D’Oh! 1 in 4 Americans don’t know Earth circles Sun
The nation that put the first man on the Moon is failing to make the grade today when it comes to basic knowledge of the solar system and other fundamental scientific insight.
RT,
15
February, 2014
That’s
according to a new survey
which concludes that while most Americans have a world of information
at their fingertips, and show tremendous enthusiasm for new
technology, they also lack fundamental knowledge of basic science.
Out of a total of nine questions on subjects related to
physical and biological sciences, the average score in the survey was
a narrowly passing 6.5 correct answers, according to a survey of
2,200 Americans conducted by the National Science Foundation. The
result was announced at the annual meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, held Friday.
For
example, only 74 percent correctly answered that the Earth revolved
around the Sun.
Meanwhile,
fewer than half (48 percent) of study participants were aware that
human beings evolved from earlier species of animals, the celebrated
scientific nostrum first demonstrated by British naturalist Charles
Darwin in his 1859 book, “On
the Origin of Species.”
That is despite the United States’ apparent fondness for
so-called "informal
science education."
The survey has revealed that almost 60 percent of Americans have
visited at some point a zoo, natural history museum or a science and
technology museum.
According to the test, more than 90 percent
of Americans are of the opinion that scientists are "helping
to solve challenging problems" and are "dedicated people
who work for the good of humanity."
Also,
nearly 90 percent said the benefits of science outweigh any of its
potential dangers, and about the same number expressed interest in
learning about medical discoveries.
"It's
important for Americans to maintain a high regard for science and
scientists,"
according to John Besley, an associate professor in Michigan State
University’s Department of Advertising and Public Relations. "It
can help ensure funding and help attract future scientists."
The full findings of the survey, which is conducted every two
years, will be included in a National Science Foundation report to
President Barack Obama and lawmakers in Congress.
The question
of academic quality has become a hot political issue as a number of
international tests show Americans falling behind.
A recent
study
by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development showed
that Americans scored far below average and higher than only two of
12 other developed comparison countries, Italy and Spain.
The
US’s failure to keep academic pace with the rest of the world,
which could have serious implications for the country’s future
economic performance, has many led to many questioning the quality of
the public school system in general and teachers in particular.
The
National Council of Teacher Quality recently called America’s
teacher preparation programs “an
industry of mediocrity,”
ranking just 10 percent of more than 1,200 of them as high quality,
while most have low or no academic standards for entry.
Critics
point to the fact that American school districts rely heavily on
property taxes for their funding, which means schools in affluent
areas get more money than those in middle and poor ones. Tax money to
fill the void fails to make ends meet in school districts where
poverty levels are greatest.
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