29 November 2004Education
US bombs out in 'Geography Olympics'
Want to have some fun this morning? Head over the 'Geography Olympics' and take their quiz where the US is getting hammered by most of the counties in the world.
The test cannot really determine an accurate understanding of geography since it only requires people have to locate 10 randomly selected countries on a map of the world with the names blanked out with 200 second time limit. You could easily be given really hard countries like Guinea-Bissau or something simple like Brazil.
That said, it's interesting to note that the US is getting creamed. If you take a look at the world wide results, St. Lucia, a tiny island in the Caribbean, is in first their 158 participants averaging 69.114. The US meanwhile is in 133th with 57827 geo-quizzers scoring a paltry 54.406. Albania, Rwanda and Burkina Faso are among the countries outgunning us.
Myself? Well, I scored 90% missing only Congo, which to my defense, is a tough one since there are two in Africa. I did nail France, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Indonesia, Solomon Islands just to name a few. (How many people in the world can't locate France on a map?). I'd love to see a page listing each country and the percentage of people who able to place it on the map. That would be far more interesting.
YOUR RESULTS!! Your Score 90.00% United States's Previous Score 54.427% United States's New Score 54.429%Your impact:
Congrats, you have increased your country's score by 0.002%YOUR STATE RESULTS!!
Your Score 90.00%
California's Previous Score 50.963%
California's New Score 50.976 %Your impact:
And you have increased your state's score by 0.013%
As you can see, I had a massive impact on the scores of my country and state, respectively.
Never Heard of Nauru? Join 'Geography Olympics' By Claudia Parsons NEW YORK (Reuters) - America may dominate the world in sports and culture but in one arena where size doesn't matter, the "Geography Olympics," the United States was 88th behind minnows such as Madagascar and the Marshall Islands.More than 46,000 Americans have taken part in this online geography competition started by a man with a mission: Roger Andresen, who quit his job as a fiber optic engineer two years ago when he realized most Americans have never heard of Nauru and don't know Cameroon is in Africa.
Working from his home in Georgia -- the U.S. state, not the country -- he created a jigsaw puzzle with pieces shaped like the countries of the world and launched what he calls the "world's biggest ongoing geography puzzle" on the Web.
Players have 200 seconds to locate 10 randomly selected countries on a map of the world with the names blanked out.
The site www.geographyolympics.com has attracted more than 300,000 players from 179 countries so far. National rankings fluctuate throughout the day depending on the latest scores.
Topping the leader board at one point on Friday were players from Trinidad and Tobago, the Philippines and Madagascar -- three countries that won a single bronze medal among them at this year's Olympics. The United States won the most medals --103.
Among U.S. states, New Mexico led the board followed by South Carolina and Idaho. South Dakota, Maine and Arkansas were last.
"Geography is just a building block for understanding what's going on in the world," said Andresen, whose family includes Christian missionaries and who has traveled to 44 countries.
"Being the world's superpower we should be informed voters," he said. "Sitting back and not worrying about these things is terrible, and it might be why the rest of the world doesn't care for us."
The best players tend to find seven of 10 locations, he said. Americans' average score is around 5.7 out of 10.
Norway and Sweden are big players, with more than 50,000 participants each, though not very successful in 84th and 173nd place respectively.
"That's what happens when thousands of people join in (the game) from new countries," Andresen said. "Initially they're terrible, they bring down the country."
Belgium and Italy are consistently high scorers. The north Pacific atolls of the Marshall Islands were doing well in 5th place. Last place was occupied by Cambodia with an average of four out of 10 but only 253 participants.
For those who don't know, Nauru is a small island in the South Pacific.
Posted by andrew at November 29, 2004 10:47 AM
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'US bombs out in 'Geography Olympics''.