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To: nmh
Just WOW! In the world of ‘big’…Oil, Banks, Auto, Insurance, Health Care, and companies that are ‘too big to fail’ we have this wonderful little bit of news from a corner of our society too sacrosanct to ever criticize - - Big Education.

Hey, ‘really smart guys’ why don’t you just tap into all those multi-million and billion dollar endowments and simply lower the costs of tuition from the get-go instead of offering all these stupid communist solutions to getting credits for graduation. Oh yeah, it doesn’t fit the plan…Sorry…

19 posted on 09/05/2009 7:40:47 PM PDT by ArchAngel1983 (Arch Angel- on guard)
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To: ArchAngel1983

Hey, the Pacific Rim countries are eating our lunch, academically speaking. Here is a sugar coated report on Math and Science.

The TIMSS is testing put out by the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study. It includes ALL industrialized countries in the world. The U.S. is in the toilet. If Obama really gave a crap, he’d change that so kids could compete in the “global” economy. As it stands now it will be difficult for even the brightest U.S. kids to have a shot at being competitive when they graduate from high school.

Mathematics

The 2007 TIMSS results showed that U.S. students’ average mathematics score was 529 for 4th-graders and 508 for 8th-graders. Both scores were above the TIMSS scale average, which is set at 500 for every administration of TIMSS at both grades, and both were higher than the respective U.S. score in 1995.

(Look how LOW that is compared to the Pacific Rim and other European countries.)

Fourth-graders in 8 of the 35 other countries that participated in 2007 (Hong Kong, Singapore, Chinese Taipei, Japan, Kazakhstan, Russian Federation, England, and Latvia) scored above their U.S. peers, on average; and 8th-graders in 5 of the 47 other countries that participated in 2007 (Chinese Taipei, Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan) scored above their U.S. peers, on average.

Among the 16 countries that participated in both the first TIMSS in 1995 and the most recent TIMSS in 2007, at grade 4, the average mathematics score increased in 8 countries, including in the United States, and decreased in 4 countries. Among the 20 countries that participated in both the 1995 and 2007 TIMSS at grade 8, the average mathematics score increased in 6 countries, including in the United States, and decreased in 10 countries.

In PISA 2006, U.S. 15-year-old students’ average mathematics literacy score of 474 was lower than the OECD average of 498, and placed U.S. 15-year-olds in the bottom quarter of participating OECD nations, a relative position unchanged from 2003.

Fifteen-year-old students in 23 of the 29 other participating OECD-member countries outperformed their U.S. peers. There was no measurable change in U.S. 15-year-olds’ average mathematics literacy score between 2003 and 2006, in its relationship to the OECD average, or in its relative position to the countries whose scores increased or decreased.
Science

The 2007 TIMSS results showed that U.S. students’ average science score was 539 for 4th-graders and 520 for 8th-graders. Both scores were above the TIMSS scale average, which is set at 500 for every administration of TIMSS at both grades, but neither was measurably different than the respective U.S. score in 1995.

Fourth-graders in 4 of the 35 other countries that participated in 2007 (Singapore, Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong, and Japan) scored above their U.S. peers, on average; and 8th-graders in 9 of the 47 other countries that participated in 2007 (Singapore, Chinese Taipei, Japan, Korea, England, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and the Russian Federation) scored above their U.S. peers, on average.

While there was no measurable change in the average score of U.S. 4th-graders or 8th-graders in science between 1995 and 2007, among the other 15 countries that participated in the 1995 and 2007 TIMSS at grade 4, the average science score increased in 7 countries and decreased in 5 countries; and among the other 18 countries that participated in both the 1995 and 2007 TIMSS at grade 8, the average science score increased in 5 countries and decreased in 3 countries.

In PISA 2006, U.S. 15-year-old students’ average science literacy score of 489 was lower than the OECD average of 500, and placed U.S. 15-year-olds in the bottom third of participating OECD nations. Fifteen-year-old students in 16 of the 29 other participating OECD-member countries outperformed their U.S. peers in terms of average scores.

http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2009/analysis/index.asp

Bottom line is the U.S. consistley scores LOWER than other countries.


30 posted on 09/07/2009 10:16:26 AM PDT by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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