1 / 12

Session 6 : Education- International databases and comparisons

Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Session 6 : Education- International databases and comparisons. Joint OECD/ONS/Government of Norway workshop “Measurement of non-market output in education and health” London, 3-5 October 2006 Michael Davidson

medeirosm
Download Presentation

Session 6 : Education- International databases and comparisons

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Session 6: Education- International databases and comparisons Joint OECD/ONS/Government of Norway workshop “Measurement of non-market output in education and health” London, 3-5 October 2006 Michael Davidson Indicators and Analysis Division Directorate for Education, OECD

  2. Aim of presentation • What internationally comparative data and indicators are available for measuring educational output/outcomes? • PISA and other data

  3. Available OECD education output data • Student numbers • For all levels of education • Student instruction hours • For ages 7-15 • Graduate numbers • Upper secondary and higher education • Educational attainment of the population • Stock of qualifications • Programme for International Student Assessment- • International student test scores PISA

  4. PISA • Measures the knowledge and skills of 15-year-olds in: • Reading literacy • Mathematics literacy • Scientific literacy • A comprehensive assessment of the yield of education systems to age 15 • including and beyond the curriculum • Measures what students can do, rather than what they have learnt • Produces standardised scores • Mean performance of 500 and standard deviation of 100 • Within each subject domain

  5. PISA • 3 yearly cycle with major/minor domains • School and student background questionnaires • Public/private schools • Social background of students • First language; migrant status • Student engagement and motivation • 57 countries in PISA 2006 • All OECD, EU countries and others

  6. Mean mathematics scores – overall (OECD) OECD (2004), Learning for tomorrow’s world: First results from PISA 2003, Table 2.5c, p.356.

  7. Variation in student performance in mathematics OECD (2004), Learning for tomorrow’s world: First results from PISA 2003, Table 4.1a, p.383.

  8. Mean scores in mathematics performance (2003)Raw scores and scores adjusted as if the mean ESCS would be equal in all OECD countries

  9. Other relevant data series • PISA • => up to end of lower secondary education… • Plus earlier assessment in the future? • TIMSS (Trends in maths and science) • Assessments in 4th and 8th grades in maths and science • 4-yearly cycle, most recent in 2003 • More curriculum focussed than PISA • Less comprehensive country coverage of OECD/EU countries than PISA • PIRLS (Progress in International Reading Literacy Study) • 4th grade reading literacy • 5 yearly cycle, first in 2001, next in 2006 • Country coverage more like TIMSS than PISA

  10. Upper secondary and Higher Education • No similar international student assessments….yet • Available data on graduate numbers and rates • But these measure output quantity not quality • How to treat non-completers? • Labour market outcomes relevant? • Comparative employment rates • Earnings differentials

  11. Summary • For schooling up to lower secondary education PISA can provide useful output and outcome measures, noting: • It is a yield measure • Equity as well as quality is a desirable outcome • Other international studies can complement this • Different phasing; country coverage • But differences in methodology with PISA • Upper secondary and higher education have to reply on more traditional measures • Student numbers, graduates or possibly labour market outcomes

  12. Thank you for listening

More Related