By Dan Conifer
Australia is losing to Kazakhstan in the latest global education report card.
The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) is conducted every four years and shows local students crashing further down the international leaderboard.
Since 2011, it shows Australia plunging from:
- 18th to 28th on Year 4 mathematics
- 12th to 17th for Year 8 maths
- 12th to 17th for Year 8 science
Australia is still in 25th place for Year 4 science results.
Kazakhstan — a Central Asian country well-known for the satirical film Borat and with a population smaller than ours — soared past Australia in all four categories.
TIMSS looks at the Year 4 results of 49 countries and Year 8 outcomes of 39 nations.
Federal Education Minister Simon Birmingham said being beaten by nations like Kazakhstan is a wake-up call.
“I don’t want to denigrate Kazakhstan, or indeed their artistic skills with movies like Borat,” Senator Birmingham said.
“I think though Australia should be seeking to be amongst the best in the world and declines like this are unacceptable and that we need to be working hard to turn it around.”
Pumping more money into schools ‘not the answer’
Other nations outperforming Australia across the board include England, the United States, Singapore, Chinese Taipei and Japan.
The Federal Government said TIMSS results have fallen since 2003 despite federal education funding climbing by almost 50 per cent