When historians look back on the past 10 years, they will surely remark on this anomaly: At a time when American power and our stake in the world were at an all-time high, Americans' interest in and knowledge of international affairs was at a low ebb.
Our increasing interdependence with our neighbors around the globe demands that we do better. Although the threat of nuclear annihilation has receded with the demise of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, the world remains a dangerous place. The emergence of the global economy calls into question the meaning of such time-honored concepts as "U.S. company" and "Made in America." Exports account for a greater percentage of our GNP than ever before.
Today, people, goods and information move across the globe at an unprecedented pace. The United States feels the impact of immigration more than it has for over a century. None of us can deny the increasing impact of worldwide actions affecting the environment. It is now as easy to communicate with virtually any spot on the globe as it was for the generation in which we grew up to call down the street. In this "global community," where international travel has become routine, communicable diseases have also been internationalized, giving Americans a stake in public health standards worldwide.
These are only a few of the reasons why the demand for globally literate citizens has never been greater. After World War II, the federal government recognized the importance of international education to prepare Americans for the Cold War. We set up the Fulbright exchange program, funded international research centers at our universities, promoted foreign language study and in other ways took responsibility for promoting the international education of Americans.
No proactive federal policy on international education exists today. Now, in the global age, we believe it is again time for the federal government to recognize and act on the national interest in international education. That is why we introduced a resolution in the Senate, which was passed unanimously earlier this month. It calls for a U.S. international education policy to enhance national security, U.S. foreign policy and global competitiveness.
Our resolution says that such a policy should strive to achieve the following:
• Ensure that a United States college graduate has knowledge of a second language and of a foreign area, as well as a broader understanding of the world;
• Invigorate citizen and professional international exchange programs and promote the international exchange of scholars;
Read more in Opinion
Unfinished BusinessRecommended Articles
-
McElroy, Hunt, Thayer to Speak At ConferencesThe Summer School will sponsor two national conferences this year, the annual conference on educational administration, and a special discussion
-
University Organizations.Tomorrow evening at eight o'clock the Camera Club will exhibit a set of lantern slides in Boylston. Hall made entirely
-
Global Health Symposium Draws ExpertsExperts on international health are converging on Cambridge this weekend in an attempt to pique students’ interest in topics ranging
-
March 11, MadridWhen 200 innocents are murdered, more than 1,400 are wounded and people either don’t know or just don’t care, something
-
STUDENT EXCHANGE PLANS TO HELP INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SAYS DRURYDr. Drury, formerly rector of the St. Stephens Church of Boston, is at present headmaster of St. Paul's School, Concord
-
THESES FOR EDUCATION PRIZES DUE TOMORROWTomorrow is the last day for the submission of theses in the Institute of International Education prize contest, the result