Search for specific education indicators by country, theme or level of education and compare the results using interactive charts and tables.
Base Theme
PISA 2022 Results (Volume I): The State of Learning and Equity in Education |
PISA 2022 Results (Volume II): Learning During - and From - Disruption |
PISA 2022 Results (Volume III): Creative Minds, Creative Schools |
PISA 2018 Results (Volume IV): Are Students Smart About Money? |
PISA 2018 Results (Volume VI): Are Students Ready to Thrive in an Interconnected World? |
PISA 2018: Are Students Ready To Take On Environmental Challenges? |
Education at a Glance 2024 (EAG 2024): Highlights |
EAG 2024, Chapter A: The output of educational institutions and the impact of learning |
EAG 2024, Chapter B: Access to education, participation and progression |
EAG 2024, Chapter C: Financial resources invested in education |
EAG 2024, Chapter D: Teachers, learning environment and organisation of schools |
Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC) |
TALIS 2018: Highlight indicators |
TALIS 2018 (Volume I): Teachers and School Leaders as Lifelong Learners |
TALIS 2018 (Volume II): Teachers and School Leaders as Valued Professionals |
TALIS 2018 (results for primary and upper secondary) |
TALIS 2018: Starting Strong Survey |
Skills |
Low performers |
Computers, education & skills |
Collaborative Problem Solving |
Access & participation |
Student mobility |
Education attainment |
Education system & governance |
Financing education |
Learning environment |
Students' well-being |
Equity |
Gender |
Digital divide |
Special needs |
Socio-economic status |
Migrant background |
Economic & social outcomes |
Teachers & educators |
Education leadership |
Evaluation & quality assurance |
Future of education and skills |
Research & innovation |
Early childhood education & care |
Vocational education & training (VET) |
Tertiary education |
Impact of COVID-19 in education |
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Upper secondary vocational education, sufficient for level completion, without direct access to tertiary education |
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Master's long first degree (LFD) degree |
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15 year-olds |
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Youths |
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All ages and age unknown |
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PISA 2018: Are Students Ready To Take On Environmental Challenges?
How prepared are students to take on environmental challenges? In a climate-changing world, readiness means having the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and values to take action on rising carbon emissions, diminishing biodiversity and other environmental degradation. This report posits that proficiency in science, particularly on environmental and sustainability issues, is a facet of this readiness as are young people's awareness of climate-change dynamics; confidence that they understand them, sense of responsibility about the state of the planet; and taking action to protect it.
About half of students are "environmentally enthusiastic", i.e. they displayed the three pro-environmental attitudes on average across countries/economies. By contrast, about 6% of students are "environmentally indifferent", i.e. do not display any of the pro-environmental attitudes. Among these attitudes, almost four in five students displayed environmental sense-of-purpose (i.e. looking after the global environment is important to them); some three out of four students displayed environmental awareness (i.e. they know something about or are very familiar with climate change); and three out of five students displayed self-efficacy in environmental understanding (i.e. they could explain how carbon-dioxide emissions affect global climate change) on average across countries and economies. Students with at least a base proficiency in science are, on average, almost three times more likely to gather the three pro-environmental attitudes definining them as environmentally enthusiastic, compared to low performer students and after accounting for student and school characteristics. The likelihood of being an environmentally enthusiastic student is, on average, greater among students who come from socio-economically advantaged families, among girls and among students who are proficient in science. On average across countries/economies, some two-thirds of students reported that they reduce energy consumption at home to protect the environment; a little less than half of students choose certain products for environmental or ethical reasons even if they are more expensive; some 44% of students participate in activities in favour of environmental protection; a bit more than a quarter of students boycott products or companies for environmental or other reasons; and a similar share sign environmental or social petitions online. Students are more likely to take action for the environment when they have pro-environmental attitudes, on average across countries/economies. Environmental sense-of-purpose is particularly strongly related to the environmental actions examined in this report. Reducing energy consumption at home to protect the environment is the only attitude positively related to science achievement among the five environmental actions examined. The share of "environmentally enthusiastic" students but do not take part in environmental actions ranges from 22% (for those who do not save energy at home) to 70% (for those who do not boycott companies or products), on average across countries/economies.
| PISA 2018 | Are Students Ready to Take on Environmental Challenges? | PISA 2018 Assessment and Analytical Framework | PISA Glossary | PISA Database | Education policies: Skills |
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Non-OECD Countries
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TALIS average |
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TALIS avg. upper secondary education |
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Thailand |
Trinidad and Tobago |
Tunisia |
United Arab Emirates |
Abu Dhabi (UAE) |
Ukraine |
Uruguay |
Uzbekistan |
Viet Nam |
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Note: These values should be interpreted with care since they are influenced
by countries' specific contexts and trade-offs. In education, there is often no simple
most- or least-efficient model. For instance, the share of private expenditure in
education must be read against other measures designed to mitigate inequities,
such as loans and grants; longer learning time is an opportunity to convey
more and better content to students, but may hinder investments in other important
areas. If you want further information on the nature of different variables, please
take the time to read the analysis and contextual information, available at the website
for each publication.
The OECD average includes only OECD countries which are listed here: http://www.oecd.org/about/membersandpartners/
Reference years displayed in the Education GPS correspond to the most common year of reference among countries for which data is available on each variable. Data for the latest available year is preferred and some countries may have provided data refering to a more recent or late year. To know more about possible exceptions on data please click on the "Download Indicator" link on each variable. When a year of reference corresponds to a school year encompassing two years, the reference reads as follows: 2018 for school year 2017/2018.
*TALIS averages are based on all countries participating in the TALIS survey, including partner countries and economies. This explains the difference between the OECD average and the TALIS average. Data from the TALIS survey and Education at a Glance (EAG) may differ. See Annex E of the TALIS technical report and Annex 3 of EAG 2021 for more details about the data collections.
B-S-J-Z (China) refers to the four PISA-participating provinces/municipalities of the People's Republic of China: Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang.
For additional notes, please refer to annexes in the list of links below the introductory text.
The OECD average includes only OECD countries which are listed here: http://www.oecd.org/about/membersandpartners/
Reference years displayed in the Education GPS correspond to the most common year of reference among countries for which data is available on each variable. Data for the latest available year is preferred and some countries may have provided data refering to a more recent or late year. To know more about possible exceptions on data please click on the "Download Indicator" link on each variable. When a year of reference corresponds to a school year encompassing two years, the reference reads as follows: 2018 for school year 2017/2018.
*TALIS averages are based on all countries participating in the TALIS survey, including partner countries and economies. This explains the difference between the OECD average and the TALIS average. Data from the TALIS survey and Education at a Glance (EAG) may differ. See Annex E of the TALIS technical report and Annex 3 of EAG 2021 for more details about the data collections.
B-S-J-Z (China) refers to the four PISA-participating provinces/municipalities of the People's Republic of China: Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang.
For additional notes, please refer to annexes in the list of links below the introductory text.