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  • Dismal scores

    Dismal scores

    Malaya (The Philippines)
    January 14, 2005

    By Ellen Tordesillas ([email protected])

    Dean Jorge Bocobo shared with us the results of the third Trends in
    International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) conducted in 2003
    and released last December.

    The good news: Asian countries dominate in student math and science
    achievement.

    The bad news: The Philippines is not one of those Asian countries at the
    top. We are, in fact, in the bottom five.

    The official TIMSS release said Singapore students were among the top
    performers in both mathematics and science at the fourth and eighth
    grade levels. Students from the Republic of Korea, Chinese Taipei and
    Hong Kong also performed very well across the two subject areas.

    "Specifically, in mathe-matics, at both the eighth and fourth grades,
    Singapore was the top performing country, having significantly higher
    average achievement than the rest of the participating countries.

    "At the eighth grade, the Republic of Korea, Hong Kong and Chinese
    Taipei also had significantly higher achieve-ment than other
    participating countries. At the fourth grade, Hong Kong, Japan and
    Chinese Taipei outperformed the rest of the countries.

    "In science, at the eighth grade, Singapore and Chinese Taipei were the
    top performing countries, having significantly higher average
    achievement than the rest of the participating countries. The Republic
    of Korea and Hong Kong also performed very well.

    "At the fourth grade, Singapore was the top-performing country with
    higher average science achievement than all other participating
    countries. Chinese Taipei, Japan, Hong Kong and England out-performed
    the rest of the countries surveyed."

    In both mathematics and science, grade eight, the Philippines shares the
    bottom with Botswana, Saudi Arabia, Ghana, and South Africa. At the
    fourth grade, the Philippines is in the lowest three with Morocco and
    Tunisia.

    But there is one interesting finding in the study where the Philippines
    figured positively. Under "gender differences in achievement", the
    results showed in mathematics that gender difference was negligible.
    "However, girls had significantly higher achievement than boys in
    Serbia, Republic of Macedonia, Armenia, Moldova, Philippines, Cyprus,
    Jordan and Bahrain."

    In science, fourth grade level, the average gender difference in
    achievement was negligible "although girls had significantly higher
    average achievement in Armenia, Moldova, the Philippines and Islamic
    Republic of Iran."

    What is TIMSS? It's the most recent in a very ambitious series of
    international assessments conducted in nearly 50 countries to measure
    trends in mathematics and science learning.

    TIMSS, aims to improve the teaching and learning of mathematics and
    science by providing data about students' achievements in relation to
    different types of curricula, instructional practices, and school
    improvements.

    TIMSS is a project of the International Association for the Evaluation
    of International Achievement (IEA), an independent international
    cooperative of national research institutions and government agencies
    that has been conducting studies of cross-national achievement since 1959.

    Conducted first in 1995 and then in 1999, the regular four-year cycle of
    TIMSS studies provides countries with an unprecedented opportunity to
    obtain comparative infor-mation about their students' achievement in
    mathematics and science.

    More than 360,000 students in 49 countries participated in TIMSS 2003.

    TIMSS is major under-taking of the IEA, together with Progress in
    International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) developed to assess
    students' reading achievement at fourth grade. The TIMSS and PIRLS
    International Study Center at Boston College had overall direction of
    the project.

    The test touched on home and school environment and the findings were:

    *Across subject area and grade level, higher levels of parents'
    education were associated with higher student achievement in almost all
    countries. Also students expecting to finish university had
    substantially greater average mathematics and science achievement.

    *Students from homes where the language of the test was always or almost
    always spoken had higher average achievement than those who spoke it
    less frequently.

    *There was a clear relationship between the number of books at home and
    achievement.

    *Achievement was positively related to computer use.

    *Students with higher achievement attended schools with positive
    climates for learning, with fewer students from disadvantaged homes,
    where teachers and students felt safe.


    http://www.malaya.com.ph/jan14/edtorde.htm
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