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Take the National Geographic Global Literacy Survey!
National Geographic Survey ^
Posted on 11/20/2002 10:33:17 PM PST by arielb
http://cybercafe230.nationalgeographic.com/geosurvey/
(Excerpt) Read more at cybercafe230.nationalgeographic.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs
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I got 20 out of 20. Any takers?
1
posted on
11/20/2002 10:33:17 PM PST
by
arielb
To: arielb
20 out of 20 is easy. I think most Freepers would score at least 18 out of 20.
To: arielb
20 out of 20.
My only hesitation was the largest religion. I guessed right but I think the gap is narrowing.
To: arielb
4
posted on
11/20/2002 10:49:21 PM PST
by
TopQuark
To: arielb
I did too...I had to really look at Sweden. The map isn't the greatest. I'm just glad they didn't ask about any of those 'stan countires, I know I would have flunked that!
To: arielb
20 out of 20. I'd be a fricking genius on 'Jaywalking'.
6
posted on
11/20/2002 10:51:46 PM PST
by
Slyfox
To: arielb
ME too.
7
posted on
11/20/2002 10:55:16 PM PST
by
crazykatz
To: arielb
That was fun. I got 19 out of 20. Kind of scary about US results. We're really raising some dumb kids.
8
posted on
11/20/2002 10:55:36 PM PST
by
CarolAnn
To: Slyfox
LOL
9
posted on
11/20/2002 10:55:55 PM PST
by
crazykatz
To: arielb
I got all of the geography questions correct. I missed the religion one. I guess it just SEEMS that way.
Not too bad, when you consider I last studied geography nigh onto 50 years ago.
To: JudyB1938
The religion question was the one I got wrong too.
11
posted on
11/20/2002 11:02:11 PM PST
by
CarolAnn
To: arielb
20/20. Not hard at all.
12
posted on
11/20/2002 11:02:22 PM PST
by
xm177e2
To: arielb
[spoiler alert. take the quiz before reading this post]
But one of the questions was not very good. Both the Taliban and Al-Qaida ARE based heavily in Pakistan, in addition to Afghanistan. I suppose the operative word is "WERE" instead of are, but that's still pretty lame.
13
posted on
11/20/2002 11:03:18 PM PST
by
xm177e2
To: arielb
20/20
Pretty sad when a higher percentage of Mexicans, Canadians, and Frogs (of all people) than our own school children can pick out the US.
14
posted on
11/20/2002 11:05:22 PM PST
by
VMI70
To: CarolAnn
We're really raising some dumb kids.Yeah, but we kicked the Mexicans' butts when it came to finding Sweden on the map! Whoo! Whoo! Whoo!!
(20 for 20, in case you're wondering.)
15
posted on
11/20/2002 11:05:49 PM PST
by
Redcloak
To: xm177e2
ok maybe that was a trick question. Al Qaeda is all over the world but their base was Afghanistan. Taliban only had a government there too. They still want to take it back
16
posted on
11/20/2002 11:07:26 PM PST
by
arielb
To: arielb
Quick, what two countries have had a longstanding conflict over the region of Kashmir? Thirty-six percent of the young Americans who answered that question in National Geographics recent geography survey got it right. How would you do?
Uhhh, HELLO?
That means that SIXTY FOUR PERCENT of these "young Americans" got it wrong or didn't have a clue.
That's odd, since they continue to whine and moan about being vaporized by "the bomb".
How about a little geography and some very recent history about nuclear testing in Asia with your condom instructions...?
17
posted on
11/20/2002 11:08:51 PM PST
by
Vidalia
To: arielb
20/20...the map locations took a little thought though. The results of the participants worldwide are not hopeful:
Survey Results: U.S. Young Adults Are Lagging
Despite the daily bombardment of news from the Middle East, Central Asia, and other world trouble spots, roughly 85 percent of young Americans could not find Afghanistan, Iraq, or Israel on a map, according to a new study.
Americans ages 18 to 24 came in next to last among nine countries in the National Geographic-Roper 2002 Global Geographic Literacy Survey, which quizzed more than 3,000 young adults in Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Sweden, and the United States. Top scorers were young adults in Sweden, Germany, and Italy.
Out of 56 questions that were asked across all countries surveyed, on average young Americans answered 23 questions correctly. Others outside the U.S., most notably young adults in Mexico, also struggled with basic geography facts. Young people in Canada and Great Britain fared almost as poorly as those in the U.S.
Among young Americans startling knowledge gaps, the study found that
nearly 30 percent of those surveyed could not find the Pacific Ocean, the worlds largest body of water;
more than half56 percentwere unable to locate India, home to 17 percent of people on Earth; and
only 19 percent could name four countries that officially acknowledge having nuclear weapons.
Several perhaps interrelated factors affected performanceeducational experience (including taking a geography course), international travel and language skills, a varied diet of news sources, and Internet use. Americans who reported that they accessed the Internet within the last 30 days scored 65 percent higher than those who did not.
18
posted on
11/20/2002 11:09:41 PM PST
by
TheLion
To: arielb
Did you all notice that Mexico got the lowest score on the "Which city is the most West"? Id figure they would be first to know since it's always on their left as they herd up to the U.S.
19
posted on
11/20/2002 11:09:53 PM PST
by
SwankyC
To: arielb
Okay, 20 out of 20 correct. I think that most FREEPERS will ace the quiz. :-)
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