The National - News

How UAE schools fare in internatio­nal rankings

- DANIEL SANDERSON

The UAE has maintained a stable position in global education rankings, with performanc­e in maths improving but progress “flat” in reading and science.

The latest edition of Pisa scores – run by the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t and published every three years – show that the nation’s 15 year olds, and those across the Middle East, are continuing to be outperform­ed by their peers in other developed countries.

The UAE achieved better results than most other Middle East nations with pupils assessed last year achieving average scores of 435, in maths, an increase of 7.5 points compared to 2015.

The UAE scored 432 in reading, a drop of 1.8, and 434 in science, a fall of 3.1.

These compare to OECD averages of 489 in maths and science, and 487 in reading.

The UAE outperform­ed Jordan, Lebanon, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, which took part in the Pisa scoring system for the first time, across all three subjects. But all Middle East countries performed below the OECD average in all three subjects.

In terms of where the UAE sits internatio­nally, the country fell from 47th to 50th place in maths, despite increasing its score in the subject. In reading, it improved its ranking by two places, to 46th, and in science it fell from 46th to 49th. The UAE government said it aims to be among the top 20 countries or Pisa scores by 2021, when the next assessment­s will take place.

To meet the target, there will have to be rapid progress, with the OECD report categorisi­ng the UAE’s overall trajectory as “stable” in all three subjects over the last decade.

“In mathematic­s, we are seeing the continuati­on of a positive trend, here the UAE is broadly on track of achieving its ambitious performanc­e targets,” said Andreas Schleicher, director for education and skills at the OECD.

“In reading and science, outcomes have remained flat and the UAE needs to reinforce its efforts.

“In particular, students have great difficulty with reading complex digital informatio­n, where they have to navigate complexity and ambiguity, discern fact from opinion, or develop their own critical stance.”

Overall, the rankings were dominated by China and Singapore.

Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang, which were assessed together, scored 555 in reading, 591 in maths and 590 in science.

Pupils in Singapore achieved average scores of 549, 569 and 551 respective­ly.

Macao, Hong Kong and Chinese Taipei also far exceeded the OECD average.

Other nations that performed strongly included Estonia, Canada, Finland, Ireland and Korea, which achieved above average scores in all three subjects.

In total, about 600,000 pupils, from 79 countries and territorie­s, were assessed last year.

In the UAE, 19,277 pupils took part in the assessment­s. Pisa includes public and private schools and is designed to include a representa­tive sample of the school population.

Performanc­e in the UAE in reading was similar to that of pupils in Romania, Serbia, Uruguay and Costa Rica, the report said. In maths, countries achieving similar results included Albania and Malaysia while in science, comparable countries included Jordan and Moldova.

The UAE’s steady performanc­e overall masked a widening disparity between the top and lowest-performing pupils, the report said, with stronger results among the most able being compensate­d for by drops among the least able.

Difference­s in learning outcomes among 15 year olds are “highly unequal” in the UAE, the report said, with Israel, Lebanon, Malta and other countries experienci­ng the same phenomenon.

Concern has previously been raised over standards in UAE schools that charge the lowest fees, which can struggle to attract staff. Rules mean that poorly performing schools have fee increases capped, leading some to claim this science leaves them stuck in a “vicious circle” in which they are unable to raise the funds to make improvemen­ts.

Since 2009, the brightest UAE pupils have improved by 8.9 points in reading, 10 in maths and 3 in science, between 2009, the first time the country took part in Pisa, and last year.

Meanwhile, performanc­e among the lowest-performing pupils dropped by 8.1 in reading, 3.7 in maths and 6.5 in science over the same period.

The UAE was cited as one of the countries where a widening attainment gap was of particular concern.

“It remains necessary for many countries to promote equity with much greater urgency,” Jose Angel Gurría, the OECD Secretary-General, wrote in the report.

“While students from well-off families will often find a path to success in life, those from disadvanta­ged families have generally only one single chance in life, and that is a great teacher and a good school.

“If they miss that boat, subsequent education opportunit­ies will tend to reinforce, rather than mitigate, initial difference­s in learning outcomes.

“Against this background, it is disappoint­ing that in many countries a student’s or school’s post code remains the strongest predictor of their achievemen­t.

“In Argentina, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Peru, the Slovak Republic and the United Arab Emirates, a typical disadvanta­ged student has less than a one-in-eight chance of attending the same school as high achievers.”

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 ?? Delores Johnson / The National ?? A maths teacher instructs pupils at a school in Al Ain. The UAE government said it aims to be in the top 20 countries for Pisa scores by the next assessment in 2021
Delores Johnson / The National A maths teacher instructs pupils at a school in Al Ain. The UAE government said it aims to be in the top 20 countries for Pisa scores by the next assessment in 2021
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