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Keyword: illiteracy

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  • Report: 1 in 4 Britons Think Winston Churchill Never Existed

    02/04/2008 11:00:52 AM PST · by atomic conspiracy · 32 replies · 445+ views
    Daily Mail via FoxNews ^ | 2-4-08 | Rebecca Camber
    One in four Britons don't believe wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill existed, according to a recent survey. Churchill is compared to Florence Nightingale and Sir Walter Raleigh, seen by many survey respondents as a mythical person, the London Daily Mail reported Monday. The survey, conducted with 3,000 respondents to test their general knowledge, reported other historical figures such as Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi, Cleopatra and the Duke of Wellington were made up for books and films, the Mail reported. The survey, by UKTV Gold, also found that Sherlock Holmes was a real person.
  • Graduates Know Even Less About History (Take The Quiz!)

    09/19/2007 5:48:59 PM PDT · by Diana in Wisconsin · 298 replies · 531+ views
    Madison.com ^ | September 19, 2007 | Anita Weier
    The University of Wisconsin-Madison did relatively well in a 50-college test of how much students learned about history and economics during four years of college, but students in Wisconsin and nationally knew little when they came in and not much more when they left. No college did better than a D-plus on the Civic Literacy Test released Tuesday by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, a nonpartisan conservative educational organization that stresses the values of a free society. The national average was F.The test of 14,000 randomly selected students revealed that some of the most expensive Ivy League universities, with the highest-paid...
  • Not even teachers can speak English

    09/01/2007 4:13:43 AM PDT · by Man50D · 71 replies · 1,734+ views
    WorldNetDaily.com ^ | September 1, 2007
    An official state inspection of Arizona public schools reveals that many students are being taught English by Spanish-speaking teachers whose command of English is so poor that the officials can barely understand them. The recent inspection revealed teachers providing instruction in Spanish instead of the legally required English, students unable to answer questions in English, and teachers' instructions such as "Sometimes, you are not gonna know some." The results of the inspections were reported by the Arizona Republic, which concluded hundreds of students in the state are trying to learn English from teachers who don't know the language. The inspections...
  • FW students protest TAKS decision (not allowed to graduate for failing standardized test)

    05/25/2007 11:42:02 AM PDT · by gondramB · 41 replies · 1,439+ views
    FORT WORTH — Students who had been planning to walk across the stage at graduation ceremonies this weekend were instead walking a picket line Thursday morning. The Trimble Tech High School seniors marched in front of Fort Worth Independent School District headquarters to protest Wednesday's decision by trustees to bar students who failed the TAKS test from commencement exercises. About a dozen young people, carrying signs and chanting, began picketing at 8:30 a.m. Thursday. They represent the 613 Fort Worth seniors who did not pass the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills exam
  • Graduates unprepared for college academics

    05/23/2007 2:59:55 PM PDT · by george76 · 254 replies · 5,007+ views
    THE GAZETTE ^ | May 21, 2007 | BRIAN NEWSOME
    Remedial classes await. Thousands of Colorado high schoolers are graduating this month with plans to go to college in the fall. Hundreds of them will be academically unprepared when they get there. Those students will take — and pay for — remedial classes that don’t count toward a degree. Educators say the need for remedial work is fueled largely by a lack of communication between high schools and colleges about what’s important to know. They also say high school students need to pay closer attention to class selection and grades, especially in the senior year when many coast toward graduation...
  • THE YEAR 1907

    05/13/2007 3:07:47 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 33 replies · 5,036+ views
    email
    Share this with All your Friends... And SHOW this to your children and grandchildren !!!! THE YEAR 1907 This will boggle your mind, I know it did mine! The year is 1907. One hundred years ago. What a difference a century makes! Here are some of the U.S. Statistics for the Year 1907: ************************************ The average life expectancy in the U.S. Was 47 years old. Only 14 percent of the homes in the U.S. Had a bathtub . Only 8 percent of the homes had a telephone. A three-minute call from Denver to New York City Cost eleven dollars. There...
  • Can't Blame White People

    03/22/2007 9:37:06 AM PDT · by shortstop · 70 replies · 2,923+ views
    email ^ | Bill Cosby
    I did a search and didn't find this posted in the past on FR. I also checked Snopes and found this is TRUE. They're standing on the corner and they can't speak English. I can't even talk the way these people talk: Why you ain't, Where you is, What he drive, Where he stay, Where he work, Who you be.. And I blamed the kid until I heard the mother talk. And then I heard the father talk. Everybody knows it's important to speak English... except these knuckleheads. Mushmouth is what they speak! You can't be a doctor with that...
  • College Graduates Dumber than Ever

    10/31/2006 10:19:19 PM PST · by John Semmens · 10 replies · 321+ views
    AZCONSERVATIVE ^ | 27 Oct 2006 | John Semmens
    The American Institutes for Research assessed the literacy of graduating seniors from two- and four-year colleges and universities. The findings indicate that many college graduates are only semi-literate. 20 percent of U.S. college students completing four-year degrees have limited quantitative skills. For example, they are unable to estimate if their car has enough gas to get to the next gas station or to calculate the sum of a list of purchases. The study also finds that more than 50 percent of students at four-year colleges have limited literacy skills. For example, they can’t understand the arguments in a newspaper editorial....
  • FDA Approves Nonprescription Sales of Plan B

    08/24/2006 7:37:11 AM PDT · by markomalley · 470 replies · 6,281+ views
    CNS News ^ | 8/24/2006 | Susan Jones
    The Food and Drug Administration approved over-the-counter sales of the "morning-after pill" on Thursday, but only for girls over the age of 18. The hormone pill, until now available only with a prescription, prevents implantation of a fertilized egg if it is taken within a few days of unprotected intercourse. Easier access to the drug known as Plan B has drawn strong opposition from conservative groups, who say it will end up in the hands of young girls, regardless of what the rules say. Focus on the Family is among the many groups that have argued against over-the-counter sales of...
  • Our Candy Ass Military

    08/09/2006 11:07:42 AM PDT · by rider237 · 359 replies · 8,477+ views
    14 august 2006 | rider237
    this weeks "navy times" came out. it had the usual articles in it. one very touching one about the last carrier operations of the f-14s. then.....
  • Push for easier spelling persists despite lack of public interest

    07/06/2006 9:29:22 AM PDT · by WestTexasWend · 78 replies · 1,130+ views
    WASHINGTON (AP) - When "say," "they" and "weigh" rhyme, but "bomb," "comb" and "tomb" don't, wuudn't it maek mor sens to spel wurdz the wae thae sound? Those in favor of simplified spelling say children would learn faster and illiteracy rates would drop. Opponents say a new system would make spelling even more confusing. Eether wae, the consept has yet to capcher th publix imajinaeshun. It's been 100 years since Andrew Carnegie helped create the Simplified Spelling Board to promote a retooling of written English and President Theodore Roosevelt tried to force the government to use simplified spelling in its...
  • Language gap adds to storm danger: Key data missed by non-English speakers

    06/05/2006 5:08:41 AM PDT · by Ellesu · 19 replies · 595+ views
    nola.com ^ | 06/04/06 | Russ Henderson
    BAYOU LA BATRE, ALA. -- The afternoon before Hurricane Katrina arrived, Vo Loan, 11, who like other Asian-American children in Bayou La Batre serves as English translator for her parents, was out with her mother when the police rapped at their door. Her father, Vietnam-born Nguyen Hung, answered. The two officers warned Nguyen in English that flooding from the major hurricane could be deadly and that his family should evacuate. He didn't understand, he explained to a reporter last week, speaking through his daughter at their small white house. "My van was broken, but I could have found another way...
  • Emergency Classroom

    03/16/2006 2:14:22 PM PST · by JSedreporter · 4 replies · 530+ views
    Accuracy in Academia ^ | March 16, 2006 | Julia A. Seymour
    Imagine taking a teaching position with no training at one of the worst urban schools in Philadelphia. Now imagine that the building was crumbling and rat infested, your 6th grade class was struggling with illiteracy, you had no textbooks, curriculum or guidance, and violence and obscenities were daily phenomena. Christina Asquith doesn’t have to imagine those things; she lived them. In 1999, with burning questions about why inner-city Philadelphia schools (and those in other cities) were failing, Asquith joined the ranks and became a teacher with no formal training at a time when the schools were desperate for them. Before...
  • What are your rights? 'D'oh' (Constitutional illiteracy)

    03/03/2006 6:25:03 PM PST · by sully777 · 23 replies · 975+ views
    Reuters ^ | Thu Mar 2, 2006pm ET
    CHICAGO (Reuters) - Most Americans have an easier time naming members of the cartoon Simpson family than listing the five freedoms granted by the nation's founders, a survey by a museum released on Wednesday said. Here's a hint: one of them is not the right to own and raise pets, an error committed by one in five respondents. Half of 1,000 Americans randomly surveyed by the McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum could name at least two of the five members of Fox Television's Simpson family, the stars of the network's long-running show. But just 28 percent of respondents could name more...
  • School Competition Remains "Unproven" (sarcasm)

    02/08/2006 8:35:21 AM PST · by FreeKeys · 19 replies · 872+ views
    Real Clear Politics ^ | February 8, 2006 | John Stossel
    When Mark and Jenny Sanford moved from Charleston to Columbia, S.C., they had a big concern: Where would their kids go to school? They wanted to send their kids to public school, but the middle school near their new home was not particularly good. But it turned out that this wouldn't have been a problem for the Sanfords because the reason they had moved to Columbia was Mark had just been elected governor. While students are normally assigned to schools based on where their house is located, Gov. Sanford's family was offered special options: People from better school districts invited...
  • South's Problems Breed Illiteracy

    11/27/2005 6:11:34 AM PST · by mcg2000 · 61 replies · 1,645+ views
    The Memphis Commercial Appeal ^ | November 27, 2005 | Emily Wagster Pettus
    SOUTHERN IDENTITY Fourth of five parts Thursday: Are Southerners losing their distinct identity? Maybe, maybe not. Friday: Black and Southern, a label of pride, tinged with pain. Saturday: So, did your mama raise you in a barn? Today: Oxford — where literature and illiteracy collide. Monday: Turning the ‘Southern’ accent off, or on. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OXFORD, Miss. -- From front-porch rocking chairs to the dog-eared pages of novels, the South boasts a rich legacy of storytelling. A complex brew of poverty and racial strife has inspired writers as diverse as William Faulkner, Richard Wright, Eudora Welty, Flannery O'Connor, Pat Conroy and...
  • Parliament Declares Venezuela Free of Illiteracy

    10/28/2005 5:08:16 PM PDT · by Honcho Bongs · 24 replies · 537+ views
    Prensa Latina ^ | Oct 28, 2005 | Prensa Latina
    Parliament Declares Venezuela Free of Illiteracy Caracas, Oct 28 (Prensa Latina) The National Assembly (Parliament) has officially declared Venezuela territory free of illiteracy thanks to a two-year campaign aimed at teaching people how to read and write. At the ceremony held at the Congressional quarters, Speaker Nicolas Maduro thanked Cuba for its contribution to Mision Robinson that helped almost one million Venezuelans to learn to how to read and write. He also highlighted the role played by President Hugo Chavez as a key promoter of the campaign. The ceremony was attended by Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel, several other ministers,...
  • Ebonics suggested for district

    07/18/2005 10:25:14 AM PDT · by 45Auto · 413 replies · 6,964+ views
    San Bernardino County Sun ^ | 17 July 2005 | Irma Lemus
    Incorporating Ebonics into a new school policy that targets black students, the lowest-achieving group in the San Bernardino City Unified School District, may provide students a more well-rounded curriculum, said a local sociologist. The goal of the district's policy is to improve black students' academic performance by keeping them interested in school. Compared with other racial groups in the district, black students go to college the least and have the most dropouts and suspensions. Blacks make up the second largest racial group in the district, trailing Latinos. A pilot of the policy, known as the Students Accumulating New Knowledge Optimizing...
  • Breaking the Piggy Bank: How Illegal Immigration is Sending Schools Into the Red

    06/14/2005 10:25:35 PM PDT · by Happy2BMe · 34 replies · 1,157+ views
    With states straining under gaping budget shortfalls, public schools throughout the country are facing some of the most significant decreases in state education funding in decades. In some states, drastic cuts mean lay-offs for teachers, larger class sizes, fewer textbooks, and eliminating sports, language programs, and after-school activities. Nearly two-thirds of the states have cut back or proposed reductions in support for childcare and early childhood programs. Some are even shortening the school week from five days to four. While these massive budget deficits cannot be attributed to any single source, the enormous impact of large-scale illegal immigration cannot be...
  • Spelling Errors Mar Blast (Letz Awl Selebrayte Diversitee Now!)

    04/29/2004 2:50:24 AM PDT · by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle · 11 replies · 167+ views
    New York Post ^ | 4/29/04 | Stefan C. Friedman
    <p>A City Council member who was blasting the Bloomberg administration's social-promotion policies sent out two press releases containing spelling and grammatical errors.</p> <p>The first release - sent Tuesday afternoon from the office of Councilwoman Margarita Lopez - asked, "Why is [sic] Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein ignoring the fact that the test is flawed and discriminatory?"</p>