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View Full Version : According to New Study, Hispanic Illiteracy Plagues Subsequent Generations




AuH20
06-24-2017, 09:02 AM
There is no market impetus for them to learn or communicate in English. That impetus was removed by.............;) Secondly, and more importantly.....How can one be this indispensable cog in the future American economy, when one does not possess the basic fundamentals in English? This widespread talking point has been an outrageous lie from the start.

http://dailycaller.com/2017/06/21/report-illiteracy-among-hispanic-immigrants-persists-across-generations/?utm_campaign=atdailycaller&utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=Social


Hispanic immigrants and their children lag far behind other migrant populations in the U.S. when it comes to developing proficiency in English, according to a new analysis from a Washington immigration policy think tank.

About two-thirds of Hispanic immigrants who have been in the U.S. for at least 15 years can be considered “functionally illiterate” in English, says independent public policy analyst Jason Richwine. In his report for the Center for Immigration Studies, a conservative-leaning nonprofit that advocates lower levels of immigration, he looked at data from a literacy test administered to more than 8,000 Americans from 2012 and 2014 and discovered some worrying results.

Richwine found that 67 percent of first-generation Hispanics scored at the “below basic” level on the Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC) test of English proficiency. In contrast, just 22 percent of non-Hispanic immigrants who had been in the U.S. for at least 15 years were at the “below basic” level of literacy.



Individuals at that level possess only a simple vocabulary and sentence comprehension, and they cannot complete more complex tasks such as reading multiple pages of a document or making inferences from charts and graphs. While Hispanic immigrants, who are poorer and less educated than the overall immigrant population when they arrive in the U.S., can be expected to struggle with English comprehension, the report found that literacy problems persist beyond the first generation.

The children of Hispanic immigrants score at the 34th percentile on the PIAAC test, and 22 percent test at the “below basic” level. Performance actually worsens in the third generation: nearly a quarter — 24 percent — of the grandchildren of Hispanic immigrants failed to score above the lowest English literacy rating. Those results suggest that Hispanic immigrants, compared to the overall immigration population, may not be assimilating as well as scholars and lawmakers believe.

tod evans
06-24-2017, 09:04 AM
I don't speak enough Beaner to do any more than get arrested or have a damn good time....

RonPaulIsGreat
06-24-2017, 09:25 AM
It's almost like humans have a self-destruct program in us.

Things could be awesome with all this technology, understanding of the universe, medical advances, etc, etc.... BUTTTTTTTTT can't reap the rewards of that progress, nope, gotta import self-righteous backward idiots in to fuck it all up. And yeah, anyone living in the US that isn't actively attempting to read, write and speak English to at least a high school level of proficiency is a piece of shit, and shouldn't be here.

This country and all the worthwhile countries of the world are going to shit fast.

Please build a wall with machine guns.

AuH20
06-24-2017, 09:28 AM
It's almost like humans have a self-destruct program in us.

Things could be awesome with all this technology, understanding of the universe, medical advances, etc, etc.... BUTTTTTTTTT can't reap the rewards of that progress, nope, gotta import self-righteous backward idiots in to $#@! it all up. And yeah, anyone living in the US that isn't actively attempting to read, write and speak English to at least a high school level of proficiency is a piece of $#@!, and shouldn't be here.

This country and all the worthwhile countries of the world are going to $#@! fast.

Please build a wall with machine guns.

If we lived in an actual capitalist society, these Hispanics would be forced to adapt their English proficiency or they would be simply priced out of the marketplace. But as you know the government severely distorts the labor market and consequently society as a whole, with extensive material benefits to the newcomers as well as widespread bilingual aids. I can't really blame the Hispanic community for falling behind because that's exactly what the external environment demands of them.

CPUd
06-24-2017, 09:34 AM
If we lived in an actual capitalist society, these Hispanics would be forced to adapt their English proficiency or they would be simply priced out of the marketplace. But as you know the government severely distorts the labor market and consequently society as a whole, with extensive material benefits to the newcomers as well as widespread bilingual aids. I can't really blame the Hispanic community for falling behind because that's exactly what the external environment demands of them.

Do you believe these communities need to be purified?

AuH20
06-24-2017, 09:36 AM
Do you believe these communities need to be purified?

What does that have to do with the topic?

Now to my answer.Yes, the communities will need to strengthened going forward if they are going to endure the harsh coming conditions. We are living in an era of shrinking resources distorted by debt.