WHERE ARE WE?
By Greg Toppo ~ The Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Give a group of fourth-graders a map of the world and only half can label the North Pole, South Pole and equator.
Ask them why rock 'n' roll has spread all over the world and 70 percent can tell you.
The questions come from a national geography test given last year, the results of which were released Friday by the Education Department.
When asked to label maps with the three major geographic features, only 54 percent of fourth-graders put all three in their proper places; but 70 percent knew that TV and radio helped popular music spread across the globe.
Among the test's major findings:
The scores of fourth- and eighth-graders rose slightly since 1994, the first time the test was given. Twelfth-graders' scores were unchanged.
A total of 21 percent of fourth-graders, 30 percent of eighth-graders and 25 percent of 12th-graders scored at the proficient level. That means they showed solid academic performance and the ability to apply knowledge to actual situations, according to the National Assessment Governing Board, the independent group that developed the test.
The percentage of fourth-graders scoring basic or above rose from 70 percent in 1994 to 74 percent in 2001. More eighth-graders scored basic or above as well -- up from 71 percent to 74 percent. Scoring basic means students showed partial mastery for grade-level work.
Critics of President Bush's education plan contend its emphasis on testing children in reading and math could force schools to place less emphasis on social studies.
"I agree with the new federal legislation ... that reading and math skills are of critical importance," said Superintendent Daniel A. Domenech of Fairfax County, Va. "But the social studies, including geography, are crucial too. Our students must understand their world as well as master basic skills."
The 2001 test was given to about 25,000 randomly selected students, 90 percent of whom attend public schools.
Mixed results
The questions were sometimes difficult, and the results were decidedly mixed. For instance, 61 percent of high school seniors knew that Hinduism is the most widely practiced religion in India, but less than half could explain why early civilization flourished in the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
Three-fourths of eighth-graders knew that Florida is a peninsula, but fewer than one-fourth could explain why the earth's rain forests are being rapidly cut down.
Also, one in three fourth-graders couldn't find their state on a blank U.S. map and mark it with an X.
Peggy Altoff, supervisor of social studies for the Carroll County, Md., school district, said geography is getting less class time, with schools spending less money on training and materials.
She criticized the test's emphasis on answering isolated questions, saying it's not always necessary for a 9-year-old to know the capitals of all 50 states, for instance, if they're not learning about states' history.
"Kids don't learn and retain information in isolation," she said.
Altoff also proposed a simpler reason for the mixed results: Students often are asked to take the national test before they've taken a geography course. For instance, only 34 percent of fourth-graders knew Switzerland is in the Alps, but 56 percent of eighth-graders knew.
The scores did bring some good news, especially for minorities: While their average scores still trailed those of their white counterparts, the gap shrank considerably for black fourth-graders, from 50 points in 1994 to 41 points last year.
Scores for all black students rose, but those of fourth-graders rose most sharply, with 44 percent at "basic" level, compared with 34 percent in 1994.
Still, only about 5 percent of black students scored at or above "proficient," far below that of white students' 33 percent proficient rate.
The National Assessment of Educational Progress, known informally as "The Nation's Report Card," is given in different subjects periodically.
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