PISA evaluates 15-year-olds' performance in mathematics, science, and reading. First conducted in 2000, repeated every three years. OECD sponsors, countries pay for participation. Each country must test at least 5,000 students
PISA evaluates 15-year-olds' knowledge in mathematics, science, and reading. Test developed by OECD and administered every three years since 2000. Students must apply learned concepts rather than memorize information. Test takes about two hours with 13 booklets containing multiple-choice questions
PISA is OECD's international student assessment program launched in 1997. Evaluates 15-year-old students' school performance every three years. Aims to provide comparable data for improving education policies
PISA assesses 15-year-old students' knowledge and skills in reading, math and science. More than 80 countries participate, including 44 middle-income countries. PISA measures both knowledge reproduction and application in unfamiliar settings
OECD average education duration is 18 years between ages 5-39. Australia leads with 20.4 years of education, followed by Canada (17 years). Estonia has highest PISA scores at 526, Colombia lowest at 406. 79% of adults aged 25-64 complete upper secondary education
PISA launched in 1997 to measure student achievement in reading, math and science. Surveys conducted every three years in 57 countries, covering 90% of world economy. OECD manages PISA with participation from 30 member countries