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Within and between school variation in Australian student achievement
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Within and between school variation in Australian student achievement

Research 4 minute read
Summary:

Analysis of data from PISA 2018 shows that most of the variation in student achievement is variation among students within their schools, rather than variation between schools.

A new ACER report explores between-school and within-school variation in the achievement of 15-year-olds students in Australia and other countries using data from the 2018 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) – the latest PISA cycle for which results are available.

Report authors John Ainley, Greg Macaskill and Sue Thomson note the extent that differences arise within or between schools are not necessarily an indication of the effects of school practices. Differences also reflect the effects of factors such as:

  • inequalities in income or wealth
  • the relative distribution of students between metropolitan, regional and remote locations,
  • demographic variations in populations
  • the proportions of students in government and non-government schools
  • whether school systems are comprehensive or selective.

PISA 2018, which focused on reading literacy, revealed a wider gap between the highest and lowest achieving students in Australia (359 points) compared to the OECD average (327 points).

According to the authors’ analysis, Australia’s variation in PISA 2018 reading performance arises more from within-school variation (explaining 82 per cent of the variation) than between-school variation (explaining the other 18 per cent). Australia’s between-school proportion of variance was lower than the OECD average (29 per cent) and similar to that of the United States, the United Kingdom, Poland and Estonia.

The largest between-school proportions of variance were found in education systems where entry to secondary school is based on measured performance (e.g. Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Greece and Japan). The smallest between-school proportions of variance were found in comprehensive school systems (e.g. Finland, Canada and Denmark).

The report also explores the extent to which the variation in Australian students’ attitudes to aspects of schooling, and their socioeconomic backgrounds, arise from differences within or between schools. The percentage of variance that was between schools on the student attitude domains that were analysed were very small. However, the between-school variance in student socioeconomic background was of a similar magnitude to those for reading achievement.

Ainley, Macaskill and Thomson say the results show that most of the variation in student achievement in PISA is variation among students within their schools, suggesting that initiatives to reduce achievement inequalities among Australian students will need to focus on differences within schools.

However, they also acknowledge the effect of socioeconomic background on achievement, and the importance of reducing disparities in the experiences of students in Australia’s most and least advantaged schools.

Read the full report:
Ainley, J., Macaskill, G., & Thomson, S. (2022). Within and Between School Variation in Achievement on the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) in Australia: PISA Australia Technical Paper. Australian Council for Educational Research. https://research.acer.edu.au/ozpisa/54

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