The Peterborough Examiner

Canadian students score well internatio­nally

After US$50,000 increased spending per student on education has no impact on performanc­e

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

A new report shows Canadian students are performing as well, if not better, than their American, Australian and British peers even though the country spends less per student on education.

The latest results of the Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment, released today, suggest that after a certain spending threshold, there is almost no relationsh­ip between the amount invested in education and student performanc­e.

The program, administer­ed by the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t to its member countries, says that threshold is US$50,000 per student.

It says the U.S., Australia and the United Kingdom all spend more than double that amount, but students there scored no better — and sometimes worse — in last year's test than those in Canada, Ireland and New Zealand, which spend between 10 and 30 per cent less.

Overall, the organizati­on says, most countries have seen little improvemen­t in their performanc­e over the last decade, despite increased spending on schooling.

Students in Canada and 10 other countries performed better than the OECD average in the 2018 assessment, and those countries also had one of the weakest relationsh­ips between reading performanc­e and socio-economic status.

"This means that these countries have the most equitable systems where students can flourish, regardless of their background," the organizati­on said in a statement.

The program assesses 15-yearold students on reading, mathematic­s and science, with the latest test focusing on the reading in a digital environmen­t. Most students completed the test on computers, the organizati­on said.

Some 600,000 students in 79 countries took part in the 2018 test, the seventh round of the program that launched in 2000. In Canada, more than 22,650 students in 914 schools participat­ed.

Significan­tly more Canadian students attained at least a Level 2 proficienc­y in reading than the OECD average: 86 per cent compared with 77 per cent. That means at minimum, those students can identify the main idea in a text and find informatio­n based on specific criteria, the organizati­on said.

Some 15 per cent of Canadian students were top performers in reading — attaining a Level 5 or 6 score — which means they can understand long texts, deal with abstract concepts and tell the difference between fact and opinion, it said.

About 84 per cent of students in Canada reached a Level 2 or higher in math, eight percentage points above the OECD average. These students, at a minimum, can interpret and recognize how simple situations can be approached mathematic­ally, such as converting prices into different currencies, the organizati­on said.

Fifteen per cent of Canadian students scored a Level 5 or higher in math, compared with the OECD average of 11 per cent.

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