Tampilkan postingan dengan label numeracy. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label numeracy. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 09 Mei 2010

Literacy and Numeracy Skills Are Low in Australia

You would think that with the Internet communication skill would be better than ever. This is clearly not the case. Forty six percent of Australians don't have adequate numeracy and literary skills in order to cope with modern society. Australian industry has called for a literacy entitlement to improve the skills of those in vocational study. Employers aren't getting sufficient numbers of new workers who can read and write to a "normal" level.

Despite Australia's fifth ranking among other countries for education, this problem persists and is getting worse. Even though Australia is developed it appears children are "falling through the cracks" in education. Oddly, a 2009 UN paper put Australia's literacy rate at 99 percent. This is just plain wrong.

A test was developed that covered people's interaction with newspapers, consumer information articles, finance graphs, medicine labels and so on. Calculating interest on a loan or understanding a workplace agreement, for example, was way beyond the ability of the majority. People are very skilled in covering up their shortcomings in numeracy and literacy skills. Many, in fact, become highly skilled orators, while they rely on friends and family to organize the filling out of forms. The main difference, usually, between those who can read and write well and those who cannot is income. Though there are a few illiterate millionaires. Most of those in financial trouble do not understand why.

A Canadian study showed that spending more money on raising the skill levels of people at the bottom of the scale significantly reduced the amount spent on welfare and improved employment. It is not children of immigrants who have problems it is the children of third and fourth generation Australians whose parents have had financial or social problems. Teachers cannot do it alone. They need help from government and the community.
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Sabtu, 06 Februari 2010

Australia Fails Tests to Meet Demands of the Modern World

A majority of Australians lack the minimum reading, writing and problem-solving skills to cope with life in the modern world. Just under half of Australians struggle to understand the meaning of newspaper and magazine articles or documentation such as maps and payslips. Over half failed the minimum numeracy and problem solving tests. The US rated much worse when the tests were applied to Americans. Switzerland and Norway did better. In Australia, women were stronger at understanding written material than men, but males were better at understanding documents such as maps and dealing with problems of numeracy.

The Australian government has not improved the education system over the last decade to meet changes in societal demands. It is an opportunity missed. If you don't make relevant public education interesting, exciting and a way to get into the modern world, you will slip back - and that's what's happening to Australia. We will look back over the last 10 years and realise with some horror how much we overemphasised the value of the individual and overlooked the common denominators in our society.
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