Remarks to the Republican Governor's Conference, Miami
November 21, 1997

 

Data from the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) show US eighth graders performance in mathematics and science to be mediocre and disappointing. We are slightly above the international mean in science and below it in mathematics - but in both cases we are in the middle. Performance in mathematics is the most disappointing as our students significantly outperform the children in only 7 countries. These countries are not our major trading partners. They are Iran, Kuwait, Colombia, South Africa, Cyprus, Portugal and Lithuania.

In today's global economy these results suggest our eighth graders are at risk. As they become adults, they will compete not only with each other in the labor market they also will compete with the children of the rest of the world.

However, results from the fourth grade TIMSS assessment suggest that we do not begin behind the children of the rest of the world, but we fall behind them during the middle school years. At fourth grade we are above the international mean in both mathematics and science. In science, we come close to the goals set by the nations governors to be number 1 in mathematics and science by the year 2000. Our fourth graders are outperformed in science only by the Koreans. Yet in eighth grade our students are only mediocre.

The key policy implications that follow from these results center on understanding the relatively weak US performance at eighth grade compared to other countries and understanding the precipitous drop in performance from the fourth grade to the eighth grade.

Differences in achievement across nations appears to be related to the specific topics different countries choose to emphasize in their curriculum. Emphasizing different topics amounts to different visions of what is important in mathematics and science. The key to understanding US performance is related to our nation's lack of an intellectually coherent vision of what we want our children to know in mathematics and science. No such vision dominates practice in the United States. In this respect we differ from all of the top achieving countries and from most of the nations that participated in TIMSS.

Not having such a coherent vision at its core, the US educational system exhibits several distinctive features which are related to educational achievement. These features include:

Given an extensive curriculum analysis of 1500 frameworks and textbooks written in 30 languages from 48 countries and videotapes of actual classroom instruction in 3 countries, much has been learned that helps us understand the US performance in a world context. Three categories of recommendations follow which report the major policy implications of what we have learned from TIMSS thus far.

Curriculum Policy Issues 

Policy Issues Summary: Access to Learning   
Structural Policy Issues   The message of TIMSS is simple and straightforward. Schools make a difference.

What we teach - the curriculum - and how we bring that content to children is critical and represents the primary route to improving mathematics and science performance.