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Am surprised to see Australia rates highly. 40% of students don’t know it takes about a year for Earth to orbit the Sun.

I would guess that half the population doesn’t understand compound interest.

I would also guess only 5% could describe the scientific method, 1% could describe the use of normal distributions.

I would guess that 20% of locally born Australians would not know how to use punctuation or grammar for clear expression.

Is this a worldwide trend? The rise of flerfers suggests it is.

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The money was spent on educating them what the government wanted them to know, as opposed to what they deserve to know?

I’m shocked america is so high in spending considering how terrible our education system is unless you pay for it yourself. Wouldn’t surprise me one bit that much of the spending is not actually on what we would expect. 🤷‍♂️

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Israel’s outline is sketchy to say the least…

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I’d much rather look a simple sorted table or a bar chart.

For me the country outlines don’t add anything of value and they aren’t too scale either with arbitrary rotations mixed in. Spending is on a strictly one dimensional scale yet the graphic implies some concentric (2-dimensional) pattern.

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Remember, just because the money is spent, it doesn’t mean it is spent well. I’m sure a lot of the US dollars are fed into sports programs and other spending, and not directly towards efforts that would benefit the most students or workers.

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Data Is Beautiful

!dataisbeautiful@lemmy.ml

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A place to share and discuss data visualizations. #dataviz


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