Would you hire a 13 year old Kid?
November 12th, 2007 Posted in Mexicans
Would you hire a 13 yearold Kid to work at your business?
You are when you hire aMexican Illegal Alien. Here are the EDUCATION REPORTS on Mexico.
North America > Mexico> Education
Average years ofschooling of Mexican adults 7.2 years that means Mexicans drop out of school bytheir 13-14 birthday.
MEXICO’S EDUCATION SYSTEMRANKS LAST
Mexico continues to lagbehind other semi-industrialized and industrialized nations in the quality ofits education, a factor that some analysts say has contributed to the COUNTRY’SSTUNTED ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT. In a report published in mid-September, theOrganization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) ranked Mexico’seducational system last among 28 member countries in the quality of education.All OECD countries except Mexico made advances in improving their educationalsystems between 1995 and 2003.
Language Statistics >English-speaking population > Total (most recent) by country
Mexico is NOT listed yetthey are a neighbor of the USA…..WOW!
What does that tell us. Over100 countries around the world Learn to read, write and speak English butMexicans can’t or won’t learn a second language. How can we even consideringhiring a NON English speaking Mexicans.
Education Statistics inUSA
Degrees Awarded > Hispanic (most recent) by state
Education Statistics >Percent of People Who Have Completed High School (Including Equivalency) (mostrecent) by state
EDUCATIONAL PERFORMANCE
Student performance varieswidely across countries
The most recentinternational comparisons of the performance levels of 15-year-old students arethose obtained in 2003 in the OECD Program for International Student Assessment(PISA), the results of which were published in December 2004. Key findings arereproduced in Education at a Glance 2005. In mathematics, Finland, Korea andthe Netherlands among OECD countries achieved statistically similar average scores(between 538 and 544 points) that are significantly higher than the averagescores in every Education at a Glance 2005No wire transmission or other mediause until 04:00, Mexico CDT, 13 September 2005- 5 - other OECD countries.Eleven other countries have mean scores that are above the OECD mean, fourperform at the level of the OECD mean, while the remaining eleven, performsignificantly below the OECD average. Mexico obtained the lowest mean score(385) on the mathematics scale.
THE OVERALL PICTURE OFMEXICAN EDUCATION
The overall picture ofMexican education that emerges from Education at a Glance 2005 is of a systemfaces many problems, deficient in both the level of education in the populationand the quality of student learning in its schools, but one in whichconsiderable resources are being invested. Education expenditure is growingfaster than national wealth (GDP per capita), teacher salaries are growingfaster than in virtually all OECD countries and participation rates beyondlower secondary education are rising.
Key results for Mexico
Over the last generations,Mexico has seen limited progress in ensuring that young people leave schoolwith strong baseline qualifications Only 24% of 25-to-34-year-old Mexicans havecompleted a baseline qualification at the upper secondary level, by far thelowest level among OECD countries, where this level of education is nowbecoming the norm. There has been less progress in Mexico in raising uppersecondary attainment than in most other countries, such that Mexico has fallenbehind in relative terms over past generations, from rank 28 among45-to-54-year-olds (i.e. those who completed school some 30 years ago) to rank29 among 35-to-44 year-olds and 25-to-34-year-olds (i.e. those who completedschool a decade ago). In contrast, over the same period, Korea moved from rank21 to 1 (Table A1.2a). Note that the individuals (25-to-34-year-olds in 2005)in this analysis passed the age of sixteen in between 1986 and 1996.
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