Latin America, US perform lousy on student math tests
The results of the new international PISA tests of 15-year-old students should be ringing alarm bells throughout Latin America: they show that 63 per cent of Latin American students lack basic skills in math, and in some countries that figure is as high as 91 per cent.
The figures are a strong reminder that education should become the number one issue in Latin America’s political agenda. In an innovation-driven global economy in which math, science and engineering are keys to countries’ prosperity, the region’s poor academic performance is one of the biggest obstacles for economic progress.
The standardized test run by the OECD, a club of wealthy nations, was taken by more than half a million students in 70 countries and major cities. It is considered the world’s most important measure of countries’ education levels, and measures student skills in science, math, and reading comprehension.
The world’s top PISA test performer in math this year was Singapore, followed by Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan, and Japan. The United States ranked in an embarrassing 40th place in math, although it did much better in science (25) and reading (24.)
Most Latin American countries with the exceptions of Buenos Aires in Argentina (42) and Chile (48) ranked at the bottom in math, including Mexico (56), Colombia (61), Peru (62), Brazil (65) and the Dominican Republic (70). Seventy per cent of students in Brazil and 91 per cent in the Dominican Republic lack basic skills in math, the study says.
What’s even worse, Cuba, Bolivia, Venezuela and Panama didn’t even have the courage to participate in the test, casting serious doubts about their educational standards. Cuba, in particular, claims to have a great education system, but its failure to participate in the PISA test raises serious questions about the island’s education statistics.
Argentina was not ranked as a country because former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner’s government did not comply with PISA testing standards.
I’m not surprised that Asian countries outperformed everybody else. One of the things that impressed me the most in Singapore, China and other Asian countries I visited is their national obsession with education, and the fact that there is a family culture of striving for academic excellence.
In Singapore and Beijing, I visited after-school private institutes that teach math, science and English, and I was amazed to see them packed with students until late into the night. It was 9 pm, and one could see teenage students sitting at their desks in the same school uniforms with which they had left home at 6.30 am.
What’s more, their parents and grandparents were sitting in the back of the classroom, killing time reading magazines while they waited for the class to be over to take their children home. When I interviewed these children and their parents, it became obvious that a sizable part of these and other Asian countries’ populations have a family culture of education: parents and grandparents invest much of their time and money in the education of their children.
The main ambition of many parents I met in Asia was for their children to get top grades, and be able to go to college in the United States or Britain.
Not surprisingly, more than 31 per cent of the more than 1 million foreign students in US colleges are from China, compared with 1.9 per cent from Brazil and 1.6 per cent from Mexico. Even tiny Vietnam and Taiwan have more students in US colleges than Brazil and Mexico, according to the New York-based Institute of International Education.
My opinion: It’s time for Latin America to make quality education — not just quantity education — a top priority.
And it’s something that should not be left up to the governments. Business people, media owners, and academics should — among other things — create big prizes for top students and launch massive campaigns to create a family culture of obsession with quality education, like non-government groups such as Brazil’s Todos pela Educacao and Mexico’s Mexicanos Primero are already doing.
The PISA tests should be a wakeup call for Latin America, and for the United States as well. Unless we improve our students’ academic level, we will fall farther behind.
Nina L Khrushcheva, the author of Imagining Nabokov: Russia Between Art and Politics and The Lost Khrushchev: A Journey into the Gulag of the Russian Mind, is Professor of International Affairs and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at The New School and a senior fellow at the World Policy Institute. confront three big questions. One, in a sense, is a take on a question that Trump raised about Clinton during the campaign: what happens if the FBI finds evidence of criminal conduct by the president? Or, perhaps more likely in Trump’s case, what happens if the president tries to shut down FBI investigations into his commercial activities involving Russia, or into the actions of cronies like Manafort?
The second question, which the US Senate should ask before confirming Tillerson as Secretary of State, concerns the extent of his and ExxonMobil’s financial interests in Russia. The Senate should also probe how closely Tillerson has cooperated with Igor Sechin, the chairman of Rosneft and a notorious ex-KGB operative, particularly in renationalizing much of the Russian oil industry and placing it under Sechin’s personal control. (Similar questions should be asked about Flynn, though, because the National Security Adviser doesn’t need to be confirmed by the Senate, little can be done about his appointment.)
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At the end of The Manchurian Candidate, another brainwashed character – Frank Sinatra’s Marco – escapes his programming to foil the communist plot. But that was Cold War Hollywood: of course the good guys won. Trump the movie is unlikely to end so well. © Project Syndicate