I welcome the invitation of the Adult Education
Association of the U.S.A. to address your annual convention meeting this
year in Denver, Colo. I regret that I cannot be present with you personally
on this occasion, but in my view the role of adult education in our national
life is so important that I wish to take advantage of your invitation to
extend my personal greetings and best wishes to those who are engaged in
this rapidly growing segment of our educational system.
It is important to note that in the platform
hearings of the Democratic Party, your association, together with other
important professional organizations, provided direct testimony about the
importance of continuing education if we are to develop informed citizens
who can participate effectively in the decisionmaking processes of our
society.
It is a source of pride to me that the Democratic
platform includes a pledge of "further Federal support for all phases of
vocational education for youth and adults; for libraries and adult education;
for realizing the potential of educational television; and for the exchange
of students and teachers with other nations." Our party has also gone on
record in support of "encouraging and expanding participation in and appreciation
of our cultural life," and we have proposed a Federal advisory agency to
assist in the evaluation, development, and expansion of the cultural resources
of the United States.
A national campaign provides an opportunity
to consider the facts and issues on major problems of our times: Peace
and security, civil rights, educational opportunities, housing problems,
problems of senior citizens, farm income, and other crucial concerns.
While farm income is one of our major economic
problems, we must also move more vigorously to deal with the problems of
our metropolitan communities, where more than 90 percent of our population
growth is occurring. If our people are to live happy, prosperous, and fruitful
lives in this urban age, we need educational programs as bold in concept
and broad in scope as the cooperative extension movement which has done
so much for rural America.
We need programs that will help all citizens
to understand the problems created by urbanization. We need to find better
ways to use the research and the educational experience of our institutions
of learning in solving these problems. Adult educators in our universities
and colleges, our schools, libraries and civic organizations, have a vital
role to play in getting this job done.
We live in an age of rapid social change and
unprecedented increase of new knowledge and scientific invention. In such
an age we must do all in our power to strengthen our great system of formal
education. But we must not stop there. We must also recognize that a free
society today demands that we keep on learning or face the threat of national
deterioration. We must educate people today for a future in which the choices
to be faced cannot be anticipated by even the wisest now among us. We are
on the frontier of an era which holds the possibilities of a new Golden
Age in which the inroads of poverty, hunger, and disease will be lessened,
in which through the extension of educational opportunities, men and women
everywhere will have it within their power to develop their potential capacities
to the maximum.
The agenda before the American people is great.
The problems are complex. I believe that an America that understands
the importance of "lifelong learning" will be able to deal with those problems
more wisely and more vigorously.
I am, therefore, pleased to express my support
of those who are working to strengthen the adult education programs of
our universities and colleges, our schools, our libraries, and our voluntary
citizen organizations. Your efforts are helping America to move forward
toward greater strength and cultural vitality which can make our Nation
once again a beacon light among freedom-loving people everywhere.