pisa 2009 results

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PISA 2009 latest world results in 12 slides See: OECD (2010), PISA 2009 Results: Executive Summary Saturday, 11 December 2010

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A slide set used to share recent PISA results around colleagues here in the Middle East.

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Page 1: Pisa 2009 results

PISA 2009

latest world resultsin 12 slides

See: OECD (2010), PISA 2009 Results: Executive Summary

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 2: Pisa 2009 results

PISArun by OECD

tests regularly every three years

testing in 3 domains: mathematics, science and reading

test focus is on young people’s ability to use their knowledge and skills to meet real-life challenges

75 countries took part in 2009 - 65 scored in the December report

all countries get scores (helpful) and rankings (be cautious)

average score is 500

differences in scores of about 8-12 points are not necessarily significant

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 3: Pisa 2009 results

PISA headlines 2009

Asia comes out top - five out of the top ten countries

China in for the first time but not as whole country - Shanghai has best scores in all 3 domains

Finland and Korea again doing well

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 4: Pisa 2009 results

Summary of findings: Reading

• Korea and Finland are the highest performing OECD countries, with mean scores of 539 and 536 points

• However, Shanghai outperforms them by a significant margin, with 556

• Top-performers in reading literacy include Hong Kong (533), Singapore (526), Canada (524), New Zealand (521), Japan (520) and Australia (515)

• The Netherlands (508), Belgium (506), Norway (503), Estonia (501), Switzerland (501), Poland (500), Iceland (500) and Liechtenstein (499) also perform above the OECD mean score of 494

• While the United States, Sweden, Germany, Ireland, france, Denmark, the United Kingdom, Hungary, Portugal, and Taipei have scores close to the OECD mean

• The lowest performing OECD country, Mexico has an average score of 425

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 5: Pisa 2009 results

Global range: Reading

• This means that the gap between the highest and lowest performing OECD countries is 114 points – the equivalent of more than two school years

• And the gap between the highest and lowest performing partner country or economy is even larger, with 242 score points – or more than six years of formal schooling – separating the mean performance of Shanghai and Kyrgyzstan (314).

• Differences between countries represent, however, only a fraction of overall variation in student performance.

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 6: Pisa 2009 results

Summary of findings: mathematics

Korea, with a country mean of 546 score points, performed highest among OECD countries in the PISA 2009 mathematics assessment.

The partner countries and economies Shanghai-China, Singapore and Hong Kong-China rank first, second and third, respectively.

In the PISA 2009 mathematics assessment, the OECD countries Finland, Switzerland, Japan, Canada, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Belgium, Australia, Germany, Estonia, Iceland, Denmark, Slovenia and the partner countries and economies Taipei, Liechtenstein and Macao also perform significantly above the OECD average in mathematics.

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 7: Pisa 2009 results

Summary of findings: science

Shanghai, Finland, Hong Kong and Singapore are the four highest performers in the PISA 2009 science assessment.

In science, New Zealand, Canada, Estonia, Australia, the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, Slovenia, Poland, Ireland and Belgium as well as the partner country and economies Taipei, Liechtenstein and Macao also perform significantly above the OECD average.

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 8: Pisa 2009 results

Gender: Girls outperform boys in reading skills in every participating country. Throughout much of the 20th century, concern about gender differences in education focused on girls’ underachievement. More recently, however, the scrutiny has shifted to boys’ underachievement in reading. In the PISA 2009 reading assessment, girls outperform boys in every participating country by an average, among OECD countries, of 39 PISA score points – equivalent to more than half a proficiency level or one year of schooling.

On average across OECD countries, boys outperform girls in mathematics by 12 score points while gender differences in science performance tend to be small.

The ranks of top-performing students are filled nearly equally with girls and boys. On average across OECD countries, 4.4 per cent of girls and 3.8 per cent of boys are top performers in all three subjects, and 15.6 per cent of girls and 17.0 per cent of boys are top performers in at least one subject area.

While the gender gap among top-performing students is small in science (1% of girls and 1.5% of boys), it is significant in reading (2.8% of girls and 0.5% of boys) and in mathematics (3.4% of girls and 6.6% of boys).

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 9: Pisa 2009 results

Example rankingsreading mathematics science

Shanghai 556 600 575Korea 539 546 538Finland 536 541 554

Australia 515 514 527USA 500 487 502UK 494 492 514

Dubai 459 453 466Mexico 425 419 416Qatar 372 368 379

OECD average 493 496 501

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 10: Pisa 2009 results

Comparing on genderreading % of boys under

level 2% of girls under

level 2

Shanghai 556 7 2Korea 539 9 2Finland 536 13 3

Australia 515 20 9USA 500 21 14UK 494 23 14

Dubai 459 41 21Mexico 425 46 34Qatar 372 72 54

OECD average 493 25 13

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 11: Pisa 2009 results

Some detailGirls read better than boys in every country, by an average of 39 points, the equivalent to one year of schooling. The gender gap has not improved in any country since 2000, and widened in France, Israel, Korea, Portugal and Sweden. This is mirrored in a decline of boy’s enjoyment of reading and their engagement with reading in their leisure time.

The best school systems were the most equitable - students do well regardless of their socio-economic background. But schools that select students based on ability, early, show the greatest differences in performance by socio-economic background.

High performing school systems tend to prioritise teacher pay over smaller class sizes.

Countries where students repeat grades more often tend to have worse results overall, with the widest gaps between children from poor and better-off families. Making students repeat years is most common in Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Portugal and Spain.

Schools with good discipline and better student-teacher relations achieve better reading results.

High performing systems allow schools to design curricula and establish assessment policies but don’t necessarily allow competition for students.

Public and private schools achieve similar results, after taking account of their home backgrounds.

Combining local autonomy and effective accountability seems to produce the best results.

The percentage of students who said they read for pleasure dropped from 69% in 2000 to 64% in 2009.

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Page 12: Pisa 2009 results

Comparisons over timePISA 2000 and PISA 2009 both focused on reading, so it is possible to track how student performance in reading changed over that period.

Among the 26 OECD countries where comparisons are possible, Chile, Israel, Poland, Portugal, Korea, Hungary and Germany (plus partner countries Peru, Albania, Indonesia, Latvia, Liechtenstein and Brazil) improved their reading performance between 2000 and 2009, while performance declined in Ireland, Sweden, the Czech Republic and Australia.

In many countries, improvements in results were largely driven by improvements at the bottom end of the performance distribution, signalling progress towards greater equity in learning outcomes.

On average, OECD countries narrowed the gap in scores between their highest- and lowest-performing students between 2000 and 2009; some also improved overall performance. In Chile, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Portugal, and the partner countries Indonesia, Latvia and Liechtenstein, overall performance improved while the variation in performance decreased. In many cases, this was the result of improvements among low-achieving students.

The gender gap in reading performance did not narrow in any country between 2000 and 2009.

Across OECD countries, overall performance in mathematics remained unchanged between 2003 and 2009, as did performance in science between 2006 and 2009.

On average across OECD countries, the percentage of students who report reading for enjoyment daily dropped by five percentage points. Enjoyment of reading tends to have deteriorated, especially among boys, signalling the challenge for schools to engage students in reading activities that 15-year-olds find relevant and interesting.

Saturday, 11 December 2010