http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2011/06/19/dont_know_much_about_history/
The test for fourth-graders asked why Abraham Lincoln was an important figure in US history, and a majority of the students didnt know. Among eighth-graders, not even one-third could correctly identify an advantage that American patriots had over the British during the Revolutionary War. And when asked which of four countries the Soviet Union, Japan, China, and Vietnam was North Koreas ally in fighting US troops during the Korean War, nearly 80 percent of 12th-graders selected the wrong answer.
Historically illiterate American kids typically grow up to be historically illiterate American adults. And Americans ignorance of history is a familiar tale.
When it administered the official US citizenship test to 1,000 Americans earlier this year, Newsweek discovered that 33 percent of respondents didnt know when the Declaration of Independence was adopted, 65 percent couldnt say what happened at the Constitutional Convention, and 80 percent had no idea who was president during World War I. In a survey of 14,000 college students in 2006, more than half couldnt identify the century when the first American colony was founded at Jamestown, the reason NATO was organized, or which document says, We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal. Numerous other surveys and studies confirm the gloomy truth: Americans dont know much about history.