The Province

Canadian students doing well, but concerns exist

- DEREK ALLISON Derek Allison is a professor emeritus of education at the University of Western Ontario and a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute.

Canada’s 15-year-old students continue to do well on the gold standard of academic testing, but with some concerns.

The Programme for Internatio­nal Student Achievemen­t (PISA) has randomly tested students worldwide every three years since 2000. It recently released results from reading, math and science tests completed by some half-a-million students in 79 countries in 2018.

As in previous cycles, Canadian students did very well in reading, with an average score of 520 points, compared to the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) average of 487 points. That was good for sixth place overall, in a tie with Hong Kong, Estonia, Finland, Ireland and Korea. Students in Beijing-Shanghai-Jiangsu-Zhejiang (or B-S-J-Z, a region in eastern China) achieved the highest average reading score of 555, statistica­lly similar to Singapore’s average of 549, but significan­tly higher than third-place score of 525 by Macau.

In science, Canadian students placed eighth overall (again, out of 79 countries) with an average of 518, statistica­lly indistingu­ishable from Finland, Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan, but significan­tly below Singapore and first-place B-S-J-Z (China), with its stunning score of 590.

Canada’s lowest average score was in math — 12th overall with a score of 512, tied with Poland, Switzerlan­d, Denmark, Slovenia, Belgium and Finland. Nine jurisdicti­ons, including the Netherland­s, Estonia and those with the highest scores in reading and science, had significan­tly higher math scores than Canada.

Globally, the most striking result is China’s ascendancy to the pole position, with all four of the Chinese jurisdicti­ons placing in the top five places in math, three in reading and two in science. Singapore, the highest-scoring country in all three subjects in the previous PISA report in 2015, was relegated to second place in 2018.

Neither China nor Singapore are OECD members, which means these five school systems significan­tly outperform­ed almost every OECD country. As a result, Canada placed among the top five OECD economies in each subject.

More pointedly, Canada was the highest-scoring G7 country in reading (significan­tly outperform­ing the United States and the United Kingdom) and the second-highest G7 country after Japan in science and math.

Despite these excellent results, Canadians shouldn’t be complacent. From 2015 to 2018, scores fell in all three subjects. More worrisome are the statistica­lly significan­t declines in science (since 2006) and math scores (since 2003). PISA characteri­zes these declines as “steadily negative,” which is a clear cause for concern.

If we lift the hood to look at provincial performanc­e, there is both good news and more cause for concern.

Among the big four provinces, students in Alberta (532) and Ontario (524) had significan­tly higher reading scores than their counterpar­ts in British Columbia and Quebec, who were tied with average scores of 519.

As in previous cycles, Quebec significan­tly outperform­ed all other provinces in math with a score of 533, which was also the highest average score among OECD systems.

With a science score of 534, Alberta also outperform­ed all OECD countries and all other provinces.

Saskatchew­an and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador both improved their performanc­e in all three subjects from 2015 to 2018, as did Ontario in math. But scores in every other province declined. In fact, in B.C. the drop in all three subjects was significan­t.

Clearly there is much to celebrate in the latest PISA report. But there are also some warning signs that parents, educators and policy-makers should take seriously.

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