September 19, 2007

Civic Literacy

Not too bad. I took this civics test:

Students at many of the country's most prestigious colleges and universities are graduating with less knowledge of American history, government, and economics than they had as incoming freshmen, with Harvard University seniors scoring a "D+" average on a 60-question multiple-choice exam about civic literacy.

According to a report released yesterday by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, the average college senior at the 50 colleges and universities polled did not earn a passing grade.

"At the most expensive colleges, they actually graduate knowing less," the executive director of the Jack Miller Center at the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Michael Ratliff, said. "Colleges and universities are not directing students to the courses that would educate them. We want to know whether after getting $300 billion to do their work, universities are actually educating their students."

At universities such as Princeton, Yale, Cornell, Duke, and Berkeley, seniors scored lower on the test, available here, than freshmen, living proof of the broadening relevancy of the old Harvard adage that the university is a storehouse of knowledge because "the freshmen bring so much and the seniors take away so little."

I never finished high school, and my last years of schooling were in Canada to boot. Yet, I managed a fairly respectable 86.67 %!

Posted by Ith at September 19, 2007 11:44 AM | PROCURE FINE OLD WORLD ABSINTHE

The fact that your last year of schooling was in Canada gave you an unfair advantage.

I'm still trying to overcome a decade of education in the California system.

Posted by: Peter Sean Bradley at September 21, 2007 11:42 AM

Nuh uh! There were no questions about the fur trade. I swear, that almost every year, Canadian school history classes revolve around the fur trade.

Posted by: Ith at September 21, 2007 12:50 PM

I received my entire education in Canada but I don't remember it revolving around the fur trade. Maybe my memory of it has been erased by the year round snow and freezing temperatures.

Posted by: Rick A at September 23, 2007 1:56 PM