Showing posts with label PISA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PISA. Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2012

Achieving World-Class Education in Brazil: The Next Agenda


Brazil has made great strides in basic education over the past 15 years and has set audacious national goals for attaining OECD levels of quality  by 2021.Basic education in Brazil historically has consisted of a fi rst cycle of eight grades (called primary education in this report and known as “fundamental education” in Brazil) and a second cycle of three grades (secondary education). In 2006, the country adopted legislation extending the length of compulsory schooling by one year and creating a nineyear primary cycle. The offi cial entry age to primary school was lowered from seven to six. The preschool cycle was correspondingly shortened to cover ages four through fi ve rather than four through six. Because the new system was not implemented until 2009, we use the old system throughout this report for consistency in comparing historical data, unless otherwise specified.

The 2009 results for the Program for International Student  Assessment (PISA), which measures high school student learning levels in more than 70 countries, confi rmed Brazil’s impressive progress in raising educational performance. Brazil’s 52-point increase in math since 2000 indicates that students have gained a full academic year of math mastery over the decade, and the country’s overall score increase—from 368 to 401—is the third largest on record. Brazil’s scores still trail the averages for OECD and East Asian countries, and are no grounds for complacency. But few countries have made faster or more sustained progress.

How did Brazil move from one of the worst performing education systems of any middle-income country to strong and sustained improvement not only in learning but also in primary and secondary school coverage? What are the prospects for Brazil to achieve its goal of student learning levels on par with the OECD average over the next decade? What more could be done to accelerate Brazil’s education advance? These are the three central questions of this report. 

We focus on basic education, which is the foundation in every country for all other progress in education. By telling the story of Brazil’s remarkable  run of policy continuity and sustained reform over the past fi fteen years, we hope this report can serve as a resource for other developing countries seeking rapid progress in education. By benchmarking Brazil’s current education performance in a competitive global context, we identify issues that still need attention. In reviewing the latest research from Brazil and elsewhere that can guide the design of sound reforms and cost-effective programs, we hope to stimulate and support the federal, state and municipal governments in setting the education agenda for the next decade. This report will succeed if it persuades a broad audience of Brazilian policy makers and citizens that the country is making impressive progress in education, but the agenda ahead is crucial. 

World Bank.Author: Bruns,Barbara; Evans,David;Luque, Javier. Document Date: 2011/01/01. Document Type: Publication. Report Number: 65659.

This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction  and Development / The World Bank. The fi ndings, interpretations, and conclusions  expressed in this volume do not necessarily refl ect the views of the Executive  Directors of The World Bank or the governments they represent.The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this  work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgement on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of  such boundaries.


For  information about Projects in Brazil see Brazil Projects
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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Brasil.São Paulo Integrated Program of Math Tutoring and Talent Recognition

Dismal average results on standardized test, such as PISA, Prova Brasil and SARESP, has opted the state of São Paulo to pursue quality enhancing mechanism in the form of math tutoring and talent recognition. State-run middle and high-schools in São Paulo have been targeted in this operation due to the significant need of improvement in quality of education.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Barbados.Training for the Future

The studies to be conducted include the following: a study of the existing teacher training and career system; technical assistance for the Caribbean Examination Council (CXC) to establish an action plan for participation in international assessments (such as PIRLS, TIMSS, PISA) for the entire region; creation of a demand-driven training system through the development of public-private partnerships including the design of a training program using sports as a mechanism to interest and retain young persons in school (¿a ganar¿ MIF project); and the implementation of a forward looking tracer study that will provide information about training and education to the Ministry of Labour.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

The measurement of educational inequality: achievement and opportunity

This paper proposes two related measures of educational inequality: one for educational achievement and another for educational opportunity. The former is the simple variance (or standard deviation) of test scores.

Its selection is informed by consideration of two measurement issues that have typically been overlooked in the literature: the implications of the standardization of test scores for inequality indices, and the possible sample selection biases arising from the Program of International Student Assessment (PISA) sampling frame.

The measure of inequality of educational opportunity is given by the share of the variance in test scores that is explained by pre-determined circumstances. Both measures are computed for the 57 countries in which PISA surveys were conducted in 2006.

Inequality of opportunity accounts for up to 35 percent of all disparities in educational achievement. It is greater in (most of) continental Europe and Latin America than in Asia, Scandinavia, and North America. It is uncorrelated with average educational achievement and only weakly negatively correlated with per capita gross domestic product. It correlates negatively with the share of spending in primary schooling, and positively with tracking in secondary schools.

Author:Ferreira,Francisco H. G.;Gignoux,Jeremie. Document Date: 2011/11/01.Document Type: Policy Research Working Paper.Report Number:WPS5873.Volume No:1 of 1

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