Video. Hillary Clinton Announces Open Book Project
Remarks at the Announcement of the Open Book Project
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton Secretary of State
Ben Franklin Room
Washington, DC
January 28, 2013
SECRETARY CLINTON: Good afternoon. Welcome to the State
Department, to the Ben Franklin Room. We have Mr. Franklin looking over
us from above. And I think he would highly approve of this session here
today. I want to thank everyone who has traveled from far and wide, from
Tunisia, from California, and many places in between and beyond.
Welcome to the launch of the Open Book Project. And when I think
about what we are doing here today in this setting, I do believe that
the United States has a great opportunity to work with institutions and
governments and individuals and the Arab League and work together on
behalf of common endeavors that make a difference, particularly to our
young people.
Ben Franklin, as I just mentioned, was one of our great scientists,
educators, publishers, and diplomats. I think of him as America’s
founding father of good ideas. And harnessing the connective power of
technology to give as many people as possible access to the
highest-quality learning materials is a good idea whose time has come.
Two promising developments have brought us to this moment. First,
since the early days of the Arab revolutions, the United States and the
Arab League have worked more closely together than ever before. This
fall in New York, we signed an agreement to cooperate more deeply and
held the first U.S.-Arab League Dialogue. At a time when extremists
everywhere work to deepen divides across cultures, we see partnerships
like this as one chance to bridge them. And we see educational diplomacy
as the means for fulfilling the obligation to try to match reality and
actions with the aspirations and hopes of the men and women across the
Arab world.
Secondly, we live at a time when technology is expanding access to
information and learning materials like never before. You can look
around the world and see young adults in remote villages and towns
huddling around a computer watching videotaped physics lessons by MIT
professors. Top universities like Rice University are creating free
online textbooks and saving students money in their studies. Science
education websites like Khan Academy go viral. There are other examples,
and these are all fruits of technological progress, but also of a
commitment to make more learning materials open – free, open licensing
for anyone to use, adapt, and share. And many of the experts in this
room today have been at the forefront of efforts to advance open
learning, and I particularly want to acknowledge Under Secretary Martha
Kanter, who has been a leader at the Department of Education.
Now, all of this leaves me, as Secretary of State for a few more
days, thinking about how we can make this powerful new tool part of our
efforts to build friendships and partnerships, and deliver the benefits
of open education to more people and more places.
Through the Open Book Project, we will work to expand access to free,
high-quality, open education materials in Arabic, with a focus on
science and technology. Our hope is to lower geographic, economic, and
even gender-based barriers to learning. Anyone with access to the
internet will be able to read, download, and print these open materials
for free or adapt a copy that meets the local needs of their classrooms
or education systems.
Now, you could say we are returning to a very old tradition, because
at a time when Europe was still in the dark ages, Arab scholars
preserved seminal writings from ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome that
would have otherwise have been lost. Today, we are honored to welcome
representatives of the Arab League, of ALECSO and the Arab diaspora
working to bring scientific knowledge and innovation to the people of
today.
Now, we know it’s not enough to generate the right material. We have
to work together to make sure it is connected to Arab educators,
students, and classrooms, and I hope we can put a full year of
high-quality college-level science textbooks – biology, chemistry,
physics, and calculus – online, for free, in Arabic. And we also want to
help Arab professors and intellectuals create their own open courses.
And I know many of you have many more ideas to share.
I’m proud that so many trailblazers in open education come from the
United States, including Creative Commons, the Hewlett Foundation,
ISKME, Meedan, MIT OpenCourseWare, the OpenCourseWare Consortium, and
Rice University OpenStax College. Your work is already proving that it
has the potential to transform the way students learn across the world.
Now, of course, this is a relatively new field, and there are a lot of
questions about standards, accreditation, connecting online learners to
employment. But we have to start, and we can start by doing what we are
doing today – learning as we go, asking the hard questions, and getting
good answers that we then will be able to share.
As I have traveled the world, I must say that we’re living at a
moment when young people’s hunger for knowledge, opportunity, good jobs,
the future that they seek, has never been more powerful. And it is also
connected to peace and security. So let’s think of how we can
creatively deliver on this very exciting program.
So I am honored to host you today and to look forward to hearing
about what happens with this exciting new initiative. I’m honored to
start it as Secretary of State after all the hard work that has gone
into it, and I will be equally excited to follow it from outside when I
leave the Department, and still care deeply about these issues and will
do what I can to support you. Thank you all very much