India  ofcourse does not participate othewise would show that only 20-30 
graduate from high school - that is just a rough guess. Perhaps I am being too 
optimistic.

Any comments?

Umesh

"Fernando M. Reimers"  wrote:   Releases/11017.cfm
 Washington, DC, December 4, 2007 – The results of the 2006 Programme for 
International Student Assessments (PISA) were released this morning by the 
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), showing that 
15-year-old students in the  U.S. continue to perform, in science and 
mathematics, at levels that demonstrate conclusively that far too many are 
unprepared for the global economy. 
 The bottom line of the 2006 results is this: In relative terms, the U.S. 
ranked 25th among the 30 OECD member countries in mathematics, down from 23rd 
of 29 in the 2003 test, and 21st of 30 in science this year, dropping from 19th 
in 2003. That places the 15-year-olds in the United States below the OECD 
member country average in both subjects, not because students are scoring at 
lower levels on the tests, but because other countries, including Croatia, 
Estonia, and Azerbaijan are moving higher.  
 American policies following World War II promoted and supported participation 
in secondary and higher education; as a result, the United States currently has 
the largest supply of high-level skills in its  adult labor force of any 
country in the world. But other countries are rapidly catching up to or 
overtaking us, as they focus on improving their educational systems. OECD data 
from 2003 ranks the U.S. as 19th in high school graduation rates, below the 
OECD average. Other countries are sending larger proportions of their students 
to college, while the  U.S.' rate of students who do not complete a degree is 
growing. Vivien Stewart of the Asia Society notes, "As these latest PISA 
results show, the global talent pool is increasing. We urgently need to develop 
a globally oriented world-class educational system to prepare students in the  
U.S. with the knowledge and skills to succeed." 
 Putting it another way, the National Governors Association's Raymond C. 
Scheppach points out that "Our students' performance today is the best 
indicator of America's global competitiveness tomorrow. The United States faces 
emerging challenges across the international marketplace. The countries that 
thrive in this new global, entrepreneurial, and knowledge-based economy will be 
those that have the most highly skilled and educated workforce."  
 The Alliance for Excellent Education, Asia Society, Business Roundtable, 
Council of Chief State School Officers, ED in '08, and the National Governors 
Association joined to co-host a briefing on the PISA results to provide a 
unique opportunity for media, policymakers, educators, the business community, 
and other concerned citizens to join an important discussion focused on 
improving the performance of  U.S. students. Gene Wilhoit of the Council of 
Chief State School Officers explains that "The release of the 2006 PISA results 
is an important and worthwhile event. It provides all of us a unique 
opportunity to benchmark student learning in the United States with that of 
emerging and high performing countries, to learn from the progress of other 
nations, and to renew our commitment and search for ways to improve educational 
opportunity for all of our students."  
 Even the highest achieving U.S. students on the 2006 assessment were either at 
or below the OECD average. Nine percent of students in the U.S. tested in the 
top two levels of achievement in science (the OECD average) and almost 8 
percent were at those levels in math (below the OECD average of over 13 
percent). These higher achievers are the most likely candidates to pursue 
careers in the fields of science or mathematics.  
 However, almost a quarter of the U.S. students tested demonstrated very low 
proficiency in science, and 28 percent scored at below the minimum math level 
for citizens' to be able to participate fully in society and the labor market. 
In both subjects, the  U.S. has a far greater percentage of students at these 
very low proficiency levels than is the average for OECD member countries as a 
whole. 
 Business Roundtable President John J. Castellani, learning of the numbers of 
students in the lowest performance levels, and noting that about two-thirds of 
students in this country fall into the middle rankings in science and math, 
questions the lack of outrage that accompanies these test results: "It is 
difficult to understand why mediocre achievement by  U.S. teenagers on 
international math and science assessments produces less concern and outcry 
than mediocre performance by a football or basketball team. There is worldwide 
competition for people with strong backgrounds in math and science who have the 
analytic and problem-solving skills needed to create tomorrow's innovations. We 
need to take a serious look at what the  U.S. can learn from the education 
systems that routinely pass us by." 
 PISA is administered triennially to 15-year-olds in participating countries 
and economies through OECD, and it relies on the leading experts in 
participating countries to develop valid comparisons across countries and 
cultures. In 2006, 57 countries, making up close to 90 percent of the world 
economy, participated in the assessment. Many of those countries, although not 
the  U.S., implement PISA both at national and state or regional levels, to 
provide more information to policymakers that will assist them in making 
better-informed decisions about ways to improve student achievement. 
 Roy Romer, former governor of Colorado and superintendent of the Los Angeles 
Unified School District, now chairman of ED in '08, knows the importance of 
high-level leadership to improving the educational outcomes for students. 
"These results reaffirm that America's education system is in crisis and that 
there are lasting implications for our children, who are unprepared to enter an 
increasingly competitive global marketplace," he says. "They underscore the 
need for the presidential candidates to show bold leadership, free from 
ideological constraints and the influence of special interests, to bring 
America out of this crisis back to a level competitive with top-performing 
countries."  
 Former governor and congressman from West Virginia, Bob Wise, looks to 
policymakers and the public for many of the changes that must be made if 
America is to maintain its strong global and economic position. "The message 
from this international report for the  U.S. Congress and every state official 
is that much of the world is improving education much faster than we are. Being 
internationally mediocre in the Olympics means only a loss of national pride; 
mediocre in PISA forecasts a loss of skilled jobs for  U.S. citizens. These 
results should arouse the public and all elected leaders to learn PISA's 
lessons – all students must be given a true world class education where they 
graduate from high school truly prepared for college or the modern workplace. 
The current congressional deliberations about renewing No Child Left Behind 
must be the first – but not last – step to improve these international 
rankings."  
 
---------------------------------
  The Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) is a nationwide, nonprofit 
organization of public officials who head departments of elementary and 
secondary education in the states, the District of Columbia, the Department of 
Defense Education Activity, and five  U.S. extra-state jurisdictions. CCSSO 
provides leadership, advocacy, and technical assistance on major educational 
issues. The Council seeks members' consensus on major educational issues and 
expresses their views to civic and professional organizations, federal 
agencies, Congress, and the public. 
 The Alliance for Excellent Education is a national policy and advocacy 
organization that works to make every child a high school graduate - to prepare 
them for college, work, and to be contributing members of society. Founded in 
2001, the Alliance focuses on America's six million most at-risk secondary 
school students - those in the lowest achievement quartile - who are most 
likely to leave school without a diploma or to graduate unprepared for a 
productive future.  
 The Asia Society is the leading global organization working to strengthen 
relationships and promote understanding among the people, leaders, and 
institutions of Asia and the United States. We seek to enhance dialogue, 
encourage creative expression, and generate new ideas across the fields of 
policy, business, education, arts, and culture. 
 The Business Roundtable is committed to advocating public policies that ensure 
vigorous economic growth, a dynamic global economy, and the well-trained and 
productive  U.S. workforce essential for future competitiveness. Business 
Roundtable believes that its potential for effectiveness is based on the fact 
that it draws on CEOs directly and personally, and presents government with 
reasoned alternatives and positive suggestions. 
 The National Governors Association (NGA) is the collective voice of the 
nation's governors and one of Washington,  D.C.'s, most respected public policy 
organizations. NGA provides governors and their senior staff members with 
services that range from representing states on Capitol Hill and before the 
Administration on key federal issues to developing policy reports on innovative 
state programs and hosting networking seminars for state government executive 
branch officials.  

  
  
  
  
  
  

  


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Umesh Sharma

Washington D.C. 

1-202-215-4328 [Cell]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005

http://www.uknow.gse.harvard.edu/index.html (Edu info)

http://hbswk.hbs.edu/ (Management Info)




www.gse.harvard.edu/iep  (where the above 2 are used )
http://harvardscience.harvard.edu/



http://jaipurschool.bihu.in/
       
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