Inside
This Issue
Front
Page
Welcome
Montessori
Representative Invited To Join Oxford Round Table
Montessori
Teachers Are The Keepers of The Keys
The
Classroom Meeting
Montessori
Behavioral Objectives
Do
Something That Cannot Be Undone
The
Web of Life Game
Emotions
Some
Thoughts On Your Art Environment
Positive
Thinking For Kids
2nd
Annual West Coast USA IMC Conference on Montessori Education and
the Partnership Way April 27-May 3, 2006 Monterey, CA
IMC
Membership Benefits Expand To Include Video Conferencing And OnLine
Professional Development
Study
Indicates That Many US College Students Lack Skills
Tomorrow's
Child: The Magazine For Montessori Families
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New Study Of The Literacy Of College Students Finds
Some Are Graduating With Only Basic Skills
WASHINGTON, D.C. January 19, 2006 Twenty percent of U.S. college
students completing 4-year degrees and 30 percent of students
earning 2-year degrees have only basic quantitative literacy skills,
meaning they are unable to estimate if their car has enough gasoline
to get to the next gas station or calculate the total cost of ordering
office supplies, according to a new national survey by the American
Institutes for Research (AIR). The study was funded by The Pew Charitable
Trusts.
The AIR study found there is no difference between the quantitative
literacy of today’s graduates compared with previous generations,
and that current graduates generally are superior to previous graduates
when it comes to other forms of literacy needed to comprehend documents
and prose.
The complete study is available on the AIR Web site, www.air.org.
The new study, “The National Survey of America’s College Students,”
(NSACS) is based on a sample of 1,827 graduating students from 80
randomly selected 2-year and 4-year public and private colleges
and universities across the United States. By targeting students
nearing the end of their degree programs, the study provides a broader
and more comprehensive picture of fundamental college literacy skills
than ever before.
“The surprisingly weak quantitative literacy ability of many college
graduates is troubling,” says Dr. Stéphane Baldi, who directed the
AIR study. “A knowledgeable workforce is vital to cope with the
increasing demands of the global marketplace.”
Study findings include:
More than 75 percent of students at 2-year colleges and more than
50 percent of students at 4-year colleges do not score at the proficient
level of literacy. This means that they lack the skills to perform
complex literacy tasks, such as comparing credit card offers with
different interest rates or summarizing the arguments of newspaper
editorials._
Students in 2- and 4-year colleges have the greatest difficulty
with quantitative literacy: approximately 30 percent of students
in 2-year institutions and nearly 20 percent of students in 4-year
institutions have only Basic quantitative literacy. Basic skills
are those necessary to compare ticket prices or calculate the cost
of a sandwich and a salad from a menu._
Students about to graduate from college have higher prose and document
literacy than previous graduates with similar levels of education;
for quantitative literacy, differences between current and former
college graduates are not significant.
There are no significant differences in the literacy of students
graduating from public and private institutions. Additionally, in
assessing literacy levels, there are no differences between part-time
and full-time students. No overall relationship exists between literacy
and the length of time it takes to earn a degree, or between literacy
and an academic major.
There are no significant differences between men and women in college
in their average prose, document, and quantitative literacy indicating
that women may be bridging a divide that has long existed between
the sexes.
The average prose and quantitative literacy of Whites in 4-year
institutions is higher than for any other racial/ethnic group, mirroring
trends in the general population. The fact that white students also
have the highest prose and document literacy among students in 2-year
colleges provides further evidence that the literacy gap between
minority and non-minority students persists.
The literacy skills of college students are directly related to
the education of their parents: children whose parents graduated
college or attended graduate school have higher literacy than students
whose parents did not graduate high school or stopped after receiving
a high school diploma or GED.
Despite variations in income, most differences in the literacy of
students across income groups are not significant. The most significant
disparity exists between students in 4-year institutions with the
lowest and highest income backgrounds. Students in the highest income
group (either their personal income or the income of their parents)
have higher prose and document literacy than students in the lowest
income group.
Literacy level is significantly higher among students
who say their coursework places a strong emphasis on applying theories
or concepts to practical problems, in comparison to students who
say their coursework rarely touch on these skills.
The results of the study are intended to help college and university
administrators identify specific academic areas where students have
literacy gaps that should be addressed, as well as provide information
on how prepared students are to join the labor force.
The report includes comparisons with data contained in the U.S.
Department of Education’s “National Assessment of Adult Literacy”
(NAAL), the first nationwide assessment of the literacy skills of
U.S. adults aged 16 and older in more than a decade. The first NAAL
report, which was released in December, was written by AIR authors.
“Despite the lackluster performance of many graduates on quantitative
literacy, we should nevertheless be encouraged that current college
graduates are not falling behind in terms of literacy when compared
to graduates from earlier generations,” says Emerson Elliott, a
former Commissioner of Education Statistics at the U.S. Department
of Education.
“Higher education institutions should take careful note of the important
benefits derived from emphasizing analytic and critical thinking,
and the application of theories in preparing students,” says Peter
Ewell, vice president of the National Center for Higher Education
Management Systems.
Elliott and Ewell are members of the National Advisory Panel that
guided the direction of the study. Other panel members include:
Joni Finney, vice president of the National Center for Public Policy
and Higher Education; George Kuh, director of the Center for Postsecondary
Research at Indiana University; Margaret Miller, director of the
Center for the Study of Higher Education at the University of Virginia;
and Nichole Rowles, Planning and Evaluation Officer for The Pew
Charitable Trusts.
Source: American Institutes for Research (AIR) http://www.air.org
About the American Institutes for Research
Established in 1946, the American Institutes for Research (AIR)
is an independent, nonpartisan not-for-profit organization that
conducts behavioral and social science research on important social
issues and delivers technical assistance both domestically and internationally
in the areas of health, education, and workforce productivity.
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