Why Don't Young Americans Know Their Us History?

http://maristpoll.marist.edu/wp-content/misc/usapolls/US100617/July%204th_summer%20vacation/Country_From_Which_US_Declared_Independence.htm

Twenty-five per cent of Americans don’t know that the United States won its independence from Great Britain according to a poll conducted by Marist University this last Independence Day weekend.

The Marist poll asked just one question: “On July 4th we celebrate Independence Day. From which country did the United States win its independence?”

And though 74 per cent of Americans were able to give the correct answer, a disappointing 26 per cent didn’t know with the majority of them saying they were “unsure” of the correct answer.

Those folks who knew the correct answer were mainly white, earning over $50,000 a year and male. People in the northeast knew their American history better than those in the south (no surprise as they have always been revisionists(take a look at the Texas with the whole textbook nonsense)), and people under 29 would probably benefit from a Wii version of the American Revolution because they were most likely to not know that the United States fought against Great Britain in the epic revolution that led to the holiday we so love to celebrate every July.

Another public education failure? Maybe.

I don’t really buy into the idea that America was ever a nation of Rhodes Scholars who’ve been dumbed down over recent decades thanks to a fiendish conspiracy of elementary school teachers and a steady diet of insipid television programming.

We were all quite dumb to begin with.

Over the last decade, the study of civics and history of any kind has taken a back seat to those subject areas that are most heavily tested like math and reading. Because only a few subject areas count in the standardized testing game, those that aren’t get shorted. Civics and American history aren’t make or break tests in determining whether a school is a success or failure. When your school’s reading or math scores can push you into a turnaround, that’s where the time and effort goes.

It could also be a byproduct of our television and movies that “re-imagine” historical events with more attention to the entertainment aspect than the facts, and the sad reality that we are a culture of now. If it happened yesterday or last week, it’s old news. In a world were everything is tweeted and updated within seconds, how can anything that happened over 230 years ago matter?

Our public school system came to be not just as a way to warehouse children once they were no longer put to hard labor the moment they could fetch and carry. It existed with the intent of producing a literate citizenry able to participate as members of a democracy. Our nation’s history and the rights and duties of its population were as important to the curriculum as the 3 R’s.

When I was in middle school, I learned some of my American history watching cartoons on Saturday morning. Schoolhouse Rock cartoons ran in between shows and regaled me and my peers with ditties designed to teach us about the American Revolution, The Constitution and how bills became laws. Simple? Yes. Effective? Very. Over thirty years later, I can still sing along with most of the tunes.

Suggestion:

this is nothing new. As a country, we've never been all that smart.

In the 1940's a study showed that more people recognized "Elsie the Cow" of Borden fame more than the recognized Harry Truman.

http://friendsofelsie.com/about-us/history

{ 9 comments… read them below or add one }

Failure starts at home, extends to the school and resides in the individual.

Sad really, and history isn't the only subject, geographical knowledge is just as bad.

Department of Education!

look around you at all the lazy leaches living of the government dole. They're to lazy to take care of themselves their kids or anyone else and the fact that they're also stupid should not come as a shock to anyone!

Thank no child left behind and parents for not being involved with their childrens education

And a lot of what they do know just aint so.

I think it's a lack of good history teachers. By the way I remember those saturday cartoons that taught us about history. my favorite to this day is the little one about being a bill. I'd love to see more of that on tv then some of the programming that is on now.

Thank you for providing proof that the US system of "socialized education" has it's own agenda.

Nice reading what you wrote, interesting ideas.

All I can say is Desire, people have to desire to know in order to know, people have other desires than learning.

Sometimes I feel the best thing for the country is to hit rock bottom in every way possible, suffering will cause the people to rethink what's important.

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