Charlotte Iserbyt
Your government designed the school system to fail.
And it doesn't take years. It takes DOING instead of FUNDING military.
Welp Americans seem to be happy with their taxes. Unfortunately thr education, health and infrastructure is still a fucking disaster.
But HEY! !! You have smart misses that suck shit! Go Team!
Lol! You can. Look around. You don't. Lol! Fucking idiots.
Well I mean he made the Korea's peaceful, he's about to do great things in Iran, he managed to send how many missiles to Syria. And he's taking down thr cabal.
But fuck! He can't fix his OWN country.
You Anons come on here boasting about ALL the great things he's doing everywhere else. Then come up with lame diluted responses as to why America is still a shit hole. Rose tinted glasses much?
Pssst. … it's not lol hahahahahahahahahha
So maybe a little less time sticking his nose in everybody else business and problems and more focus on the problems at home.
That's what people with common sense would say to each other. "Why are you cleaning their house when yours is a disaster, who are you to talk?"
So, what changed? Books, curriculum, teachers?
Holy Crap! You exist! Lol. ;)
Hahahahahaha. The good ole pass the buck trick. Fuck off wanker. Twist shit to make you feel better. You HOPE for change you don't SEE change. Quite the internal struggle isn't it?
Thr next president of the U.S is to being in 21 infrastructure. Trump is big on infrastructure, but first the middle east needs to be aligned.
Agreed
No.
The Goddess vortex they are fighting over for thr last 5000 years. Yes.
It's also in a fee other places. ;)
Agree
Portugal -port teu graal (mirandesa)
"For your Graal"
How do U.S. students compare with their peers around the world? Recently released data from international math and science assessments indicate that U.S. students continue to rank around the middle of the pack, and behind many other advanced industrial nations.
One of the biggest cross-national tests is the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), which every three years measures reading ability, math and science literacy and other key skills among 15-year-olds in dozens of developed and developing countries. The most recent PISA results, from 2015, placed the U.S. an unimpressive 38th out of 71 countries in math and 24th in science. Among the 35 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which sponsors the PISA initiative, the U.S. ranked 30th in math and 19th in science.
You were saying?
math achievement of American high school students in 2015 fell for the second time in a row on a major international benchmark, pushing the United States down to the bottom half of 72 nations and regions around the world who participate in the international test, known as the Program for International Student Assessment or PISA. Among the 35 industrialized nations that are members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the U.S. now ranks 31st.
Both reading and science scores were steady, with U.S. students scoring near the international average in both subjects.
“We really are doing a lot worse in math than we are in science and reading,” said Peggy Carr, the acting commissioner for the National Center for Education Statistics, who had early access to the PISA results, which were released to the public on Tuesday.
Carr emphasized that the 2015 PISA results showed that students across the board, from bottom to middle to top performers, were doing worse in math. It wasn’t just one segment of students who brought the national average down.
“We need to take a strong look at ourselves in mathematics, particularly since we’re beginning to see a downward trend across assessments,” Carr said.
Charlotte Iserbyt had the manual on her desk. She'll Americans all about it
The Commonwealth Fund focused on care process, access, administrative efficiency, equity and health care outcomes, studying 72 indicators within those fields. The 11 countries analyzed were Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States. In addition to ranking last or close to last in access, administrative efficiency, equity and health care outcomes, the U.S. was found to spend the most money on health care.
The U.S. rated especially poor in equality of coverage. The report found that 44 percent of low-income Americans have trouble gaining access to coverage compared with 26 percent of high-income Americans. The numbers for the U.K. are 7 percent and 4 percent, respectively. Not unrelated, the U.K.’s National Health Service was deemed the best health care system, just as it was in 2014. “In contrast to the U.S., over the last decade the U.K. saw a larger decline in mortality amenable to health care than the other countries studied,” the report reads.
You are NOT the greatest country in the world. You haven't been in 80 years.