OECD PISA tests the skills and knowledge of 15 year-olds, providing the global benchmark for the quality, equity and efficiency of school systems.
The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) is an internationally standardised assessment that was jointly developed by participating countries and administered to 15-year-olds in schools.The survey was implemented in 43 countries in the 1st assessment in 2000, in 41 countries in the 2nd assessment in 2003, in 57 countries in the 3rd assessment in 2006, 62 countries in the 4th assessment in 2009 and 65 countries in the 5th assessment in 2012 and 72 countries in 2015. Tests are typically administered to between 4 500 and 10 000 students in each country. PISA assesses how far students near the end of compulsory education have acquired some of the knowledge and skills that are essential for full participation in society. In all cycles, the domains of reading, mathematical and scientific literacy are covered not merely in terms of mastery of the school curriculum, but in terms of important knowledge and skills needed in adult life.
>be singaporean >chew bubblegum >get sentenced to death
John Morris
Sweden would probably score higher on this if we had actual school discipline like the top of the list.
I remember doing the 2009 PISA thing with my class. I just answered random things to be done with it as soon as possible. Most of my friends did as well and we spent the remaining time fucking around throwing around a frisbee in the corridor outside.
Michael Rodriguez
Why is Iraq not on here?
Angel Gray
Argentina, Kazakhstan and Malaysia were assessed as well, but their results are not comparable to other countries/regions nor with themselves from previous results.
Grayson Hall
>be meme flag >get called a faggot
faggot
Aaron Butler
Your flag is probably the biggest meme flag Amerijew
Jace Hill
This is a myth, obviously you can chew gum in Singapore, they just don't sell it, nor import it.
Tyler Wright
There's the problem. Western schools are filled with degeneracy shilling, while Canada is filled with immigrants from probable right-wing, lower-tier countries with "high" potential.
score about the same as finland estonia germany switzerland natives
Lucas Nelson
Their highest achievement is getting their drivers license. They all end up working skilled trades while every other ethnicity goes into engineering, medicine, etc.
Kayden Bell
Quality bread bump
Carson Powell
Some Western countries like Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Netherlands, Finland, Slovakia, Czechia, Hungary, etc. have experienced a significant decline in their scores over the years, while some Asian countries like Korea, Macau, Singapore, etc., and Latin American like Peru, Colombia etc., or from other parts of the world have theirs rise.
the west is lossing 1 iq point every 10 years since the 80 and apart from inmigration the natives are getting dumber too,and is not difficult to see why
Are there any links between school reforms/budget cuts and those changes in score ?
Dylan Baker
Since the empowerment of the woman in the west especially the smartest one prefer to develop their carrer before have any children. We now can say objetively that is destroying the human resorces of the west but of course onbody is goin to say anything
Ethan Nguyen
at least we are not india where the inferior castes make a total of 90 of the childrens
Matthew Barnes
90%
Gavin Ward
Basically if a country/region doesn't participate on PISA is because their Ministry of Education or equivalent (sometimes also Ministry of Finance and other govermental offices) don't feel that is very important to take part in such assessment, in the end PISA is voluntary, the only countries that are "bound" to take part are OECD Member countries. Or maybe they are already signed up for the next round, for example new first time participants already taking part in PISA 2018 are Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brunei Darussalam, Morocco, Philippines, Saudi Arabia and Ukraine.
and also a country may decide not to participate because of the strict technical standards set by the PISA Governing Board, what would be the point of signing up if your results are not going to be of high quality nor be comparable to the rest of the participating countries.
Jaxson Lee
Well actually, something very interesting is that most variation in PISA scores between and among participating countries is explained by things more related to students, like their attitudes, and not on differences between education systems or differences between countries, like culture, for example a very common reaction is to think that maybe the education system of Finland or Korea or Singapore is very different from the one in France for example, but what the data is telling us is that, at least in developed countries they have reached the point where they do have an educational system afoot, a system that works, all teens go to school, all schools have teachers, all schools have roofs, if a teacher doesn't arrive there's a subtitude teacher, there's a curriculum to follow, etc., of course there's going to be some differences in some policies but again the data is telling us that most variation falls on what the students do.
And no, actually there have been not only an increase in education spending but also on the socioeconomic status of teens and yet that hasn't yield better performance
They literally changed their education focussing on better results at the test. It became a competition in Asia. The cheating part of some not to mention. This test is worthless