Geography proficiency

.  Even as schools aim to better prepare students for a global workforce, fewer than one in three U.S. students are proficient in geography, with most eight-graders unable to explain what causes earthquakes or accurately describe the American Southwest, according to a report released Tuesday.
.  Overall, high school seniors demonstrated the least proficiency on a 2010 test, the National Assessment of Education Progress, also known as the nation’s geography report card, with 20 percent found to be proficient or better, compared with 27 percent of eighth-graders and 21 percent of fourth-graders.
.  The average test scores for 12th-graders declined to 282 (on a scale of 500) from 284 in 2001 when the test was last given. It remained essentially unchanged for eight-graders during that period, though there were gains among the lowest-performing students. Fourth-graders had the largest gains, with the average score rising to 213, up five points from 2001.

Source: Report: U.S. kids not proficient in geography By Winnie Hu The New York Times. Published in The Enquirer July 20, 2011 A5

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