May 26, 2009

Assessing U.S. Education

An article comparing the educational performance of students in different countries has sparked some discussion on the Columbia Daily Tribune’s Homeroom blog. The article’s conclusion, with which several of the blog’s commenters agree, is that students in the United States aren’t doing as poorly as the critics would have you believe.

I’m all in favor of staying calm about education. Politicians say we need a “sense of urgency,” then use that agitation to their advantage as they push through huge spending increases. It would be wiser to weigh the pros and cons of different policies without giving in to hysteria.

But staying calm doesn’t mean ignoring the facts. For example, this is from the first section of the article:

Only about one-third of U.S. students could read and do math at current grade levels on national tests in 2007, the most recent figures available.

I’m not reassured that a few other developed nations do comparably poorly on international math and science exams, especially given that some countries do a lot better while spending less money.

A project of the

 


Download the Show-Me Institute's iphone app. Download the Show-Me Institute's android app. Sign up for the Show-Me Institute's RSS feed
Follow the Show-Me Institute on Facebook Follow the Show-Me Institute on Twitter Watch the Show-Me Institute on YouTube

The views expressed by each contributor to this blog are those of that contributor alone, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Show-Me Institute.

Welcome to the official blog of the Show-Me Institute. Here you'll find daily commentary by Show-Me Institute staff and scholars.



Recent Posts

View a random entry.

Archives

Categories

Links

Missouri

Free Market

Sister Organizations

Powered by Wordpress