Tag Archives: International Tests

Headlines Around the World: PIRLS 2021 International Reading Results Edition

This week, IEN scans the headlines for the results of the 2021 PIRLS reading assessment. For related scans from other international tests see Around the World in PISA 2018 Headlines; Headlines around the world: PIRLS (2016)  Results; Headlines Around the World TIMSS 2015 Edition; TIMSS and PIRLS 2011.

The release of the PIRLS 2021 4th grade reading results provides another opportunity for education systems to see if and how the COVID-19 pandemic and school closures affected students’ test performance.  In addition to collecting data in the middle of what the PIRLS report called the “COVID-19 disruption,” the latest implementation of PIRLS also entailed a transition to “an innovative digital assessment with 23 colorful and engaging texts delivered to students using a new group adaptive design.” The 2021 PIRLS also included a questionnaire that provided information about the challenges participating schools and students faced during the pandemic, which can help put the results in context.

In all, 57 countries and 8 benchmarking entities participated in PIRLS 2021, providing data from about 400,000 students, 380,000 parents, 20,000 teachers, and 13,000 schools.  According to the report, “in general there are downward trends in PIRLS 2021that likely are evidence of the assessment taking place during the COVID-19 pandemic.” 

“in general there are downward trends in PIRLS 2021that likely are evidence of the assessment taking place during the COVID-19 pandemic.” 

As we have with previous PISA and TIMMS results, IEN scanned the headlines to see what media outlets in different parts of the world are emphasizing. Predictably, many of the headlines focus on rankings, often noting sharp rises and drops in performance. In this case, the headlines tout high performance in countries like England – rising to #4 in the rankings — but the reporting also acknowledges that rises like these reflect  “significant drops” in outcomes in some countries (like Finland and Poland) that are likely associated with the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and the fact that some previously highly-ranked countries did not participate this time due to COVID. (At the same time, the headlines in Poland note that Poland, along with Finland, are still at the top of the rankings in the EU.)

In our google search scans, we found a number of headlines from media in the UK, Australia, and parts of Europe, with perhaps the largest number of headlines decrying South Africa’s dismal results. Although headlines in Brazil framed results there in negative terms, Nic Spaull pointed out that South Africa might actually do well to learn from Brazil, given that the results for 4th graders there suggest the that they were 3 years ahead of their peers in South Africa. Notably, no headlines from the US showed up in any of our scans.

Australia

Victorian students’ reading scores went backwards amid long remote learning period, international study showsThe Guardian

Students from disadvantaged backgrounds, in remote areas and First Nations students also lagged behind the national average

Year 4 reading outcomes steady despite Covid disruptions – major studyThe Educator Online

Falling through the cracks’: NSW boys fail to keep up with girls in readingThe Sydney Morning Herald

Brazil

Brazil lags behind Uzbekistan and Kosovo in a reading assessment for elementary school studentsThe Rio Times

Canada

Students in Alberta outperformed several other Canadian provinces in reading scores during pandemicCTV News

England

PIRLS 2021: England rises up rankings, and 8 more findingsSchools Week

The country achieved an average reading score of 558, one point below the score when the tests were last held in 2016

Reading ability of children in England scores well in global surveyThe Guardian

English children are the most literate in Europe and shoot up the leaderboard to become fourth best in the world when it comes to their reading skills, study showsDaily Mail

Europe

European countries score well in international reading rankingsEuronews

France

Reading comprehension: France still falling short of European averageLe Monde

Germany

Germany: Reading skills below European average, and droppingDW

Hong Kong

Hong Kong Primary Four pupils take third spot in reading survey of 57 countries and territories around the worldSouth China Morning Post

Hong Kong students achieve remarkable results in International Reading Literacy StudyDimsum Daily

92% of Hong Kong P4 students were at or above the Intermediate International Benchmark, higher than the global average of 75%. The results also showed that 21% of the students were high achievers in reading literacy at the Advanced International Benchmark, which was only attained by 7% of students worldwide.”

Ireland

Ireland’s 10-year-olds outperform internationally in readingRTE

Italy

The results of the 2021 IEA-PIRLS international survey were presented todayItaly 24

Poland

Poland tops EU in ranking of children’s reading abilityNotes from Poland

Scotland

Scots ‘in dark’ over pupils’ reading as global study results publishedThe Herald

Serbia

Serbian children achieve excellent PIRLS literacy scoreSerbian Monitor

Singapore

Singapore’s Primary 4 pupils are world’s best in readingThe Straits Time

Spain

The problem sinking Spain in reading comprehension rankingsWorld Nation News

South Africa

South Africa’s massive reading problemBusiness Tech

SA produces one of worst global reading results among over 50 countriesnews 24

South African children come last in international reading assessmentThe Rep

Sweden

Swedish reading skills fell in 2021 despite decision to keep schools openThe Local

IEN will be taking a break over the holidays. Wishing everyone a safe and healthy New Year!

TIMSS 2019 Around the World: Headlines announcing the latest results in Math and Science

This week, IEN has collected headlines focusing on the results from the latest release of the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study of 2019. The press release reported that “science and mathematics achievement is on the rise,” with progress in the percentage of students reaching minimum proficiency as 92% of fourth grade students and 87% of eighth grade students reached  TIMSS 2019 Low International Benchmark.  At the same time, there is a growing gender gap in 4th grade in math, as boys had higher average scores in almost half of all countries.

In an effort to make the release more useful, IEA (International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement) and UNESCO also produced “Measuring global education goals: how TIMSS helps; monitoring progress towards Sustainable Development Goal 4 using TIMSS,” and, in an interview, the head of the global study declared “Rankings are the least informative part.”

As in IEN’s report on the TIMSS results in 2015 (Headlines Around the World TIMSS 2015 Edition), Asian countries like Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong continue to dominate the top of the rankings with Singapore students “best in the world.”  Russian students followed just behind in math and ranked in the top five in science.

In the US, the release of results barely registered, with Forbes the only US publication who had an article appear in any of our searches. They reported “East Asia Aces Global Math, Science Tests As West Struggles To Keep Up.”  The National Center for Education Studies summed up the US performance by pointing out that the US “had higher average scores than most participating countries” but “only 1 of the 45 other education systems (Turkey) had a larger score gap between the top-performing (90th percentile) and bottom-performing (10th percentile) students than the United States.” Checker Finn, former Assistant Secretary for Research and Improvement at the US Department of Education, lamented “U.S. students continue to fall short of too many international peers.”

TIMSS results in headlines:

Australia

Australian students rise in maths, science, Canberra Times

Belgium

Flemish students score worse and worse on mathematics and sciences: , VRT.be

Bosnia and Herzegovina

TIMSS Results demonstrate that Schools in BiH are not prepared for the knowledge Society of the 21st Century, Sarajevo Times

Cyprus

Minister welcomes improved maths, science scores, Cyprus Mail

France

Maths: The fall of the Frenchhouse, Café Pedagogique 

Hong Kong

Hong Kong’s declining pupil performance in global maths and science study triggers Education Bureau review, South China Morning Post

Israel

Israel’s Math, Science Rankings Modestly Improve, but Arab Students Left Behind, Haaretz

Northern Ireland

Northern Ireland primary schools rank among the best in the world in maths, The Irish News

Morocco

Moroccan students struggle with mathematics and science, Yabiladi

Philippines

Philipines last in math, science among 58 countries, The Manila Times

Singapore

Singapore students best in world for maths, science, New Straits Times

South Korea

S. Korean students have high scores in math and science, but confidence levels are lower than global average, Hankyoreh

South Africa

The shocking state of maths and science education in South Africa, BusinessTech

Turkey

Reformed approach key to Turkish students’ rising success in math, science, Daily Sabah

United Arab Emirates

Dubai private school pupils now rank among world’s best in Maths and Science, Gulf News

— Thomas Hatch