B.C. students earn high marks in international education study - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. students earn high marks in international education study

Canadian high school students are no slouches and B.C. students rank as some of the best educated in the country and the world, according to a new international education study.

B.C. achieved higher average scores ... placing them among the top-performing participants globally

B.C. students scored high in science, reading and math in the 2015 OECD international education performance study (OECD)

Canadianhigh school students are no slouches and B.C. students rankas some of the best educated in the country and the world according to a new international education study.

In the latest Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)international student assessment study,Canada and Finland are tied for fourth overall, behind only Japan, Estonia and Singapore.

The study is based on the test scoresof over half a million 15 year-olds from 72 countries. It primarily measures science proficiency, with a lesser focus on math andreading.

In science, B.C. students scoredabove the national average when brokendown province by province.

A close up of students writing exams at desks
In science, reading and math, B.C. students scored above the national average, when broken down province by province. (Getty Images)

"From a Canadian perspective, students in Quebec, Alberta, and British Columbia achieved higher average scores than the Canadian average, placing them among the top-performing participants globally," reads the study summary.

Nosignificant difference was detected between the performance of boys and girls in the province, nor in the performance of students in the francophoneversus the anglophone school system in B.C.

B.C. students ranked the highest in the country in reading literacy and second highest in mathematics, although the sample size was smaller and fewer questions were asked in both those subjects compared to the science assessment.

More than 20,000 students from approximately 900 schools across10 Canadian provinces participated in the assessment.