Showing posts with label Declaration of Learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Declaration of Learning. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Hillary Clinton Signs Declaration of Learning



Remarks at Signing of the Declaration of Learning


Remarks

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Ben Franklin Room
Washington, DC
January 30, 2013



Thank you. Thank you all very, very much. This is one of the last events that I will have the great honor of doing as Secretary of State, and I can’t imagine a more important one, because of what this means for our ability to reach out and connect with not only our own students, but all of our citizens and people across the world.
I want to thank Marcee for her stewardship of the Diplomatic Reception Rooms. I want to thank Ambassador Capricia Marshall, our Head of Protocol. They have spearheaded what we call the Patrons of Diplomacy, and a number of you were part of that campaign and generously supported it. With your help, we established a permanent endowment to care for these rooms and their collections. And today, we launch this partnership to share them with the world.
Now, we have the centerpiece of the Diplomatic Reception Rooms here, as Marcee was telling you – the desk on which our founders signed the Treaty of Paris, ending the Revolutionary War with Britain and forever sealing our independence. Now, we rarely move this desk – (laughter) – from its spot in the John Quincy Adams Room just two doors away. We never move it off the 8th floor. We spent more time worrying about moving the desk – (laughter) – than we have probably on anything else in the last month.
So unfortunately, except for the thousands who availed themselves of the wonderful tours that we run here, very few people have actually seen it for themselves. But the Declaration of Learning I am about to sign will help transport the story and the significance of this desk along with many other pieces of our history to anyone with an internet connection.
Now, for educators, this partnership will offer valuable resources for students and all the lifelong learners out there. It will help bring history to life and, we hope, inspire them to learn and achieve even more. Some of the students who will explore the Diplomatic Reception Rooms online may even become interested in a career in diplomacy. So I want to thank all the institutions that are active partners in this ambitious initiative, the leaders who have committed the time and resources, and the many team members who will help make this goal a reality.
And I particularly want to thank all of our Patrons of Diplomacy. You really saw our vision. You have worked to realize that vision. We are immensely grateful. And our partners have selected diplomacy as the first topic for this collaboration because, after all, diplomacy is not something that is confined to the State Department or reserved for special occasions. In this complicated, connected world, diplomacy is a daily practical occurrence. It’s about people learning from each other and building understandings through the kinds of interactions that happen millions of times each day in person and online. In fact, I think we need to practice diplomacy from the lunch table to the board room to the government offices.
These rooms hold special significance for me. They have certainly been the backdrops for hundreds of diplomatic initiatives and celebrations and events every year. I’ve greeted heads of state, royalty, a fair number of celebrities. We’ve hosted peace talks, we’ve held strategic dialogues, we’ve opened the doors of the State Department to people from all over the world. And every time I see Ben Franklin up there watching over us, I’m reminded of the deep diplomatic history that we have built from our very beginnings. So it’s been a tremendous honor for me to be part of that history and to share the stories and even some of the lessons of American diplomacy with a global audience.
So now, I’d like to invite the leaders of our 13 institutional partners to stand with me as I sign this Declaration of Learning. We’ll take some pictures. After I sign it, we’ll all be able to take a deep collective breath out because the desk will be fine. (Laughter.) That is our plan and what we have prepared for, but please join me.
(The declaration was signed.)



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Monday, January 28, 2013

Wednesday: On Hillary Clinton's Agenda

01-23-13-Z-40

Secretary Clinton and Leaders from Thirteen Organizations Sign "Declaration of Learning" on Historic Treaty of Paris Desk


Notice to the Press
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
January 28, 2013


On Wednesday, January 30th, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and leaders of thirteen government agencies and NGO’s will sign the "Declaration of Learning" on the historic Treaty of Paris desk in the Diplomatic Reception Rooms at the U.S. Department of State. The signing formally announces their partnership as members of the Inter-Agency Collaboration on Learning.

Led by the Diplomatic Reception Rooms at the U.S. Department of State, the signing ceremony will recognize the institutions for their commitment to work together to utilize historic artifacts in their collections, as well as their educational expertise, to create digital learning tools that can be accessed from computers, tablets, and cell phones. Non-digital learning tools will also be created for classroom and public use.

This initiative will give students, teachers, and life-long learners the opportunity to explore historic objects and access new learning resources digitally, helping ensure that tomorrow’s leaders better understand the events, ideas, and movements that have shaped our country and the world. The group has selected "Diplomacy" as the first topic around which learning resources will be created. A new topic will be selected every two years.

The institutions participating in the Inter-Agency Collaboration on Education and signing the Declaration of Learning include: National Archives, Library of Congress, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institutions, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Endowment for the Arts, Newseum, American Library Association, National Center for Literacy Education, National Council of Teachers of English, National Council for the Social Studies, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and the Diplomatic Reception Rooms at the U.S. Department of State. 

This ceremony will also honor Secretary Clinton for her role in making this possible through the completion of the $20 million "Patrons of Diplomacy" initiative, which established the first permanent endowment for the Diplomatic Reception Rooms and the initial funding to launch educational initiatives to share the Diplomatic Rooms, their historic objects, and the work that occurs in the Rooms with people around the world. 

The event will begin at 10 a.m. in the Benjamin Franklin Room at the Department of State.