by Christine Amario and Dorie Turner
MIAMI (AP) — Nearly one-fourth of the students who try to join the military fail its entrance exam, painting a grim picture of an education system that produces graduates who can't answer basic math, science and reading questions.
The report by The Education Trust found that 23
percent of recent high school graduates don't get the minimum score needed on
the enlistment test to join any branch of the military. The study, released
exclusively to The Associated Press on Tuesday, comes on top of Pentagon data
that shows 75 percent of those aged 17 to 24 don't qualify for the military
because they are physically unfit, have a criminal record or didn't graduate
high school.
"Too many of our high school students are not
graduating ready to begin college or a career — and many are not eligible to
serve in our armed forces," U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan told the
AP. "I am deeply troubled by the national security burden created by
America's underperforming education system."
The effect of the low eligibility rate might not be
noticeable now — the Department of Defense says it is meeting its recruitment
goals — but that could change as the economy improves, said retired Navy Rear
Admiral Jamie Barnett.
"If you can't get the people that you need,
there's a potential for a decline in your readiness," said Barnett, who is
part of the group Mission: Readiness, a coalition of retired military leaders
working to bring awareness to the high ineligibility rates.
Kenneth Jackson, 19, of Miami, enlisted in the Army
after graduating from high school. He said passing the entrance exam is easy
for those who paid attention in school, but blamed the education system for why
more recruits aren't able to pass the test.
"The classes need to be tougher because people
aren't learning enough," Jackson said.
This is the first time ever that the U.S. Army has
released this test data publicly, said Amy Wilkins with The Education Trust, a
Washington, D.C.-based children's advocacy group. She said the organization
worked with the U.S. Army to get raw data on test takers from the past five
years.
"It's really about illuminating the issue of
whether our high schools are preparing young people to serve the country,"
said Wilkins, vice president of The Education Trust. "It's important for
national security."
The Education Trust study shows wide disparities in
scores among white and minority students. Nearly 40 percent of black students
and 30 percent of Hispanics don't pass, compared to 16 percent of whites.
Even those passing muster on the Armed Services
Vocational Aptitude Battery, or ASVAB, usually aren't getting scores high
enough to snag the best jobs.
"A lot of times, schools have failed to step
up and challenge these young people, thinking it didn't really matter — they'll
straighten up when they get into the military," said Kati Haycock,
president of the Washington-based Education Trust. "The military doesn't
think that way."
Christina Theokas, the author of the study, said
the test was updated in 2004 to reflect the current needs of the Army, and the
Army didn't want to release data from before the realignment.
Recruits must score at least in the 31st percentile
on the first stage of the three-hour test to get into the Army or the Marines.
Air Force, Navy and Coast Guard recruits must have higher scores.
The average score for blacks is 38 and for
Hispanics is 44, compared to whites' average score of 55. The scores reflect
the similar racial gaps on other standardized exams.
Further tests determine what kind of job the
recruit can do with questions on mechanical maintenance, accounting, word
comprehension, mathematics and science.
The Education Trust study examined the scores of
nearly 350,000 high school graduates, ages 17 to 20, who took the ASVAB exam
between 2004 and 2009. About half of the applicants went on to join the Army.
The study also found disparities across states,
with Wyoming having the lowest passage rate, at 13 percent, and Hawaii having
the highest, at 38.3 percent.
Retired military leaders say the report's findings
are cause for concern.
"The military is a lot more high-tech than in
the past," said retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Norman R. Seip. "I don't
care if you're a soldier Marine carrying a backpack or someone sitting in a
research laboratory, the things we expect out of our military members requires
a very, very well educated force."
A Department of Defense report notes the military
must recruit about 15 percent of youth, but only one-third are eligible. More
high school graduates are going to college than in earlier decades, and about
one-fourth are obese, making them medically ineligible.
In 1980, by comparison, just 5 percent of youth
were obese.
"Aptitude, educational attainment, and
physical fitness are three factors that make the military a highly selective
employer. Recent reports in these areas show that today's youth are falling
behind," said Curt Gilroy, the director of Accession Policy in the Office
of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness.
Jackson is among those who had to lose weight to
become eligible. At one point, he weighed more than 300 pounds. He was down to
250 pounds by the time he entered basic training.
Taking the entrance exam was the easy part.
"You've just got to be focused," he said.
Copyright
2010 The Associated Press.






