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What Are The Trends In U.S. PISA Scores?

Steve Sailer

12/03/2013

Scores for 65 countries (or "economies") are now out from the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA). How have scores in the U.S. changed since PISA got going in 2000?

From the federal NCES explorer tool for PISA scores:

Subject

2000

2003

2006

2009

2012

Mathematics

483

474

487

481

Science

489

502

497

Reading

504

495

?

500

498


Scores were down slightly in 2012 versus 2009, but they had been higher in 2009 than in preceding years (when, unfortunately, not all three subjects had been tested). Overall, 2012 scores look about the same as 21st Century scores in general, with no consistent trends visible in any subject.

So, that’s kind of boring. The reason I mention it is because PISA results usually lead to great wailing and gnashing of teeth about Decline, etc.

PISA tests are scored like SATs with 500 as the intended mean for wealthy OECD countries (it usually slips below that) and a standard deviation of 100. So a 400 is at the 16th percentile for the OECD and 600 at the 84th percentile.

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