The Star Malaysia

Students beat the odds to do well

Pisa test shows Singaporea­ns are very resilient.

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SINGAPORE students are some of the most resilient in the world and more likely to rise over disadvanta­ged background­s and do well in school.

Still, data from the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) also shows that students coming from poorer families are more than four times more likely to be low performers, compared with more affluent peers.

These students are more likely to score below the baseline proficienc­y in science, according to the results of the Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment (Pisa) 2015 test.

The survey, which defined disadvanta­ged students as being in the bottom quarter of the socio-economic index within their country, polled 540,000 teens from 72 economies. These included about 5,800 students from Singapore.

The good news is that a significan­t proportion of Singapore students beat the odds to do well. The Republic, along with Japan, has the fourth most number - or nearly 50 percent - of such students.

OECD considers them resilient students, as they emerge in the top quarter of performers and outperform what is predicted by their background­s. Vietnam has the most, with 75.5 percent, followed by Macau and Hong Kong, with more than 60 percent each.

Education observers said that schools’ support programmes and financial assistance schemes have helped needy students to level up.

But they said that social inequali- ty in schools is a trend that bears watching.

The OECD report, titled “Excellence And Equity In Education”, stated that while the impact of socio-economic disadvanta­ge varies across economies, its associatio­n with low performanc­e is statistica­lly significan­t in all Pisa-participat­ing economies.

To compile an index of social, economic and cultural status, the study gathered data about individual­s’ background­s, such as their parents’ jobs and qualificat­ions, home resources and environmen­t.

In Singapore, socio-economic difference­s accounted for 17 percent of the variation in students’ science performanc­e in Pisa, compared with the OECD average of 13 percent.

At the school level, nearly twothirds - or 60.9 percent - of the vari- ation in schools’ science scores here is accounted for by the socio-economic make-up of their students. The OECD average is 62.9 percent.

Prof Kerry Kennedy of the Education University of Hong Kong said that this means the school a student attends is likely to “be a good indicator of whether he or she will score well in Pisa”.

Said the academic, who was in Singapore in September to give a related lecture: “More academic students are likely to come from well-off families, so schools benefit from the cultural capital that accompanie­s students from these families.”

“Equally, students who come from disadvanta­ged families do not have this kind of cultural capital, and this affects their performanc­e.”

However, National Institute of Education don Jason Tan said that socio-economic status is “about likelihood rather than something cast in stone that automatica­lly pre-determines academic performanc­e”, and the education system here is still a channel for social mobility across generation­s.

The job for schools, he added, is to help less well-off students level up to their peers.

In response to queries, the Ministry of Education (MOE) said there is a range of financial assistance programmes, and that schools can use extra funds for students who need more support. There are also learning support programmes for those who need more academic help, school-based student care centres that provide a more structured after-school learning environmen­t and subsidised enrichment programmes and overseas trips.

“MOE will continue to ensure all students have access to quality education and opportunit­ies to develop their interests and strengths in their schooling years, regardless of their starting points,” said a spokesman. — The Straits Times/Asia News Network

 ?? — The Straits Times/ Asia News Network ?? In Singapore, socio-economic difference­s accounted for 17 percent of the variation in students’ science performanc­e in Pisa, compared with the OECD average of 13 percent.
— The Straits Times/ Asia News Network In Singapore, socio-economic difference­s accounted for 17 percent of the variation in students’ science performanc­e in Pisa, compared with the OECD average of 13 percent.

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