Don't get me wrong, I know there is room for improvement, but your comment about "worst in the world" was a gross exaggeration.
"Assessments were conducted in 21 countries in 1995"
how many countries in the world? Many sources offer different answers, and depending on the source, there are 189 , 191, 192, 193, 194 or 195 independent countries in the world today. ... http://www.worldatlas.com/nations.htm
So according to your stats, we are still in the top 10.
;-)
You are right. I meant compared with other industrialized countries we are seriously behind( I was not including 3rd world countries). Based on the US being a world leader, you would expect the US to be at the top in Education...and we are not. We have the resources and the talent, but are still missing the mark. Compared with the other industrialized countries in the world we are NOT in the top 10 percent. If we ignore the fact there is a problem and do nothing to correct it, we will continue to fall further behind. This study is from 2006.
While most parents think their children are receiving a quality education, the majority of American students are falling behind their international counterparts. The consequences to the country are dramatic.
Consider these stark statistics: We have low expectations for American students. American students rank 25th in math and 21st in science compared to students in 30 industrialized countries.
America’s top math students rank 25th out of 30 countries when compared with top students elsewhere in the world. [1] By the end of 8th grade, U.S. students are two years behind in the math being studied by peers in other countries. [2] Seventy percent of 8th graders can’t read at their grade level, and most will never catch up. Too many students drop out. More than 1.2 million students drop out of school every year. That’s more than 6,000 students every school day and one every 26 seconds. [3] The national high school graduation rate is only 70 percent, with states ranging from a high of 84 percent in Utah to a low of 54 percent in South Carolina. [4]
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4marcoisland writes:
You are right. I meant compared with other industrialized countries we are seriously behind( I was not including 3rd world countries). Based on the US being a world leader, you would expect the US to be at the top in Education...and we are not. We have the resources and the talent, but are still missing the mark. Compared with the other industrialized countries in the world we are NOT in the top 10 percent. If we ignore the fact there is a problem and do nothing to correct it, we will continue to fall further behind. This study is from 2006.
While most parents think their children are receiving a quality education, the majority of American students are falling behind their international counterparts. The consequences to the country are dramatic.
Consider these stark statistics:
We have low expectations for American students.
American students rank 25th in math and 21st in science compared to students in 30 industrialized countries.
America’s top math students rank 25th out of 30 countries when compared with top students elsewhere in the world. [1]
By the end of 8th grade, U.S. students are two years behind in the math being studied by peers in other countries. [2]
Seventy percent of 8th graders can’t read at their grade level, and most will never catch up.
Too many students drop out.
More than 1.2 million students drop out of school every year. That’s more than 6,000 students every school day and one every 26 seconds. [3]
The national high school graduation rate is only 70 percent, with states ranging from a high of 84 percent in Utah to a low of 54 percent in South Carolina. [4]
Share your thoughts
Comments are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.