Fifteen-year-old students in the U.S. ranked 25th of 34 countries on an international math test and scored in the middle of the pack in science and reading, raising concerns the U.S. isn’t prepared to succeed in the global economy.
Teenagers from South Korea and Finland led in almost all academic categories on the 2009 Program for International Student Assessment, according to the Paris-based Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, which represents 34 countries. U.S. students ranked 17th in science and 14th in reading. The U.S. government considers the OECD test one of the most comprehensive measures of international achievement.
The results show that U.S. students must improve to compete in a global economy, Education Secretary Arne Duncan said yesterday in a telephone interview. The Obama administration is promoting national curriculum standards and a revamping of teacher pay that stresses performance, rather than credentials and seniority.
“The brutal fact here is there are many countries that are far ahead of us and improving more rapidly than we are,” Duncan said. “This should be a massive wakeup call to the entire country.”
The OECD’s international test, first administered in 2000 and given every three years, aims to measure skills achieved near the end of compulsory schooling. In the U.S., 165 public and private schools and 5,233 students participated in the two- hour paper-and-pencil assessment, given in September and November 2009. It consisted of multiple-choice and open-response questions.
In all, 470,000 students worldwide took the exam. The test also measured countries and regions outside the OECD, or a total of 65 countries and economies. For the first time, the test broke out the performance of China’s Shanghai region, which topped even Finland and South Korea.
U.S. 15-year-olds had an average score of 487 in math, below the OECD average of 496 on a zero to 1,000-point scale. South Korean students scored 546 and those from Finland scored 541. On an absolute basis, students from 24 of 34 OECD countries had higher scores than U.S. students, though the Education Department said 17 were better on a statistically significant basis.
U.S. math scores rose from 474 in 2006, when they ranked 25th of 30 OECD countries.
The average U.S. reading score of 500 ranked 14th among OECD countries, which were led by South Korea, Finland and Canada. Only six had scores that were better statistically, the Education Department said. Because of an error in printing test booklets, no U.S. reading results were reported in 2006.
The U.S. faces educational challenges from its immigrant and heterogeneous population, an OECD report said. In contrast with the U.S., Finland benefited from the country’s relative cultural homogeneity, the report said.
The success of top-scoring education systems holds lessons for U.S. policy, notwithstanding cultural differences, the report said. Successful countries provide comparable opportunities to all students, regardless of wealth, offer autonomy to individual schools in terms of curriculum and prioritize teacher pay over smaller classes, according to the report.
More here
[So this focus on 'multi-culturalism' is actually hurting us, and Obama's current push for a national curriculum is contradicted by this report. Education Secretary Arne Duncan is certainly right about one thing-- “This should be a massive wakeup call to the entire country.” --Editor]
8 comments:
just bailout the teachers unions some more give all the teachers a raise and have more obama video speeches to the kids. that will do it. oh and throw a few more standardized tests in there. forget about holding both the teachers and the kids accountable
Get rid of that no child left behind crap and I'm sure it will get better.
We don't need science anyway if we have God. He is the way, not liberal theories of monkeys men and space bangs.
God bless.
But we have the highest paid teachers in the world...gotta love unions!
12:44 PM
What makes you think that GOD didn't make science?
Science helps prove GOD'S existence.
Science is a good thing. It's not infallible. It corrects itself all the time.
We have abandoned teaching real math and science skills or any critical thinking agenda in order to pass these tests and now even THAT is a failure. It will take years to turn this around. And the millions of American children who have already progressed through this fiasco of a learning system and are crippled by their inability to read, write, do math or think independently and analyze information, well, they are our future workers. Fat and unemployable. Incapable of handling any complicated endeavor. Perhaps they will be able to take comfort from all the awards and plaques they have for "effort" and "participation" and the "you are special and unique" mantras we have taught them to believe. At least, they will "feel good about themselves" as they apply for benefits of various kinds.
Home school your kids then genius
Imclain, it seems like perhaps it has been your generation (I'm guessing 40-70) that has landed us in our current predicament. I wouldn't throw too many stones if I were you.
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