The TIMSS 2019 eighth grade mathematics assessment was based on a comprehensive assessment framework developed collaboratively with the participating countries to reflect their curricular goals. The eighth grade mathematics assessment included four content areas—number (30%), algebra (30%), geometry (20%), and data and probability (20%). In accordance with the framework, the majority of TIMSS 2019 mathematics items assess students’ applying and reasoning skills. To cover the framework at the eighth grade, the TIMSS 2019 mathematics assessment comprised 211 assessment items.
This cycle marked the beginning of the transition to a computer-based assessment system. More than half of the TIMSS 2019 countries administered the assessment in an “e” (electronic) format and almost half administered the assessment in a paper format, as in TIMSS 2015. The “e” countries also administered the trend items in the paper format to provide a bridge to the TIMSS 2015 and TIMSS 2019 paper-based assessments. The assessment was carefully designed and analyzed, so that the TIMSS 2019 mathematics achievement results for all 39 countries are reported on the same TIMSS eighth grade mathematics scale.
Exhibit 3.1 presents the average achievement at the eighth grade for each participating country from highest to lowest together with the scale score distribution. Exhibit 3.2 shows whether relatively small differences in average achievement between one country and the next are statistically significant.
The five East Asian countries had the highest average achievement, with Singapore, Chinese Taipei, and Korea performing similarly and having higher average achievement than all of the other TIMSS 2019 countries. These three countries were followed by Japan, whose eighth grade students had higher average achievement than students in all of the other countries except those three countries, and then by Hong Kong SAR, whose students had higher average achievement than students in all of the other countries except those four countries. In turn, the Russian Federation had higher achievement than all of the other remaining countries. Next, Ireland, Lithuania, Israel, Australia, Hungary, the United States, and England also performed well. Essentially, Exhibit 3.2 shows clusters of several similarly performing countries, followed by the next highest achieving clusters of similarly performing countries, and so on.
A number of eighth grade TIMSS 2019 participants performed well. Fourteen countries (including those discussed above) had higher average achievement than the centerpoint of 500 (Exhibit 3.1), which is a point of reference on the TIMSS eighth grade mathematics scale that remains constant from TIMSS assessment to TIMSS assessment. However, there was a considerable difference between the highest average achievement and the lowest. Also, the scale score distributions in Exhibit 3.1 show that there is wide variation in achievement in every country. Every country has some higher achieving and some lower achieving students.
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