Klaralven (7,329 posts)
4. Ethnicity and geographic distribution of low skilled adults doesn't seem to support that they're GOP
Adult Literacy in the United States
FIGURE 3. Percentage of low-skilled adults age 16 to 65, by nativity status and race/ethnicity: 2012 and 2014
U.S. Skills Map: State and County Indicators of Adult Literacy and Numeracy
https://nces.ed.gov/surveys/piaac/skillsmap/
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Response to Klaralven (Reply #4)
Sat Jan 29, 2022, 08:40 AM
Star Member Scrivener7 (40,385 posts)
5. How do you read that as not supporting that it is the GOP? The most illiteracy in your source map
occurs in the reddest areas.
And are you seeing a spate of Democrats cutting educational funding that the rest of us have missed?
Or perhaps you are thinking the black and latino illiterate people enumerated in your source are the ones voting for TFG and ignoring science?
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Response to Scrivener7 (Reply #5)
Sat Jan 29, 2022, 09:12 AM
Klaralven (7,329 posts)
14. County level 2020 election results to compare with literacy distribution map
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Response to Klaralven (Reply #14)
Scrivener7 This message was self-deleted by its author.
Response to Klaralven (Reply #14)
Sat Jan 29, 2022, 09:24 AM
Star Member Scrivener7 (40,385 posts)
19. Again, what is your point? Are you seeing Democrats cutting funding to education?
Are you saying that the illiterate black and latino populations are the ones voting for TFG and ignoring science?
Clearly you are trying to imply something. Why are you not simply stating it? Share your wisdom, do.
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Response to Klaralven (Reply #14)
Sat Jan 29, 2022, 09:49 AM
True Blue American (14,635 posts)
23. If you look at that map the blue areas are where the better educated
Workers and jobs are.
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Response to Klaralven (Reply #14)
Sun Jan 30, 2022, 11:09 PM
radius777 (3,249 posts)
53. Dems are the party of densely populated
metropolitan areas, and you will naturally have immigrants, working class, inner city poor, etc in such areas who are struggling to get by.
But there's no excuse for people who have been here for generations choosing to be anti-science and anti-education as they are in many red areas.
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Response to Klaralven (Reply #4)
Sat Jan 29, 2022, 09:04 AM
Star Member PJMcK (17,086 posts)
13. Your map belies your point, I think (n/t)
A fun little exchange that comes so close to noting the effects of culture on how much people put into their education. I get all kinds of kids who are being taught at home that school doesn't matter, for reasons that vary from student to student, and sometimes it's being taught directly, sometimes indirectly, also in various ways. It's not exclusively or inclusively our minority students, but they do make up the majority who are hearing that there's no point to working hard in school or getting anything out of the education system.
Star Member Wicked Blue (3,388 posts)
6. Reagan started it nt
Personally, I put much of the blame at Bush 1's feet. While I don't think the intent was to decimate the system, No Child Left Behind created our "teach them how to take tests so we can get Fed money" system that has left a couple of generations unable to do much more than guess A, B, C, or D. There are many other factors, but from the Federal side, that's where the issues really kicked in, IMHO.