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  • How do U.S. 15-year-olds compare to students in other countries

  • when it comes to reading, mathematics, and science.

  • The academic performance of American 15-year-olds hasn't improved over the past decade,

  • while other countries, like Ireland and Poland, are passing the United States.

  • That's according to the Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA.

  • PISA is designed to measure how well students can apply what they've learned -- in and out of school --

  • as they near the end of high school or secondary education.

  • PISA is especially valuable because it measures applied literacy skills, which makes it different

  • from nearly every other major assessment.

  • With PISA, we can see how American 15-year-olds compare to their peers in a very diverse group

  • of participating education systems, including nearly every developed economy in the world.

  • PISA began in 2000

  • and since then every 3 years 15-year-olds from countries around the world have taken it.

  • Average scores for U.S. 15-year-olds in 2012 were not different from any of the previous years

  • in any of the subjects.

  • Eighteen education systems had higher average scores in all three subjects: reading, mathematics, and science.

  • Shanghai-China, which participated in PISA for the first time in 2009,

  • remained the top performer in the world in all three subjects.

  • The U.S. performed better in reading than in mathematics or science.

  • If you take a closer look at U.S. math scores, you discover that the U.S. had more low-performing students

  • and fewer high-performing students than the international average.

  • In reading and science, the U.S. had about the same percentage of low-and high-performing

  • students as the international average.

  • On the NCES PISA website, you'll find the international rankings and details

  • on how American 15-year-olds performed: by gender, socioeconomic status, by race and ethnicity,

  • and other variables.

  • You can get the full report here.

How do U.S. 15-year-olds compare to students in other countries

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