WASHINGTON - Ãâ Despite near-continuous innovation in most fields, the way America educates its young people has changed very little since the Industrial Revolution. And new international data show that Industrial-Age schools Ãâ schools designed to prepare a handful of students for college, but most for jobs in factories, mills, and the like Ãâ simply arenÃât preparing students for a Digital-Age world. At a time when low-income students and students of color together represent the majority in AmericaÃâs public schools, they are being outpaced and outperformed by students from most of the developed world. ThatÃâs certainly not good for them. But it isnÃât good for our country as a whole, either.
In 2009, the United States was among 34 developed countries that participated in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA). On that exam, our nation has improved in math and science since 2006. But despite those improvements, our students are Ãâ at best Ãâ still in the middle of the global pack at a time when education plays a decisive role in the success of our young people and the strength of our economy.
According to the new PISA data released earlier this week, American high schoolers now rank 12th in reading, 17th in science, and 25th in mathematics. Yet despite that seemingly higher rank in reading, only about one-third of 15-year-olds in the United States meet reading benchmarks that indicate readiness for higher level work.
These results reveal the Ãâbrutal truthÃâ about our education system, as U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan observed this week: American students are ill-prepared for the demands they will face after high school.
ÃâWe must do better by our students to ensure that we close the international achievement gap between the United States and leading nations,Ãâ said Kati Haycock, president of The Education Trust. ÃâBut weÃâll never regain our global edge without closing the domestic gaps that separate low-income students and students of color from their peers within our own borders. Unfortunately, where America ranks high is in inequality.Ãâ
Many of the countries at the top of the performance rankings Ãâ Canada, Finland, and Korea, for example Ãâ rank noticeably at the bottom of the list measuring the size of socioeconomic-status (SES) gaps. On the other hand, the United States has the fifth largest gap in reading between low-SES students and their high-SES classmates. In reading, for example, students attending our high-poverty high schools performed 19 percent below those from higher income schools.
But large disparities in socioeconomics donÃât fully explain our middling performance: Our low-SES students are less likely to be among their nationÃâs high-performing students than low-SES students in other countries. Students in New Zealand, for example, are Ãâ on average Ãâ of lower socioeconomic status than are U.S. students, but they far outperform us. In fact, according to OECD, the United States would actually end up with a lower ranking on PISAÃâs reading assessment if all 34 developed countries had the same average socioeconomic status.
On average, our white and Asian students actually perform about as well in reading, math, and science as the average student in high-performing countries like Canada and Japan. But consider these startling parallels:
ÃâThereÃâs no question that we as a nation are capable of ensuring that all kids get the kind of rigorous education they need to succeed after high school,Ãâ said Haycock. ÃâWhether you are focused on the health of our economy or the health of our democracy, these results make very clear that AmericaÃâs young people need to learn more in school. How we respond to and act on these new findings, however, will say a lot about our own beliefs and commitments.Ãâ