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How You Can Get Involved
Already, the President and Vice President have unveiled a series
of endeavors that serve as
important steps toward fulfillment of the national goal and as
examples of future action. The
President has announced:
The formation of Net Day '96, through which a voluntary
consortium of companies
will ensure that, by the end of the year, every California
K-12 school has access to the
Internet and 20% of the classrooms in California K-12
schools will be connected to
computer networks.
The nationwide inauguration of the Tech Corps, which will
help to bring private sector
volunteer into our schools so that they can help to bring
technology into our
classrooms.
These ventures demonstrate how communities, businesses, schools,
teachers and students can
work together to achieve what no one person, entity, or even
governmental unit, could
accomplish alone.
Students can get involved through the American Technology Honor
Society, which will:
provide an organization through which
students can help apply computing and telecommunications knowledge
and technical expertise to expand their school's use of technology
and
recognize and reward students who use their technological
expertise to serve their schools. The National Association of
Secondary School Principals will manage and guide this effort, which
has its roots in the National Honor Society and the Technology Student
Association.