By Andrea Billups - Today is Presidents Day, so it's an appropriate
time to see who has a good handle on national history or government. If
you think, however, the nation's college students have the most
knowledge on the subjects, think again.
College freshmen earned an average grade of F, or just 53.7 percent,
when asked a series of questions about U.S. presidents and key
historical events from their times in office. After four years of
college, their knowledge didn't improve much.
College seniors got just 55.4 percent on the 60-question quiz given to
14,000 students at 50 colleges and universities across the country as
part of a study designed to test their knowledge of America's history,
government, international relations and market economy.
"In this election, we are focusing on the youth vote, and it's great
that more kids are coming out to vote. But we worry that it's become a
kind of cult of personality," says Richard Brake, director of the
Lehrman American Studies Center at the Intercollegiate Studies
Institute in Wilmington, Del., which commissioned the civic learning
study, conducted by researchers at the University of Connecticut's
Department of Public Policy.
"If these kids don't know what has happened in the past, our history,
then we fear they are going to be fodder for sweeping rhetoric," said
Mr. Brake, a former professor who taught American history and
government for seven years.
The study, "Failing Our Students, Failing America," was the second of
its kind from ISI. It was first completed in 2005 and then repeated in
the fall of 2006. It surveyed students at elite institutions as well as
small and public schools, asking questions about such things as the
Constitution, the Civil War, the New Deal and the Cuban missile crisis.
It found that Harvard University seniors did best, with a grade of just
69.6 percent — a D-plus. In general, the higher a college ranked on the
widely publicized U.S. News & World Report rankings, the lower it
ranked on civic learning. At schools such as Cornell, Duke, Yale and
Princeton, all ranked in the magazine's top 12, seniors actually did
worse than freshman.
Why should anyone care? Because of the global diplomatic climate,
nation's future remains at stake, Mr. Brake argues.
"A clear trend from these results is that American undergraduates know
very little about the crucial moments and competing visions of American
foreign policy," he said. "That is deeply troubling, especially for a
nation currently at war and struggling to determine its proper role on
the world stage."
Winfield Myers, a former history professor who co-founded the nonprofit
Democracy Project, a foundation designed to improve the nation's civic
responsibility and understanding, blames the problem of civic
understanding on the way teachers are educated in colleges of
education.
"Rather than being taught the meat of a discipline, be it history or
political science, they are taught methodologies of how to teach," said
Mr. Myers, who now leads Campus Watch, a project of the Middle East
Forum.
College curriculums also have broadened, even at small schools, and
students are no longer required to take a prescribed set of
foundational or core courses, leaving many to graduate with few courses
related to government and history, Mr. Brake said.
"What we would really want is for a university to have a notion of
itself and a confidence to say 'We are the adults here,' and there are
certain things that you have to take to be an adult in our society," he
said. "We should also try to improve the teaching of American history
and government."
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