silverpig
Lifer
Read:
If you guys would look at the link provided:
http://www.oecd.org/site/piaac/SkillsOutlook_2013_ebook.pdf
You'd see that nearly every country that is ranking above us is small, homogenous, and does not promote immigration as liberally as the United States. It's not fair to compare the US to some small white bread nation with 5 million people.
We have 300m+ citizens that come from hugely diverse backgrounds. It's very easy for a small country to maintain a high standard of education when they have a small and economically similar population. Educational systems can be tweaked and standardized and still be effective for their cookie cutter population.
You know how internet forums have trolls? These research organizations have them too. And they release stuff like this. It's a ridiculously unfair survey.
Compare the US to equally diverse (both economically and culturally) large nations (150m+) and you'll find the US ranks near or at the top.
Check out my post just above.
The US is not the most diverse nation there, and doesn't suffer from the immigration problem that drags scores down as much as others.
And even taking that out, the US' scores for native born and native language speakers is still lower than all of the countries above it on the list.
Also, culturally diverse countries of 150M+ population? Which would those be exactly?
Code:
1 China[8] 1,360,370,000 October 8, 2013 19.1%
2 India 1,234,860,000 October 8, 2013 17.4%
3 US 316,816,000 October 8, 2013 4.45%
4 Indonesia 237,641,326 May 1, 2010 3.34%
5 Brazil 201,032,714 July 1, 2013 2.82%
6 Pakistan 184,452,000 October 8, 2013 2.59%
7 Nigeria 173,615,000 July 1, 2013 2.44%
8 Bangladesh 152,518,015 July 16, 2012 2.14%
The study was for western industrialized nations with good education systems.
Last edited: