South Wales Evening Post

Pandemic postpones controvers­ial education standards tests

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CONTROVERS­IAL education tests looking at school standards across the world have been postponed thanks to Covid-19.

The Pisa rankings is often used to compare youngsters’ learning in different countries across the world - and Wales has often scored lower than other nations. In that last set of figures, Wales was ranked the lowest scoring UK nation in reading, maths and science for the fifth year in a row.

The Paris-based Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, which runs the tests, said member countries have decided to postpone the next two Pisa surveys in light of disruption caused by the pandemic.

Students will now take the test in 2022, not 2021, and the results will be published in December 2023. The following Pisa survey will then be published in 2026, not 2025.

The Program for Internatio­nal Student Assessment - known as the Pisa test - is widely seen as a gauge for how well Wales’s diverging education system is performing.

The two-hour test is usually taken every three years by 15-year-old pupils in participat­ing countries including the USA, China, most European

nations and all the UK nations.

After the 2016 results, the fourth time Wales had done worse than the other UK nations, the then First Minister Carwyn Jones said the results made for “uncomforta­ble reading”.

The latest results last December show 15 yearolds in Wales were still adrift of the other UK nations in reading, maths and science, although narrowing the gap.

Those results were an improvemen­t on previous years in all three areas and the performanc­e gap between pupils on free school meals and their better off peers also improved.

More than 3,165 pupils aged 15 sat the two hour tests in 107 schools across Wales last year, including 458 who took it in the Welsh language. They were among 600,000 students taking the test in 79 participat­ing countries across the globe.

Wales now ranks alongside countries like the Netherland­s, Austria and Switzerlan­d but below the average of developed nations (known as the OECD average) and the UK average. The best education systems in the world, as assessed by Pisa, are those of China’s major mainland cities Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang and as well as Singapore. Estonia, Canada, Finland and Ireland were the highest-performing OECD countries in reading.

A Welsh Government spokespers­on said: “Pisa is an important measure of education performanc­e in key subjects. In Wales we saw an improvemen­t in all three subjects in last year’s assessment­s, including best ever scores in reading and maths.

“The need to postpone Pisa is perfectly understand­able under the current circumstan­ces and we look forward to participat­ing once the assessment­s return.”

 ?? Picture: Bananastoc­k ?? Pisa surveys will be taken by 15-year-old students in 2022 instead of 2021.
Picture: Bananastoc­k Pisa surveys will be taken by 15-year-old students in 2022 instead of 2021.

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