By Steve Sailer
04/02/2014
The tireless PISA folks are back with the results of a test of math-related real world problem solving among 15 year olds in 44 upscale countries. (Check here for sample questions like how to find the quickest route on a map or how to adjust an air conditioner). The U.S. did not bad, scoring a little above the average for rich countries, but not as good as the Asians or the white countries with smart immigration policies (Canada, Australia, Finland).
OECD average | 500 |
Singapore | 562 |
Korea | 561 |
Japan | 552 |
Macao-China | 540 |
Hong Kong-China | 540 |
Shanghai-China | 536 |
Chinese Taipei | 534 |
Canada | 526 |
Australia | 523 |
Finland | 523 |
England (United Kingdom) | 517 |
Estonia | 515 |
France | 511 |
Netherlands | 511 |
Italy | 510 |
Czech Republic | 509 |
Germany | 509 |
United States | 508 |
Belgium | 508 |
Austria | 506 |
Norway | 503 |
Ireland | 498 |
Denmark | 497 |
Portugal | 494 |
Sweden | 491 |
Russian Federation | 489 |
Slovak Republic | 483 |
Poland | 481 |
Spain | 477 |
Slovenia | 476 |
Serbia | 473 |
Croatia | 466 |
Hungary | 459 |
Turkey | 454 |
Israel | 454 |
Chile | 448 |
Cyprus 1, 2 | 445 |
Brazil | 428 |
Malaysia | 422 |
United Arab Emirates | 411 |
Montenegro | 407 |
Uruguay | 403 |
Bulgaria | 402 |
Colombia | 399 |
Shanghai came down to earth after its stratospheric scores on the last two PISAs. Poland was also down v. its PISA scores. Otherwise, there would appear to be a fairly high degree of correlation at the national level between the triennial PISA test of book smarts and the new PISA test of real world smarts, which is what the g Factor theory of intelligence would predict.
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