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Improving both quality and equity

Explore the significance of educational outcomes, student performance, and social distribution of learning opportunities in OECD countries. Discover how to achieve higher quality and equity in education through policy levers identified by the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) data.

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Improving both quality and equity

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  1. OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) Improving both quality and equity Insights from PISA 2000 EI Round Table, Florence, 17 November 2003 Andreas Schleicher Head, Indicators and Analysis DivisionOECD

  2. Improving both quality and equity 1. Why we need to worry • The significance of educational outcomes for individuals and societies 2. Where we are today • What PISA shows about student performance and the social distribution of learning opportunities in OECD countries 3. Where we can be • What the best performing countries show can be achieved 4. How we can get there • Levers for policy that emerge from PISA

  3. The significance of educational outcomes. Changing contexts for education systems.

  4. Changing contexts for education • Living with an ageing population • In some OECD countries, the share of over-65s in the population is growing twice has fast as the share of under 35s is shrinking • Unwanted but needed • School systems in most OECD countries will need to integrate unprecedented numbers of immigrants ...but only few are prepared

  5. Changing contexts for education • Knowledge workers the only fast growing share of the workforce • By 2002 - about the time when school reforms put in place today will begin to show effects in labour markets... ...Manufacturing output in OECD area is likely to double… …Manufacturing employment is likely to shrink to 10% of the workforce …And this is affects all jobs…

  6. Traditional jobs are changing too…Literacy skills in the manufacturing sector Pages Total number of pages of repair manuals for Opel cars from 1933 to 1998 Source : Georg Spöttl, 2002 Year 1966 1933 1951 1983 1998

  7. Changing contexts for education • Knowledge workers - the new “capitalists“ • Knowledge is becoming the key economic and social resource … and the only scarce one • Collectively, knowledge workers own the modern means of production ... and through their stakes in pension and mutual funds, they have become majority shareholders and owners of key businesses in the knowledge society • The knowledge society is a society of juniors and seniors ... rather than of bosses and subordinates

  8. Unique opportunities • Unlimited upward mobility… • Knowledge changes rapidly • Everybody starts from ignorance • Knowledge differs from traditional means of production in that it cannot be inherited or bequeathed • Knowledge is “public” • Knowledge has to be put in a form in which it can be taught and is therefore universally accessible • Every impediment to mobility… …is perceived as a form of discrimination … If our education systems deliver on their promises

  9. Where we are today. What PISA shows about student performance and the social distribution of learning opportunities in OECD countries.

  10. PISA - The OECD Programme for International Student Assessment • A regular assessment of the yield of education (2000, 2003, 2006, 2009,…) • including and beyond the curriculum • Comparable skill measures • that can guide policy decisions • Insights into the mix of factors which contribute to the development of knowledge and skills • and how these factors operate similarly or differently across countries • A strong substantive and cross-culturalcore for defining performance targets

  11. PISA - The OECD Programme for International Student Assessment • The most comprehensive international assessment to date • Geographic and economic coverage • 340,000 students randomly sampled • All 30 OECD countries plus a growing number of non-OECD countries • Subject matter coverage • Reading, Mathematics, Science • Cross-curricular competencies • Variety of task formats • Depths • A total of 7 hours of assessment material

  12. Three broad categories of key competencies Using “tools” interactively to engage with the world To analyse, compare, contrast, and evaluate e.g.Using language, symbols and texts Interacting with information Capitalising on the potentialof technologies To think imaginatively PISA 2000: A new concept of literacy Acting autonomously Interacting in diverse groups Accessing, managing, integrating and evaluating written informationin order to develop ones knowledge and potential, and to participate in, and contribute to, society e.g.Acting within the bigger picture Forming and conducting life plans Taking responsibility and understanding rights and limits e.g.Relating well to others Co-operating, working in teams Managing and resolving conflicts To apply knowledge in real-life situations To communicate thoughts and ideas effectively

  13. Using “tools” interactively to engage with the world To analyse, compare, contrast, and evaluate e.g.Using language, symbols and texts Interacting with information Capitalising on the potentialof technologies To think imaginatively Reading literacy Acting autonomously Interacting in diverse groups Using, interpreting and reflecting on written material e.g.Acting within the bigger picture Forming and conducting life plans Taking responsibility and understanding rights and limits e.g.Relating well to others Co-operating, working in teams Managing and resolving conflicts To apply knowledge in real-life situations To communicate thoughts and ideas effectively

  14. Using “tools” interactively to engage with the world To analyse, compare, contrast, and evaluate e.g.Using language, symbols and texts Interacting with information Capitalising on the potentialof technologies To think imaginatively Mathematical literacy Acting autonomously Interacting in diverse groups Emphasis is on mathematical knowledge put into functional use in a multitude of different situations in varied, reflective and insight-based ways e.g.Acting within the bigger picture Forming and conducting life plans Taking responsibility and understanding rights and limits e.g.Relating well to others Co-operating, working in teams Managing and resolving conflicts To apply knowledge in real-life situations To communicate thoughts and ideas effectively

  15. Using “tools” interactively to engage with the world To analyse, compare, contrast, and evaluate e.g.Using language, symbols and texts Interacting with information Capitalising on the potentialof technologies To think imaginatively Scientific literacy Acting autonomously Interacting in diverse groups Using scientific knowledge, identifying scientific questions, and drawing evidence-based conclusions to understand and make decisions about the natural world e.g.Acting within the bigger picture Forming and conducting life plans Taking responsibility and understanding rights and limits e.g.Relating well to others Co-operating, working in teams Managing and resolving conflicts To apply knowledge in real-life situations To communicate thoughts and ideas effectively

  16. Using “tools” interactively to engage with the world Under development: PISA assessment of • Problem-solving skills PISA self-reports on: • Dispositions to learning • Learning strategies • Engagement with school Acting autonomously Interacting in diverse groups

  17. Using “tools” interactively to engage with the world Acting autonomously Interacting in diverse groups Not yet developed

  18. Where we can be. What the best performing countries show can be achieved.

  19. HighPerformance High performance Low social equity High performance High social equity Moderate impact of social background on performance Strong impact of social background on performance Low performance Low social equity Low performance High social equity Low Performance

  20. HighPerformance • Quality and equity can be achieved together • ‘dumbing down’ is not an inevitable consequence of the pursuit of equity • ‘levelling up’ is achievable(e.g. Finland, Korea, Canada) High performance Low social equity High performance High social equity Moderate impact of social background on performance Strong impact of social background on performance Low performance Low social equity Low performance High social equity Low Performance .

  21. Is it all innate ability?Variation in student performance 1917-21 1 53-9 64-9 109-11 2221-25 75-9 2119-24 83-10 1610-20

  22. Is it all innate ability?Variation in student performance 1917-21 1 53-9 64-9 109-11 2221-25 75-9 2119-24 83-10 1610-20

  23. Is it all innate ability?Variation in student performance Variation of performance within schools Variation of performance between schools 1917-21 1 53-9 64-9 109-11 2221-25 75-9 2119-24 83-10 1610-20

  24. Policy levers. Overall findings

  25. Policy Levers • Performance in reading • Students from advantaged backgrounds… … have a greater chance of coming to school more engaged in reading and entering into a virtuous circle of increasing reading interest and improved reading performance … but not all engaged students come from privileged homes… … and those from more modest backgrounds who read regularly and feel positive about it are better readers than students with home advantages and weaker reading engagement • Schools can make a significant difference to bring students into the virtuous circle • Seeking mutual reinforcement of cognitive skills and motivation, particularly for boys

  26. Policy Levers • Student approaches to learning • The ability to manage one’s learning is both an important outcome of education and a contributor to student literacy skills at school • Learning strategies, motivation, self-related beliefs, preferred learning styles • Different aspects of students’ learning approaches are closely related • Well-motivated and self-confident students tend to invest in effective learning strategies and this contributes to their literacy skills • Immigrant students tend to be weaker performers … but they do not have weaker characteristics as learners • Boys and girls each have distinctive strengths and weaknesses as learners • Girls stronger in relation to motivation and self-confidence in reading • Boys believing more than girls in their own efficacy as learners and in their mathematical abilities

  27. Policy Levers • Student engagement at school • An important outcome in itself • Disaffection at age 15 can potentially be a precursor to the onset of more serious problems among vulnerable young people • Engagement at age 15 is likely to influence students’ choices and educational pathways • The prevalence of disaffected students varies significantly across schools in each country • Only weak link to student’s social background – there is thus scope for school policy/practice to engage students • But strong link to school’s social background • Students in schools with strong average engagement tend to perform well • Engagement and performance seem to work complementary • The school climate seems to make more of a difference than resources • For individual students, strong performance does not necessarily ensure strong engagement at school • Relationship complex

  28. Policy levers. Some characteristics shared by some strongly performing countriesCombining the empirical results obtained through PISA with qualitative information on the socio-cultural conditions and education policy strategies.

  29. HighPerformance High performance Low social equity High performance High social equity plusNetherlands Moderate impact of social background on performance Strong impact of social background on performance Low performance Low social equity Low performance High social equity Low Performance .

  30. Sympathy doesn’t raise standards – aspiration does • In the countries studied • National research teams report a strong “culture of performance” • Which drives students, parents, teachers and the educational administration to high performance standards • PISA shows that students perceived a high degree of teacher support • Which should not be simply equated with “achievement press”

  31. Governance of the school system • In the countries studied… • Decentralised decision-making is combined with devices to ensure a fair distribution of substantive educational opportunities • The provision of standards and curricula at national/subnational levels is combined with advanced evaluation systems • That are implemented by professional agencies • Process-oriented assessments and/or centralised final examinations are complimented with individual reports and feed-back mechanisms on student learning progress

  32. HighPerformance • E.g. Learning environment and course offering • High degree of school-level autonomy • Low degree of school-level autonomy • % Variance between schools 11% 20% 9% 76% 7% Moderate impact of social background on performance Strong impact of social background on performance 75% 71% r=.51 Low Performance .

  33. Organisation of instruction • In the countries studied… • Schools and teachers have explicit strategies and approaches for teaching heterogeneous groups of learners • A high degree of individualised learning processes • Disparities related to socio-economic factors and migration are recognised as major challenges • Students are offered a variety of extra-curricular activities • Schools offer differentiated support structures for students • E.g. school psychologists or career counsellors • Institutional differentiation is introduced, if at all, at later stages • Integrated approaches also contributed to reducing the impact of students socio-economic background on outcomes

  34. HighPerformance • Early selection and institutional stratification • High degree of integration • Early selection and stratification Moderate impact of social background on performance Strong impact of social background on performance Low Performance .

  35. Support systems and professional teacher development • In the countries studied… • Effective support systems are located at individual school level or in specialised support institutions • Teacher training schemes are selective • The training of pre-school personnel is closely integrated with the professional development of teachers • Continuing professional development is a constitutive part of the system • Special attention is paid to the professional development of school management personnel

  36. HighPerformance • Students perceived teacher support • High degree of support • Low degree of support Moderate impact of social background on performance Strong impact of social background on performance Low Performance .

  37. Summary of common characteristics Uniformity Diversity Universal high standards “hit and miss” “Inputs” Outcomes Bureaucratic Devolved responsibility Look outwards Look up Received wisdom Data and best practice Motivating feedback and incentivising success and innovation Evaluation to control Prescription Informed profession

  38. One challenge – different approaches The future of education systems needs to be “knowledge rich” Informed professional judgement, the teacher as a “knowledge worker” Informed prescription National prescription Professional judgement Uninformed prescription, teachers implement curricula Uninformed professional judgement The tradition of education systems has been “knowledge poor”

  39. Further information • www.oecd.org • www.pisa.oecd.org • email: pisa@oecd.org • Andreas.Schleicher@OECD.org … and remember: Without data, you are just another person with an opinion

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