Work harder to avoid getting Bangalored, Obama tells kids

15 Sep 2010

US President Barack Obama has exhorted American students to strive harder at school, saying their work would determine their success as well as that of the country in a world where children in Bangalore and Beijing were racing ahead.

Obama has repeatedly said that American schools would have to ensure that they continue producing leagues of top professionals, so that the American hegemony in human resource continues in this century.

"At a time when other countries are competing with us like never before, when students around the world in Beijing, China, or Bangalore, India, are working harder than ever, and doing better than ever, your success in school is not just going to determine your success, it's going to determine America's success in the 21st century," Obama said.

"The farther you go in school, the farther you're going to go in life," he told students at a school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Last year, while announcing an end of tax incentives to US companies which created jobs overseas, Obama had launched the 'Say no to Bangalore and yes to Buffalo' slogan. Since then, he has time and again mentioned the competition coming in from developing countries like China and India while asking Americans to rise to the challenge to keep the American supremacy alive.

"You've got an obligation to yourselves, and America has an obligation to you, to make sure you're getting the best education possible," Obama said in his latest remarks.

He said preparing the students for success in classroom, college and career would also require an enormous collective effort of teachers, principals as well as the administration. "It's going to take outstanding principal and outstanding teachers who are going above and beyond the call of duty for their students," he said.