like whatever towards his speech. i am striving to do well in school so its not like im brushing this speech off cause i dont care about school. but honestly, since he wants us to do well, he should focus on the financial situation first cause that's the thing that's affecting us the most. cause of the budget cut, it's affecting our education in SO many ways. there's 4 ap bio classes in my school (by the same teacher) and it's PACKED. there aren't even enough seats to sit in. and it's so uncomfortable cause i have absolutely no personal space at all. we have one too many people in each tables.
and then my precalculus class is packed too. there's like 4-5 people in each tables and we dont even have our own classroom. we have to use the school's engineering classroom sleep.gif we also dont have enough books so nobody has a book. how freaking sad is that?! the only way we can do our hw is cause the teachers make copies of the hw problems. and it's extremely frustrating cause it's inevitable that there are some problems the teacher does not explain and i have no books to get help from.
moreover, this year, we can't even afford agendas - which MANY students rely on for writing down their hw.
when he told us that we HAD to do our best. idk but i was pretty pissed cause he's just giving us more burden / pressure. (btw i was doing my hw when he said this, and i was already frustrated cause of my precalc hw so i kinda wanted to punch his face :X).
i wished all of his plans were working right now, cause to me, the economy's just getting worse, the budget cut is getting worse. i'm scared that we'll have to pay school tuition in the future D: (not my prob though cause im a senior lol). but yeahh .. i bet you that a lot of students are even feeling that they shouldn't even try cause they probably think "what's the point? even if i do well, there's no guarantee that i'll get a job" or "i can't even afford college, so there's no point" :/ or they'll try TOO hard and eventually wear out their health :/ idk but the only way to guarantee a good career in the future is overachieving. and if every students overachieve, the standards grow even higher and eventually the standard will be 160 iq + perfect scores on the SATs :/

inyeon. - thank you for saying that. youre right :/ i think it's cause the media is much more forward now compared to back then :| our generation does get all the crap for drugs and stuff, and half the time, it's cause the previous generation sucks at being parents >_> everybody just pretty much ignore our good points.

sorry my post is more of a frustrated rant D: i sound so worked up over this LOL. but school's been tough :/
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#18 User is offline   xdanbi 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 07:42 PM

In our school district, the teachers were ordered to only show the video if it was related to the curriculum. Only one teacher showed the video, so I didn't get to see it. There were tons of angry, scared parents calling in about the school "brain-washing" their children. sleep.gif
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#19 User is offline   KanyeWEST 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 08:19 PM

stupid parents that think obama is a socialist..
simple as that for your simple ass
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#20 User is offline   CitrusFlower 

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Posted 09 September 2009 - 08:21 PM

QUOTE (MangoStar @ Sep 8 2009, 06:30 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
If Obama was 100% White, he wouldn't have these problems with parents getting upset over stupid
ish.


I don't think race have much to do in this situation, the fact that Obama was black gave him alot of supporters.






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