2017 Report on American education: US students have mediocre scores, US classes "much easier"
The key findings include:
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The U.S. continues to register mediocre scores on the Program
for International Student Assessment, as it has done since the test
began in 2000. U.S. performance in all three subjects—math,
reading, and science—was no different statistically in 2015 than it was
when each subject was first administered.
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International students still think U.S. schools are much less challenging than schools in their home countries.
In 2001, 55.9 percent of foreign exchange students surveyed said their
classes in America were “much easier” than back home; in 2016, that
increased to 66.4 percent.
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Analyzing data from California schools, Loveless finds that
African-American students continue to be suspended at a higher rate than
other ethnic groups. In 2013, the suspension rate for
African-American students was 0.235, meaning 235 out of every 1,000
black students received a suspension; in 2015, it fell to 0.178. This is
still dramatically higher than the 2015 rates of Hispanic students
(0.052), white students (0.044) and Asian-Americans (0.012).
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