首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Why Can’t American Students Compete? Twice as many students in Singapore are proficient in math as in the United States.
Why Can’t American Students Compete? Twice as many students in Singapore are proficient in math as in the United States.
admin
2017-04-29
65
问题
Why Can’t American Students Compete?
Twice as many students in Singapore are proficient in math as in the United States.
A)"We know what it takes to compete for the jobs and industries of our time," President Obama said in his State of the Union address this year. "We need to out-innovate, out-educate, and out-build the rest of the world." Yet despite the economic crisis facing the country, the US educational system remains frozen in place, unable to adapt to contemporary global realities.
B)As all schoolchildren know, water freezes to solid, barren, cracked ice at 32 degrees Fahrenheit(华氏温度). So maybe it is more than a mere coincidence that 32 percent of US public and private-school students in the class of 2011 are deemed proficient in mathematics, placing the United States 32nd among the 65 nations that participated in the latest international tests administered by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development(OECD). The United States ranks between Portugal and Italy and far behind South Korea, Finland, Canada, and the Netherlands.
C)We became aware of the seriousness of the problem after we equated, with the help of colleagues, the test scores of the class of 2011 on the latest international test when this class was in 10th grade, with its prior eighth-grade scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress(NAEP), an official US test that both assesses performance of US students and sets the standard for "proficiency".
D)Linking these tests also allowed us to compare the performance of students in each state with that of students in other countries. The results are scary. Even in Massachusetts, with its famous collection of public and private schools, students reach only the level attained by students in the entire nations of Canada, Japan, and Switzerland. Massachusetts, the only US state with a majority of students(51 percent)above the proficiency mark, trails well behind students in South Korea and Finland.
E)The percentage proficient in the state of New York(30 percent)is equivalent to that achieved by students in debt-ridden Portugal and Spain. California, the home of highly skilled Silicon Valley, has a math proficiency rate of 24 percent, the same as bankrupt Greece and just a notch(等级)above struggling Russia.
F)President Obama, to his credit, has highlighted the problem repeatedly. But too many state education officials have done their best to obfuscate(故意混淆)the low performance of their students. Under the educational accountability rules set down by the federal law No Child Left Behind, each state may set its own proficiency standard, and most have set their standards well below the world-class level. As a result, most state proficiency reports grossly increase the percentage of students who are proficient, if we account for the fact that our students need to compete not just with others from the same state but also with those across the globe.
G)When not obfuscating the problem, apologists explain away the results with misleading arguments. Some point to the country’s large immigrant and disadvantaged populations, which, to be sure, do pose difficult educational challenges. Proficiency rates among African-Americans and Hispanics are very low(11 and 15 percent, respectively). But if one compares only the white students in the US with all students in other countries, the US still falls short: Only 42 percent are proficient, which would place them at 17th in the world compared with all of the students in other nations. The only positive sign is the majority of Asian students in the United States(52 percent)who score at or above the proficiency level.
H)When our results were first released, one school-board member in Loudoun County, a wealthy suburb of Washington D.C., explained away the results: "In many countries, poor-performing children are filtered out of high school, whereas in the US, we test all our students, both great and not so great. So the comparison is not on a level playing field." That might have been true some decades ago when only a few countries followed the United States’ emphasis on universal education and thus left many students out of school and unavailable for testing. But today the US actually graduates fewer students from high school than the average developed country, completely eliminating any claim that the US is testing a broader range of the youth population.
I)Some also take false comfort in the belief that it takes only a limited number of high-flying students to fill the jobs at Google, Facebook, IBM, and all the other businesses and professions that need highly skilled talent. The United States is still great at producing the advanced students needed to power economic growth.
J)Still others say the low math scores are offset by a better record in reading. Admittedly the proficiency rate in only 10 countries is significantly higher than in the US. If not the world leader, the United States’ record is at least better than average. Nonetheless, the set of skills most needed for sustained growth in economic productivity—and the skills in shortest supply today—are those rooted in math competencies. Our future scientists and engineers—the engine of US innovation—come from those with high math skills. While Silicon Valley could possibly be fueled by importing skilled workers from abroad, we should not continue to count on this in today’s globalized world. Even if we could, it is hardly fair to our own young people to count them out of the country’s best jobs.
K)According to our best calculations, the US could enjoy a remarkable increase in its annual per capita GDP growth by enhancing the math proficiency of its students. Increasing the percentage of proficient students to the levels attained in Canada and South Korea would increase the annual US growth rate by 0. 9 percentage points and 1.3 percentage points, respectively.
L)When translated into dollar terms according to the historical patterns, we see very different futures for the United States, depending on whether or not our schools are improved. If one calculates increases in national income from projections over an 80-year period(providing for a 20-year delay before any school reform is completed and newly proficient students begin their working careers), the present value of gains amounts to some $75 trillion for reaching the performance levels of Canada. These additions can be compared with our current GDP of $15 trillion or the $1 trillion spent to stimulate the economy out of recession.
M)It is easy for political leaders to put off considerations of effective school reform. The economic benefits from reform would not be felt immediately, as it takes time for an educated generation to become a productive workforce. But just as the continuing debt crisis, if not fixed, will be out of control only over the longer term, so the best available solution to that crisis—a fully unfrozen, high-functioning, constantly improving educational system—could raise the level of human capital to the point where resources would be available to address much of this future debt crisis. In the simplest terms, the approaching financial crises with Social Security and Medicare are most effectively dealt with by enhanced growth of the economy, growth that will not be achieved without a highly skilled workforce.
The percentage of proficient students in most states increases because most states set their own proficiency standards below the world-class level.
选项
答案
F
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/6RU7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、TotourthemostfamoussightsofinterestinChina.B、ToinvestigatethecomputermarketinChina.C、Tonegotiateacontract
Negotiationsworkwonders.Thisisparticularlysoininternationalbusinesssinceitismostlythroughnegotiationsthatexport
Nursing,asatypicallyfemaleprofession,mustdealconstantlywiththefalseimpressionthatnursesaretheretowaitonthep
WhenanexpectantmomregularlyeatshermealsinfrontoftheTV,chancesareshe’llcontinuethathabitduringherbaby’sfeed
A、Industrialdevelopment.B、Theirownhealth.C、Theirchildren’sfuture.D、Soundenvironment.A短文提到,我们把“提高工业化”作为我们首要目标。所以A正确。选项为
A、He’stootalkativetobeaboss.B、Hedoesn’tsupporttheprogramatall.C、Heshouldn’tshowsupportonlyinwords.D、He’sgo
自从1978年市场化改革以来,中国经济已经逐渐从集中的计划经济向市场经济转变,中国经济和社会发展迅速。目前,中国是继美国之后的世界第二大经济体。中国是全球最大的农业生产国和工业生产国,稻谷、小麦产量以及工业产值(industrialoutput)世界领先
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledAgingProbleminChina.Youshouldwriteatleast150
Memoryappearstobestoredinseveralpartsofthelimbic(边缘的)systemofthebrain,andanyconditionthatinterfereswiththef
A、Thebenefitoflisteningtoradioprograms.B、Themaindisadvantagesoftelevisions.C、Theadvantagesofradiocomparedwitht
随机试题
小王利用word2010编辑了一份关于“信息技术”相关知识点的复习纲要,其部分截图如下,根据所学的知识回答下列问题: 在Word2010中,不能在“页面设置”对话框中设置的是________。
关于慢性阑尾炎的叙述,下列哪项不正确
某猪场2~5月龄猪出现发病,病猪首先发生喷嚏,特别是在饲喂或运动时更明显,鼻孔流出少量浆液性或脓性分泌物,有时含有血丝,不时拱地、搔扒或摩擦鼻端。经数周,少数病猪可自愈,但有少部分病猪有鼻甲骨萎缩的变化。经过2~3个月后出现面部变形或歪斜。若两侧鼻腔严重损
加减葳蕤汤适用于治疗
大黄黄连
北外“香水女生”作为网络炒作现象的典型代表,会使缺乏媒介素养的青少年混淆“媒介人物”与客观真实,并有可能促使他们盲目模仿炒作行为以求“出名”,对青少年价值观的形成产生极大的负面影响。因此,在新媒体环境下,应采取学校提供条件、社会创造环境、家庭营造氛围的“三
创意产业的核心要素是创意人才和文化资源,这两个要素都具有_________的地方个性特色,因此世界各国创意产业的发展具有___________地域差异。依次填入划横线部分最晗当的一项是()。
已知函数f(x,y)满足fxy"(x,y)=2(y+1)ex,fx’(x,0)=(x+1)ex,f(0,y)=y2+2y,求f(x,y)的极值.
MarineLifeIftheCensus.BureauthinksithasitshandsfullcountingAmericans,imaginewhatscientistsareupagainstin
由关系R1和R2得到关系R3的操作是
最新回复
(
0
)