PISA - Against the Odds: Disadvantaged Students Who Succeed in School

Executive summary | Table of contents
How to obtain this publication | Websites

 

 

ISBN: 9789264089952
Publication 11/07/2011

 

PISA - Against the Odds: Disadvantaged Students Who Succeed in School

Many socio-economically disadvantaged students excel in PISA. Students who succeed in school despite a disadvantaged background, known as resilient students, are the focus of Against the Odds. The book provides students, parents, policy makers and other stakeholders in education with insights into what enables socioeconomically disadvantaged students to fulfil their potential.
The more hours disadvantaged students spend learning science at school, the better equipped they are to close the performance gap with their more advantaged peers. Resilient students are also found to have positive approaches to learning, including an active interest in science and greater self-confidence. However, the evidence in PISA shows that positive approaches to learning tend to boost the performance of advantaged students more than that of disadvantaged young people. From an equity perspective, the PISA results suggest that policies aimed at fostering positive approaches to learning should target disadvantaged students more than others.


Executive summary

 

The proportion of disadvantaged students that are successful varies considerably across educational systems. In some education systems, like in Australia, Canada, Finland, Japan, Korea, New Zealand and Portugal close to half of disadvantaged students exceed an internationally comparable benchmark and can be considered successful from an international perspective.

A within-country perspective is best suited for analysing policies, school and student characteristics associated with student resilience. When looking at disadvantaged students that are succesful within countries, resilient students’ performance is high even when compared to their more advantaged peers. On average, most resilient students in OECD countries are strong performers, achieving proficiency Level 4 in the PISA science scale (which has 6 Levels). Students performing at Levels 5 and 6 are considered top performers. In partner countries and economies the vast majority of resilient students achieve at least Level 2, the baseline level, in the PISA science scale. Thus, it is possible to find disadvantaged students, who despite the odds against them, become resilient and succeed at school. These young people show that it is possible for disadvantaged students to excel in PISA.


 Table of contents

  • Chapter 1 PISA as a Study of Student Resilience.
  • Chapter 2 Defining and Characterising Student Resilience in PISA.
  • Chapter 3 A Profile of Student Resilience
  • Chapter 4 Closing the Gap? Enhancing the Performance of Socio-Economically Disadvantaged Students
  • Chapter 5 Conclusions and Policy Implications
  • Annexes

 


How to obtain this publication

Readers can access the full version of PISA - Against the Odds: Disadvantaged Students Who Succeed in School from the following options:


Websites

Top of page

Focus

Learning beyond Fifteen focuses on the development of reading proficiency between the ages of 15 and 24 using the results of a Canadian study that combines PISA data with a follow-up survey, the Youth in Transition Survey (YITS)

Learning Beyond Fifteen - 10 years after PISA

Focus

This book looks at the students who excel in PISA surveys despite a disadvantaged background.

Against the Odds: Disadvantaged Students Who Succeed in School

Focus

PISA 2009 Results presents the findings from the most recent PISA survey, which focused on reading and also assessed mathematics and science performance.

PISA 2009 Results

PISA 2009 Framework

Discover the theory behind the development of the tests for PISA 2009

PISA 2009 Assessment Framework - Key Competencies in Reading, Mathematics and Science