Study: Many seniors lack basic knowledge By Janice Simon ■ The Cameron Collegian Cameron U and Wendy Bounds ■ The Daily Tar Heoi U. of North Carolina One out of four college seniors sur veyed in a recent Gallup Poll could not name the century in which Christopher Columbus landed in the New Wurld The survey, commissioned by the National Endowment for the Humanities, provides dismaying evi dence that students are not learning much of what an educated person should know, according to an NEH spokesman. The results also said that 58 percent of the seniors surveyed didn’t know Shakespeare wrote “The Tempest," and 55 percent couldn't identify the Magna Carta Twenty-three percent said Karl Marx's phrase, “Erom each according to Ins ability, to each according to his need." is part of the U.S. Constitution "The survey results prove colleges need to revise their curricula so that undergrade get a broad education,” said NEH chairwoman Lynne Cheney Cheney also released a NEH report urging that all students lie required to take 50 credit hours of humanities courses to graduate According to the report, “Students who approach the end of their college years without knowing the basic landmarks of history and thought are unlikely to have reflected on their meaning A required course of studies a core of learning can ensure that students have opportu nities to know the literature, philosophy, institutions and art of our own and other cultures ’ The survey tested 696 college seniors from 67 universities across the United States. The test consisted of 87 ques tions on a variety of concepts and land marks NKH felt are common knowledge Seventy-one percent of those surveyed came from public schools and 29 percent from private institutions. Ninety-three percent of the students were non humanities majors According to the NEH report, more than one-third of tile 87 questions were originally designed so high school 17 year-olds could answer a majority of them Five questions also came from the U S. Immigration and Naturalization Service test administered to prospective American citizens If the test results were graded, 55 per cent of the students would have received a grade of F and another 20 percent a I) Only 11 percent would have received an A or B grade However, 64 percent of the seniors sur veyed knew the Emancipation Proclamation issued by President Abraham Lincoln abolished slavery in the l'mon Eighty-four percent knew Sen Joseph K. McCarthy and the con troversy surrounding him focused on “investigations of individuals suspected of Communist activities.” The validity of the test and NEH’s pol icy recommendations have been ques tioned by some educators and students. “I’m not sure even if the students are taught these facts, that they will remem ber them.” said Richard White, dean of arts and sciences at Trinity College. “1 might have trouble with some of those questions myself ” BRIAN SHELUTO, PAILV NtBRASKAN . Of NE3RA9U Thomas Goldstein, executive director of the American Association of University Students, a group represent ing college student governments, said. “The test itself is circumspect. Do 1 have to know these things to be a good citi zen?” Cheney’s report suggests a strict core curriculum concentrating in five main areas: cultures and civilizations, foreign language, mathematics, natural sci ences, and social sciences. Colleges adopting the program would require spe cific courses for freshmen, sophomores and some juniors. Cheney recommended the classes be taught in small classes by a school's most distinguished faculty. SAT Continued from page 1 The bias may stem from questions on the SAT, particularly those using exam ples that are familiar to only one group, Stockwell said For example, a question on the SAT might ask students to compare "merce nary soldier" to other pairs and find a pair with the same relationship Because men may be more comfortable than women with a question about sol diers, that question favors men bv 16 percent, according to FairTest Statistics released by the College Board indicate that the average com bined SAT score achieved by women m 1988 was 875 The total average for both sexes combined was 93-1 A combined score of 1,600 is perfect. “There are score differences between men and women on the SAT," said Nancy Burton, program director for the admis sions testing program of ETS However, she said the differences do not stem from a bias in test questions but rather from the different educations men and women receive Men tend to take science and math classes, she said, and women take liberal arts classes Burton also said each SAT question is checked for bias five times before it becomes part of one of the nine new SATs created each year A representative of the College Board, the group that sponsors the SAT. also said many questions that may seem Wake Forest University ... a different school of thought WAKE FORES I l \ I \ l R S I I V MBA With special emphasis on: • International Business • Microcomputers • Small class environment • Broad based management • Experiential learning • Close student-faculty relations • Integrated curriculum For more information call toll-free: (800) 722-1622 or write James Garner Ptaszynski. Admissions Director Wake Forest MBA, 7659 Reynolds Station. Winston-Salem, NC 27109 (919) 761 5422 biased — because of'the examples they use are not biased at all. In questions on ratio, for example, men and women score equally well on a ques tion that involved a cooking recipe and a question on jogging To examine the difference in men’s and women’s scores, ETS and Hugters U. are conducting a study of the SAT to deter mine if the test accurately predicts aca demic potential. However, Ray Nicosia, manager of media relations for ETS, said tiie test is not a direct reponse to con cerns about gender difference in SAT scores 'The SAT is always being looked at for a variety of different reasons, and ETS does work with a variety of college and universities on these studies,” he said. “These studies are ongoing.” Student sanctioned A U. of Mississippi student sus pected of plagiarizing information from Seventeen magazine for an article that appeared in The Da:h Mtssissippian and the October li'sH U. The National College Newspaper has received unspecified sanctions from the university. The Administrative Discipline Committee sanctioned the student after a blue-ribbon committee oi professional journalists and others determined that portions of her arti cle were plagiarized, said Assistant Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Jerry Lee Westbrook. FBI releases crime data; schools question accuracy By Jeff Perrine ■ The Daily LobO U. of New Mexico If recent FBI reports are accurate, the I ’, of New Mexico is the most dangerous Place to attend college and Michigan’s Macomb Community College is the safest But police from both schools ques tion the report's accuracy, and the FBI admits that only a small percentage of schools nationwide provided informa tion for the report. At the U. of New Mexico, 53 violent crimes were reported to the FBI for 1988, the highest number nationwide But according to UNM Police Chief Barry Cox, the actual number of violent crimes at UNM should have been 20. A campus police staff member sent in the wrong data, said Cox, who has sent a letter to the Justice Department asking tor a cor rection. “They were counting simple assaults, not aggravated assaults, he said. Aggravated assaults, but not sim ple assaults, are classified as violent crimes. Macomb Community College, located in Detroit’s suburbs, reported only one See CRIME, Page 27