Monday, October 1, 2007

Can You Pass the New Test?


By Cal Thomas
Tribune Media Services


"If you can read this, thank a teacher," says the bumper sticker on the
car in front of me. But literacy is more than the ability to read a
bumper sticker. It also includes the accumulation of basic knowledge
combined with a way of thinking that allows an individual to lead a life
that is personally productive and contributes to America's health and
welfare.
For the second year in a row, America's elite universities and colleges
have failed to rise above a "D plus" on tests of basic knowledge about
civics and American history, maintains a study commissioned by the
Intercollegiate Studies Institute's (ISI). In 2005, ISI contracted with
the University of Connecticut's Department of Public Policy (UConnDPP)
to administer tests of basic historical and civic knowledge to 14,000
students at 50 top schools, including Yale, Harvard, Cornell, the
University of Virginia, Brown and Duke. The survey found that students
"were no better off than when they arrived in terms of acquiring the
knowledge necessary for informed engagement in a democratic republic and
global economy." Since an education at top colleges can cost as much as
$40,000 a year, it would appear that those paying the bill are being
cheated.
ISI's final report entitled "The Coming Crisis in Citizenship: Higher
Education's Failure to Teach America's History and Institutions,"
presented four pivotal findings:


1. The average college senior knows very little about America's history,
government, international relations and market economy. Their average
score on the civic literacy test was 53.2 percent. "No class of seniors
scored higher than 69 percent, or D plus."


2. Prestige doesn't pay off. "An Ivy League education contributes
nothing to a student's civic learning. ... There is no relationship
between the cost of attending college and the mastery of America's
history, politics, and economy."


3. Students don't learn what colleges don't teach. "Schools where
students took or were required to take more courses related to America's
history and institutions," says the ISI, "outperformed those schools
where fewer courses were completed. The absence of required courses in
American history, political science, philosophy and economics suggests a
negative impact on students' civic literacy."
America's most prestigious colleges had the worst scores. Many of the
schools that typically rank the highest in popularity score among the
lowest in advancing civic knowledge. Generally, the ISI study found, the
higher the ranking by U.S. News and World Report in its annual survey of
institutions of higher education, the lower the rank in civic learning.
"Even when controlling for numerous variables that influence learning,
seniors at schools with reasonably strong core curricula - for example,
Rhodes, Calvin and Wheaton - had double the gain in civic learning
compared with those seniors at schools without a coherent core
curriculum - for example, Brown, Cornell and Stanford."


4. Greater civic learning goes hand-in-hand with more active
citizenship. "Students who demonstrated greater learning of America's
history and its institutions were more engaged in citizenship activities
such as voting, volunteer community service and political campaigns."
The study found that "86 percent of the students at the four
highest-ranked colleges had exercised their right to vote at least once.
At Colorado State, ranked second overall, 90 percent of seniors had
voted at least once. ... Higher civic learning and greater civic
involvement are closely associated."
Here are three of the test questions. Even partially informed people who
believe American history is a better teacher than fascination and
fixation on the latest news about Britney Spears and O.J. Simpson ought
to be able to answer them correctly. The entire 60 multiple-choice
questions can be found on ISI's Web site, http://www.isi.org/.


1. Which battle brought the American Revolution to an end: (a) Saratoga
(b) Gettysburg (c) the Alamo (d) Yorktown (e) New Orleans?


2. The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution (1964) was significant because it: (a)
ended the war in Korea (b) Gave President Johnson the authority to
expand the scope of the Vietnam War (c) Was an attempt to take foreign
policy power away from the president (d) Allowed China to become a
member of the United Nations (e) Allowed for oil exploration in
Southeast Asia.


3. Which of the following is the best measure of production or output of
an economy (a) Gross Domestic Product (b) Consumer Price Index (c)
Unemployment rate (d) Prime Rate (e) Exchange rate?


Everyone should take the test. No cheating and no, I'm not going to give
you the answers. If you're interested enough to read this column, you
ought to be smart enough to know them. If not, then you paid too much
college tuition, or didn't take college seriously enough to get a real
education.


In 1777, John Adams wrote to his son about the importance of education.
He said it was necessary to teach the next generation about America's
founding principles in order to preserve the freedom and independence so
many of his fellow countrymen sacrificed to achieve. Only when we know
and embrace those principles can we pass on to a new generation that
which we inherited from the past. The ISI study reveals severe cracks in
that foundation, which need immediate attention and repair.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

I feel that some people who go to these Ivy League colleges are scoring low because they are not taking these classes. They choose not to. They would rather take classes that pertain to their major. It is like a chemist taking a poetry class. They do not need it. Social Studies Majors are not the only majors offered at these colleges. There are many more.

"If you're interested enough to read this column, you ought to be smart enough to know them. If not, then you paid too much college tuition, or didn't take college seriously enough to get a real
education," said Cal Thomas.

If you are studying law, history, economics, or anything similar in college and scored this low, then I would agree that you wasted time and money. But if that is not your major, and you aquired a better understanding of your major, which is more than likely your career choice, I would say you did not waste money nor your time although you may have scored the lowest score on this test.

Anonymous said...

I think the test is completly dumb. Someone should take this test out on the streets and see how many people pass. Should they have their citizenship revoked. I could guarantee that only a dearth of people in America could pass it. And the sad thing is it would probably only be high school students and college student majoring in American History. I say do away with the test and think of something new. I mean they do have experts to make these test.

Anonymous said...

I'm sorry, but I just don't see how knowing the significance of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution is going to help me get a degree in Sociology, or if you chose not to go to college, how it's going to help you flip burgers at Burger King. Sure, go ahead, make the test harder, drill us with tests and tests about American History, in about two to three weeks we'll forget about it anyway.

Anonymous said...

If you are at college you learn about what will help you with your future job. If you want to become a doctor you wouldn't need to know about you American History in the O.R.
So you can't take polls on students and except them to know everything just because they go to an Ivy League. They have enough hard classes to worry about.

What if? said...

While knowing American history may have nothing to do with your major it has nothing to do with the fact that you are an American. All Americans should have some knowledge of their nations history and the two history questions asked are of such historical importance that they should be common knowledge.

ham sandwhich said...

The test was pretty idiotic in the way that it tested students on something the majority of them weren't majoring in. A lot of people will agree that it is important to know our countries history but the ivy league guys have their own majors to worry about. I left my cat in the fridge.

Anonymous said...

I believe it's important for people to know about the history of their country and the foundation which it is built on but to be honest when i'm in college i'm not gonna want to take a bunch of history classes and unless someone is planning on becoming a history or government teacher i dont think many people would. People are most likely going to take classes that pertain to their major and that interest them. True history is going to help you in the future but college is already long enough, so i'd like to go learn what i need to, have fun and get out into the real world

Perry Family said...

I think that it's important to know history and how the government in our country works but I don't think anybody should be set up for failure. Our country is supposed to help people succeed. It doesn't make sense to me to give people an impossibly hard test to pass to help them be successful in life. I think it's important to know about government and to vote in an educated way and I do think that the average citizen is educated in politics enough. Otherwise I don't think we would have such a low percentage of people who actually vote. But I think this test is a little over the edge when the smartest people in our very own country can't pass it.

Anonymous said...

I agree with this author in a few ways....I do think it is important to uundersatnd the past in order to control the future. His paragraph about Adams did make sense and should be listened to. But just because someone is in an ivy league school doesn't mean that they are all-knowing. Just because they didn't do well on a test doees not mean that they do not know a lot about their area of study. If this test were given only to government or politics majors, I would be shocked, but it wasn't, so I'm not.

I said...

Let me start off by saying all the previous comments were well thought out.
I agree that people at the Ivy League schools scored lower because they are not majoring in these classes. If you think about it, universities such as Harvard and Yale are not known for their impecable government courses. They are usually the target schools for doctors and lawyers. Also, it is not a secret that the 'average' American knows very little about our country, its history, and how it is governed.
Obviously I think everyone should know, but fact is they don't. How many people have given you that blank stare when you say you are from Nebraska. Chances are you have come across one intelligent person who could not point out which state Nebraska is on a map.
The same principle applies to this test. Surely it doesn't make you an idiot if you can not answer the questions correctly. It simply means it is not your priority.
To debunk Cal Thomas' quote, I would just like to ask him a series of questions for my own test. An example could be something along the lines of "How many flats are in the E flat scale?" or "Name one equivalent inharmonic tone on the C scale for the diminished third." The answer happens to be three and major second, respectively(although the second question has many correct responses). This in no way makes Mr.Thomas dumb, it simply means he knows little about music. Is music of no importance? Would he say it has no value? I cannot answer this for him, nor can I assume he paid too much for college which he did not take seriously enough to obtain a decent education.
In short, this test may be a reflection of where college students place priorities of subjects, not a refelection of intelligence levels (or anything of the sort.)

theaterluvr62 said...

Oh wow I just realized how much I really don't like statistics! This is really demeaning of hard working students who don't necessarily know these things because they don't study it becasue who won what battle won't help them in their life... Ivy league schools are not all boring colleges percieved in pop culture many offer extremely well defined various programs from Theater to Law. I mean Yale has one of the finest theater departments around and I'm pretty sure drama students could care less about sitting in an american history class when they could be on stage; if you know what I mean. I think this article was written in extremely poor taste and articles like this just make America pity themselves when we have a very fine education system!