ACER Logo

Media Centre



Contact us

Corporate Communications Officer
Ms Megan Robinson

19 Prospect Hill Road, Camberwell VIC, Australia 3124

T: (03) 9277 5582
F: (03) 9277 5500
E: communications@acer.edu.au

ACER releases results of PISA 2009+ participant economies

Posted on:Friday, 16th December 2011

MEDIA RELEASE
ACER releases results of PISA 2009+ participant economies

 

16 December 2011:  The Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER) this morning released the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2009+ results for ten economies.

PISA is an international comparative survey of 15-year-olds’ knowledge and skills in reading, mathematical and scientific literacy, conducted by ACER.  It measures how well young adults have acquired the knowledge and skills that are required to function as successful members of society.

Sixty-four economies originally participated in PISA 2009. Ten additional partner participants, who were unable to participate within the PISA 2009 project timeframe, participated in the PISA 2009 study on a reduced and delayed timeline in 2010.  This is known as the PISA 2009+ project. 

The PISA 2009+ economies are: Costa Rica, Georgia, India (Himachal Pradesh & Tamil Nadu), Malaysia, Malta, Mauritius, Venezuela (Miranda), Moldova, United Arab Emirates.  PISA 2009+ involved testing just over 46 000 students across these ten economies, representing a total of about 1 377 000 15-year-olds.

ACER CEO, Professor Geoff Masters, said the results found that in the PISA 2009+ economies, girls significantly outperformed boys in reading (reflecting the PISA 2009 results).

“Girls not only tended to attain higher reading scores than boys, they were also more aware of strategies for understanding, remembering and summarising information,” Professor Masters said.

“Students who are highly aware of effective strategies for learning who also regularly read a wide range of material, tend to demonstrate better reading proficiency than those who either have a lower awareness of effective strategies or read a narrower range of materials regularly.”

Professor Masters said that while school level factors account for a considerable proportion of variation in reading performance between schools, much of this is associated with socioeconomic and demographic factors.

“This suggests that policies around governance, accountability, the investment of educational resources and the overall learning environment are influenced by the social and demographic intake of the school,” Professor Masters said.

“Schools containing students with higher socioeconomic backgrounds, tend to be more autonomous in their decision about curriculum, make more of assessments for accountability purposes, have better student-teacher relationships, and utilise more educational resources. Students attending these schools have better educational outcomes.”

The results also showed both girls and boys from the PISA 2009+ nations had results in reading, mathematical and scientific literacy that were lower than the OECD average.

The results reveal the following highlights for each PISA 2009+ participants:

Costa Rica

Georgia

Himachal Pradesh-India

Malaysia

Malta

Mauritius

Miranda-Venezuela

Moldova

Tamil Nadu-India

The United Arab Emirates

To download the PISA 2009+ report, go to: https://mypisa.acer.edu.au/

****************ENDS*************

 

Media enquiries: Petros Kosmopoulos

Phone: +61 3 9277 5582   
Mobile : +61 417 754 570   
Email: communications@acer.edu.au


Related links

You might also like to read:

Only 25% of students regularly walk to school

95% of staff in schools experienced workplace bullying

National productivity linked to adult literacy and numeracy

Preparing 21st Century Learners: The Case for School-Community Collaborations

Business potential lies untapped in schools

Parents urged to develop maths in kids from birth

Australia a key player in international higher education student market, but competition is building


« Go back to media releases list

Follow us on facebook Follow us on facebook Follow us on twitter Follow us on vimeo Follow us on Linkedin Subscribe to RSS feed