Yay for Canada!Toronto Star wrote:International math test scores Canada third
Exam measures skills at age 15
Rich-poor gap also lower than most
LOUISE BROWN
EDUCATION REPORTER
Canada has scored third out of 41 countries on a global test of math skills, partly because it does so well helping children of all backgrounds to succeed, a study shows.
Only Finland and Hong Kong did better, though seven other countries tied with Canada on the second international test of 15-year-olds, administered last year by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. The test emphasized math but also measured reading and science literacy.
Test results show the gender gap wraps around the globe, with girls gradually catching up to boys in math, but boys remaining behind girls in reading.
"If I had one real concern from the whole report, it would be how to get boys reading more, because reading is the basis of learning all disciplines, " said Pierre Reid, Quebec's minister of education and chair of the Council of Ministers of Education in Canada.
"But over all, the test is a very encouraging sign for everyone in Canada who works with children, that we are targeting the right ways to make sure we give everyone a chance, regardless of their socio-economic background."
Canada is one of a handful of countries where children from more challenging backgrounds — lower income, less-educated parents, single parents, new immigrants — score near their more advantaged classmates.
Experts link this to the fact each province spends more to support students with higher needs and also that Canada's broad social safety net, with public health care and tax breaks for poor families, helps lower some of the demographic barriers to learning.
Among provinces, Alberta scored highest in math, reading, science and problem-solving, with Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia and Manitoba at the national average.
Ranked on its own against other countries, Alberta came second only to Hong Kong in math and to Finland in reading.
"Ontario and Canada have shown themselves to be world-competitive in this test, but we do believe Ontario has the potential to do better, and we'll be looking at ways to unlock that," said Ontario Education Minister Gerard Kennedy.
Canada also is one of a handful of countries that raised its math scores from the first test, held in 2000. While Canada slipped slightly in science skills, it held its second-place spot in reading.
In over-all math performance, the United States ranked nearly 20 places behind Canada. It also showed dramatic gaps between its richest students and those from disadvantaged homes.
The Program for International Student Assessment surveyed almost 250,000 students in 41 countries last year. Each wrote a two-hour test that was part multiple-choice and part creative answers. Canada had one of the largest samples, with 28,000 students, compared with the typical 5,000.
The PISA test measures students in four types of math: geometry, algebra, arithmetic and statistics. Canada scored ninth in geometry, sixth in arithmetic, fourth in algebra (up from last time) and third in statistics.
Math consultant Stewart Craven believes Canada's scores are rising because new curriculum introduced over the past decade has made math teaching more hands-on, more language-based, more centred on student learning rather than the teacher's lesson, and uses technology and concrete materials more than ever. That's a trend that has met with resistance south of the border, he notes.
The test also shows that students of the same socio-economic level do roughly as well in Canada's public schools as in private schools, in contrast to many other nations, including the United States, where private schools outperform public.
While Canadian students on the whole experience less math anxiety than their peers in other countries, Canadian girls consistently described themselves as more anxious about math than boys. In contrast, boys were more interested and confident in math, and more convinced that math is practical.
Mind you, from the tests it would appear that our American neighbours need to work on their system, but the decay of the US public education system in favour of private education is a trend that shows no signs of stopping in the current right-wing political atmosphere. No one really seems to be upset in the US about the fact that if you're rich, you get better health care and education, and if you're poor, you get screwed in every conceivable way. As far as the right-wing is concerned, it's some kind of fair reward for being rich.