TranceAddict Forums

TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Political Discussion / Debate
-- UNICEF ranks countries on academics


Posted by dEsidEL on Nov-26-2002 22:48:

KarateKid UNICEF ranks countries on academics

just thought this article might be appropriate for this room .. let's just remember that this article doesn't list which countries are the richest. comments? thoughts?

http://www.cnn.com/2002/EDUCATION/1...reut/index.html



UNICEF ranks countries on academics

GENEVA, Switzerland (Reuters) --Students in South Korea and Japan scored highest in academic surveys comparing 24 industrialized countries, with teenagers in southern Europe lagging in both reading and maths, the United Nations said Tuesday.

Finland and Canada came third and fourth in the table compiled by the U.N. Children's Fund, known as UNICEF, while Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal held the lowest overall rankings.

The report, issued by UNICEF's Innocenti Research Center in Florence, Italy, is based on results from three surveys testing 14- and 15-year-old's literacy and ability to apply essential maths and science.

"A child starting school in Canada, Finland, or (South) Korea ... has both a higher probability of reaching a given level of educational achievement and a lower probability of falling well below the average," UNICEF said.

"The United Kingdom, where hand-wringing over educational failures is a national pastime, fares better than all other countries in the European Union except Finland and Austria."

Britain ranked seventh overall, followed by France at 12, the United States at 18 and Germany at 19, the agency said.

The report examined performance in 24 member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, whose 30 members account for most of the world's wealth.

"The 'big picture' shows that some OECD countries are consistently performing better than others when it comes to educating and equipping their young people for life in the 21st century ..." it said.

"In all countries under review, a strong predictor of a child's success or failure at school is the economic and occupational status of the child's parents," it added.

COUNTRY RANKINGS
Percent of 15-year-olds falling below international benchmarks:

1. South Korea 1.4
2. Japan 2.2
3. Finland 4.4
4. Canada 5.0
5. Australia 6.2
6. Austria 8.2
7. Britain 9.4
8. Ireland 10.2
9. Sweden 10.8
10. Czech Republic 12.2
11. New Zealand 12.2
12. France 12.6
13. Switzerland 13.0
14. Belgium 14.0
15. Iceland 14.0
16. Hungary 14.2
17. Norway 14.2
18. United States 16.2
19. Germany 17.0
20. Denmark 17.0
21. Spain 18.6
22. Italy 20.2
23. Greece 23.2
24. Portugal 23.6
Source: UNICEF


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 2002 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Posted by webmeister on Nov-27-2002 12:09:

Hmm interesting .. I wonder exactly what the kids were tested on? And I wonder how differences in languages were accounted for?

I'd be interested to see more data from this survey, boys vs girls, public vs private schools etc etc

Good food for thought I guess - and surprising to see Australia so high up


Posted by dr me on Nov-27-2002 15:56:

quote:
Originally posted by webmeister
...and surprising to see Australia so high up


this includes the aboriginal children. this must mean that metropolitan schools are doing a good job!

after watching some educational documentaries on tv, i can see that the next generation are going to be very well informed (less ignorant idiots)


Posted by zarathustra on Nov-27-2002 23:11:

Holy crap, the numbers just surge near the bottom of the list.

In Portugal nearly 1/4 of 15 yr olds fell under the benchmarks. This shows that there is still much disparity. Even between "developped" countries.



Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.