- In OECD countries, the average class size at the lower secondary level is 23 students, but there are significant differences between countries, ranging from over 32 in Japan and Korea to 19 or below in Estonia, Iceland, Luxembourg, Slovenia and the United Kingdom.
- Class size, together with students’ instruction time, teachers’ teaching time and teachers’ salaries, is one of the key variables that policy makers can use to control spending on education. Between 2000 and 2009, many countries invested additional resources to decrease class size; however, student performance has improved in only a few of them.
- Reducing class size is not, on its own, a sufficient policy lever to improve the performance of education systems, and is a less efficient measure than increasing the quality of teaching.
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
Policy brief12 March 202611 Pages
-
9 December 20258 Pages
-
Policy brief31 July 20258 Pages
-
12 March 20258 Pages
-
17 December 20247 Pages
-
Policy paper1 August 20244 Pages
-
12 March 20246 Pages
-
29 January 20246 Pages
Related publications
-
17 June 2025119 Pages
-
17 June 202579 Pages
-
Policy paper
An overview of practices, approaches, models, and strategies from OECD countries
24 November 202373 Pages -
12 September 2023476 Pages