The standard of English literacy and English language skills is declining in closet pom's mother country and in it's colonies.
Will future Australian students have to study in India to learn proper English?
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-12-03/australian-students-slipping-behind-in-mat... Quote:Australian students slipping behind in maths, reading: OECD report
A new report comparing Australian high school students with 65 other countries shows the nation is slipping further behind in maths and reading skills.
The 2012 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) measures the mathematics, reading and science skills of half a million 15-year-olds from around the world.
It found Australian teens placed equal 17th in maths, equal 10th in reading and equal 8th in science.
Asian countries like China, Singapore, Korea and Japan are pulling ahead of Australian students in maths and reading.
The results show Australian students are slipping in maths performance by about a half a year of schooling compared to 10 years ago.
How the states/territories rated:
Maths Science Reading
ACT 518 534 525
NSW 509 526 513
VIC 501 518 517
QLD 503 519 508
SA 489 513 500
WA 516 535 519
TAS 478 500 485
NT 452 483 466
AUST 504 521 512
Shanghai 613 580 570
The decline was stronger in girls than boys, with girls dropping to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/3254407/Standard-English-in-decline-among-t... Quote:Standard English in decline among teenagers
Half of teenagers fail to spot the difference between standard English grammar and colloquial language, according to research.
By Graeme Paton, Education Editor 5:32PM BST 24 Oct 2008CommentsComment
Many GCSE English students did not realise that phrases such as "get off of" and "she was stood" were grammatically incorrect.
It comes amid fears that the use of social networking websites and mobile phone text messaging is undermining children's literacy skills.
Ministers have also complained many young people spend too much time playing video games and watching TV instead of reading books.
In the latest study, Cambridge Assessment, one of the country's biggest examination boards, surveyed more than 2,000 teenagers in 26 English secondary schools.
They were presented with various phrases - and asked to mark out those employing non-standard English.
Only 41 per cent realised that an adjective had been used in place of an adverb in the phrase "come quick".
Fewer than six-in-10 pupils correctly identified "off of", "she was stood" and "this man showed us" as ungrammatical.
Around a quarter of GCSE students failed to spot errors in the phrases "it wasn't me who done it", "couldn't hardly move", "Tom had gotten cold" and "three mile".
At least a fifth failed to recognise that "more easier" was incorrect. And almost one-in-10 students failed to spot the use of a double negative in the phrase "I didn't break no vase".
Ian McNeilly, from the National Association for the Teaching of English, told the Times Educational Supplement: "For a lot of people - not just young people - their daily use of English is in new media, where non-standard grammatical constructions are more acceptable. That's inevitably going to lead to an increased lack of awareness of more standard constructions."
This summer, almost seven-in-10 pupils gained at least a C grade in GCSE English.
A similar Cambridge Assessment study in 2005 found that GCSE pupils had better grasp of grammar and punctuation than young people a decade ago but were more likely to lapse into colloquialisms.
Dr Beth Black, author of the latest report, said: "It is possible that these less well-recognised non-standard English forms will find their way into standard English, especially given the view that teenagers are linguistic innovators who bring about change in standard dialect."