Here's one of those articles which makes no sense unless you understand the implications of mass immigration from the Third World. The picture above is from Michelle Obama's visit to the Mulberry School for Girls in London, that should give you an idea of what's changing.
From RT: A quarter of British adults have literacy levels so low they would struggle to read a bus timetable, new research has found.
Government figures indicate some 28 percent of UK adults are at literacy level 1 or below, the equivalent to GCSE grades of D to G. A pass grade for GCSE level is considered to be a C or above.
Research by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) found 5 million adults lack basic reading, writing and numeracy skills deemed necessary to carry out a job.
England is among the worst performing countries in the OECD, with roughly one in 20 adults found to have the literacy and numeracy levels of a five-year-old.
It is also the only nation in the OECD where the average literacy score for 16- to 18-year-olds is lower than 55- to 65-year-olds.
In other developed nations, young people tend to have much higher literacy and numeracy scores than their older counterparts, but in Britain the opposite trend is occurring.
Some 23 percent of 16- to 18-year-olds are at literacy level 1 or below, while the same figure is 19 percent for the older age group.
Follow RT UK @RTUKnews
Englands youth worst at literacy & basic maths in developed world http://on.rt.com/7349
The same pattern extends to numeracy, where 29 percent of 16- to 18-year-olds are level 1 or below, compared to 26 percent of 55- to 65-year-olds.
[...]In-depth analysis by the OECD published in January found literacy rates among young people to be among the lowest in the developed world.
The organization ranked English teenagers aged 16 to 19 the worst of 23 developed nations in literacy and 22 out of 23 in numeracy.
The report, based on 2012 data, found England was better off investing its money in basic education rather than trying to broaden access to university.
England has three times as many low-skilled 16- to 19-year-olds as top-performing countries such as Finland, Japan, South Korea and the Netherlands. See this meme:
There's not one mention of mass immigration or the changing demographics of the UK throughout the article.