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Endangering Prosperity - A Global View of the American School (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R571
Discovery Miles 5 710
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Endangering Prosperity - A Global View of the American School (Paperback, New)
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Loot Price R571
Discovery Miles 5 710
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The relative deficiencies of U.S. public schools are a serious
concern to parents and policymakers. But they should be of concern
to all Americans, as a globalizing world introduces new competition
for talent, markets, capital, and opportunity. In Endangering
Prosperity, a trio of experts on international education policy
compares the performance of American schools against that of other
nations. The net result is a mixed but largely disappointing
picture that clearly shows where improvement is most needed. The
authors' objective is not to explain the deep causes of past
failures but to document how dramatically the U.S. school system
has failed its students and its citizens. It is a wake-up call for
structural reform. To move forward to a different and better future
requires that we understand just how serious a situation America
faces today. For example, the authors consider the Programme for
International Student Assessment (PISA), an international
mathematics examination. America is stuck in the middle of average
scores, barely beating out European countries whose national
economies are in the red zone. U.S. performance as measured against
stronger economies is even weaker - in total, 32 nations
outperformed the United States. The authors also delve into
comparative reading scores. A mere 31 percent of U.S. students in
the class of 2011 could perform at the "proficient" level as
measured by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
program, compared with South Korea's result of 47 percent. And
while some observers may downplay the significance of cross-globe
comparisons, they should note that Canadian students are
dramatically outpacing their U.S. counterparts as well. Clearly
something is wrong with this picture, and this book clearly
explicates the costs of inaction. The time for incremental tweaking
the system is long past - wider, deeper, and more courageous steps
are needed, as this book amply demonstrates with accessible prose,
supported with hard data that simply cannot be ignored.
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