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调查称中国女性比男性英语学得好


http://en.youth.cn   2012-11-06 16:08:00

  Chinese women outrank men in English proficiency

  一项对全球170万18岁以上成年英语学习者的测试成绩评估报告,周四上午出炉。在全球54个非英语母语国家和地区中,瑞典以68.91分高居第一,丹麦、荷兰紧随其后,中国大陆以49.00分排名第36位,属于低熟练度水平。在世界上堪称投入最大、耗时最长的中国式英语教育,却未能培养出令人满意的外语熟练度。

The English proficiency of Chinese women is much better than that of men, according to a study released in Shanghai yesterday.

Chinese women scored three points higher than men in the English Proficiency Index released by EF Education, a language training company. Worldwide, women scored one point higher than men on average.

"This shows that Chinese women are more accustomed to the Chinese education mode," the report said. "Chinese women use their gift of language to gain success."

However, Chinese mainlanders' English proficiency ranked second to last in Asia, despite the great time and effort that many people invest in learning the language, the report said.

China's mainland is ranked the 36th in the index of 54 countries and regions where English is not the native language. That's down from 29th last year. The Chinese mainland belongs to the low-proficiency tier and is ranked just above Thailand in Asia.

This year's index has increased the weight of listening tests, while decreasing the importance of grammar and vocabulary exams, which partly caused the ranking change, researchers said.

Moreover, test-oriented and rote-based learning methods often used in China hurt the language skills of Chinese students, education experts said.

The study compared test scores of more than 1.7 million adults in the 54 countries and regions.

Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands have the best command of English, while Libya has the lowest English proficiency level.

European countries generally performed well. But Italy, Spain and Portugal, some of the countries at the heart of the euro zone crisis, are being dragged down by poor English, according to the report.

Singapore is 12th, the best in Asia, followed by Malaysia and India. South Korea, at 21st, and Japan, at 22nd, performed disappointingly low despite their focus on education, the report said.

Young workers aged between 25 to 35 years old are best at English on average around the world. But in Asia, high school graduates have the best command of English, the report said.

Europeans' English skills are still improving after they start work, while the English skills of many Chinese deteriorate in the workplace because they have fewer opportunities to practice the language, the study said.

One in every four people frequently uses English at work on China's mainland while nearly 15 percent said they never use English, lower than the world average level, according to the study.

 
source : 中国网     editor:: 张岩
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