The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) assesses the knowledge and skills of 15-year-old students in mathematics, reading and science. The tests explore how well students can solve complex problems, think critically and communicate effectively. This gives insights into how well education systems are preparing students for real life challenges and future success. Ireland participated for the first time in PISA in 2000. By comparing results internationally, policy makers and educators in Ireland can learn from other countries’ policies and practices.
PISA 2022 Results (Volume I and II) - Country Notes: Ireland
How well did 15-year-old students in Ireland do on the test?
Copy link to How well did 15-year-old students in Ireland do on the test?Trends in mathematics, reading and science performance
Copy link to Trends in mathematics, reading and science performanceAverage 2022 results were down compared to 2018 in mathematics; about the same as in 2018 in reading; and up compared to 2018 in science.
In science, performance returned close to the performance observed in 2015, but remained below the high mark set by PISA 2012. In reading, the overall trend since 2012 can be described as flat – neither improving, nor declining. In contrast, in mathematics, mean performance was below that of any other assessment since 2012.
Over the most recent period (2018 to 2022), the gap between the highest-scoring students (10% with the highest scores) and the weakest students (10% with the lowest scores) did not change significantly in mathematics, reading and science. In mathematics, performance dropped to a similar extent for both high- and low-achievers.
Compared to 2012 the proportion of students scoring below a baseline level of proficiency (Level 2) did not change significantly in mathematics; did not change significantly in reading; and increased by four percentage points in science.
How does Ireland compare?
Copy link to How does Ireland compare?Students in Ireland scored higher than the OECD average in mathematics, reading and science.
A similar number of students in Ireland, to the average across OECD countries, were top performers (Level 5 or 6) in at least one subject. At the same time a larger proportion of students than on average across OECD countries achieved a minimum level of proficiency (Level 2 or higher) in all three subjects.
What students know and can do in mathematics
Copy link to What students know and can do in mathematicsIn Ireland, 81% of students attained at least Level 2 proficiency in mathematics, significantly more than on average across OECD countries (OECD average: 69%). At a minimum, these students can interpret and recognize, without direct instructions, how a simple situation can be represented mathematically (e.g. comparing the total distance across two alternative routes, or converting prices into a different currency). Over 85% of students in Singapore, Macao (China), Japan, Hong Kong (China)*, Chinese Taipei and Estonia (in descending order of that share) performed at this level or above.
Some 7% of students in Ireland were top performers in mathematics, meaning that they attained Level 5 or 6 in the PISA mathematics test (OECD average: 9%). Six Asian countries and economies had the largest shares of students who did so: Singapore (41%), Chinese Taipei (32%), Macao (China) (29%), Hong Kong (China)* (27%), Japan (23%) and Korea (23%). At these levels, students can model complex situations mathematically, and can select, compare and evaluate appropriate problem-solving strategies for dealing with them. Only in 16 out of 81 countries and economies participating in PISA 2022 did more than 10% of students attain Level 5 or 6 proficiency.
What students know and can do in reading
Copy link to What students know and can do in readingSome 89% of students in Ireland attained Level 2 or higher in reading (OECD average: 74%). At a minimum, these students can identify the main idea in a text of moderate length, find information based on explicit, though sometimes complex criteria, and can reflect on the purpose and form of texts when explicitly directed to do so. The share of 15-year-old students who attained minimum levels of proficiency in reading (Level 2 or higher) varied from 89% in Singapore to 8% in Cambodia.
In Ireland, 10% of students scored at Level 5 or higher in reading (OECD average: 7%). These students can comprehend lengthy texts, deal with concepts that are abstract or counterintuitive, and establish distinctions between fact and opinion, based on implicit cues pertaining to the content or source of the information.
What students know and can do in science
Copy link to What students know and can do in scienceSome 84% of students in Ireland attained Level 2 or higher in science (OECD average: 76%). At a minimum, these students can recognize the correct explanation for familiar scientific phenomena and can use such knowledge to identify, in simple cases, whether a conclusion is valid based on the data provided.
In Ireland, 8% of students were top performers in science, meaning that they were proficient at Level 5 or 6 (OECD average: 7%). These students can creatively and autonomously apply their knowledge of and about science to a wide variety of situations, including unfamiliar ones.
A special edition of PISA
Copy link to A special edition of PISAThis PISA test was originally due to be conducted in 2021 but was delayed by one year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The exceptional circumstances throughout this period, including lockdowns and school closures in many countries, led to occasional difficulties in collecting some data. While the vast majority of countries and economies met PISA’s technical standards, a small number did not. A country or economy in this note with an asterisk (*) next to its name means that caution is required when interpreting estimates because one or more PISA sampling standards were not reached. Further information can be found in the Reader’s Guide and in Annexes A2 and A4 of the main report.
In Ireland, student response rates decreased slightly between 2018 and 2022 and fell below the minimum target set by PISA technical standards. Additional analyses were conducted to investigate whether bias would result from non-response. The results of these analyses results imply that the reported mean scores (based on responding students) may be slightly higher than hypothetical mean scores that considered also all the non respondents, by approximately eight or nine points. The bias associated with trend and cross-country comparisons, however, might be smaller if past data or data for other countries are biased in the same direction.
Performance gaps within Ireland
Copy link to Performance gaps within IrelandSocio-economic divides
Copy link to Socio-economic dividesThe PISA index of economic, social and cultural status is computed in such a way that all students taking the PISA test, regardless of the country where they live, can be placed on the same socio-economic scale. This means that it is possible to use this index to compare the performance of students of similar socio-economic background in different countries. In Ireland, 49% of students (the largest share) were in the top international quintile of the socio-economic scale, meaning that they were among the most advantaged students who took the PISA test in 2022. Their average score in mathematics was 518 score points. In Estonia and Japan, students of similar socio-economic background tend to score significantly higher.
The PISA index of economic, social and cultural status can also be used to order students from the most disadvantaged to the most advantaged within each country and economy, and to create four groups of students of equal size (each comprising 25% of the population of 15-year-old students in each country/economy). In Ireland socio-economically advantaged students (the top 25% in terms of socio-economic status) outperformed disadvantaged students (the bottom 25%) by 74 score points in mathematics. This is smaller than the average difference between the two groups (93 score points) across OECD countries.
Between 2012 and 2022, the gap in mathematics performance between the top and the bottom 25% of students in terms of socio-economic status narrowed in Ireland, while the average gap across OECD countries remained stable.
Socio-economic status was a predictor of performance in mathematics in all PISA participating countries and economies. It accounted for 13% of the variation in mathematics performance in PISA 2022 in Ireland (compared to 15% on average across OECD countries).
Some 12% of disadvantaged students in Ireland were able to score in the top quarter of mathematics performance. These students can be considered academically resilient because, despite their socio-economic disadvantage, they have attained educational excellence by comparison with students in their own country. On average across OECD countries, 10% of disadvantaged students scored in the top quarter of mathematics performance in their own countries.
Gender differences in performance
Copy link to Gender differences in performanceBoys outperformed girls in mathematics by 13 score points; girls outperformed boys in reading by 18 score points in Ireland. Globally, in mathematics, boys outperformed girls in 40 countries and economies, girls outperformed boys in another 17 countries or economies, and no significant difference was found in the remaining 24. In reading, girls, on average, scored above boys in all but two countries and economies that participated in PISA 2022 (79 out of 81).
In Ireland, the share of low performers is similar among boys (19%) and girls (20%) in mathematics; in reading, however, the share is larger among boys (8% of girls and 14% of boys scored below Level 2 in reading). When it comes to top performers, the share is larger among boys (10%) than among girls (5%) in mathematics; in reading, however, the share is similar among girls (11% of girls and 9% of boys scored at Level 5 or 6 in reading).
Between 2012 and 2022, performance in mathematics declined to a similar extent among boys and girls in Ireland.
Immigrant background and student performance
Copy link to Immigrant background and student performanceImmigrant students are defined as students whose parents were born in a country/economy other than that where the student took the PISA test. Students with an immigrant background can be distinguished between first- and second-generation immigrants. First-generation immigrants are those who were also born outside the country of assessment; second-generation students are students born in the country of assessment but whose parent(s) were born outside the country of assessment.
The share of immigrant students has increased in Ireland to 17% in 2022 (10% in 2012). In 2022, 8% of 15-year-old students were first-generation immigrants, meaning that they were born in another country/economy, and their families moved to Ireland only in recent years. Among these first-generation immigrant students, 40% arrived in Ireland at or before age 5; 32% arrived after age 12, and after completing the elementary grades in another education system.
Immigrant students in Ireland tend to have a more disadvantaged socio-economic profile than non-immigrant students; while 25% of all students are considered socio-economically disadvantaged, the corresponding share among students with an immigrant background is 30%. Some 59% of immigrant students (and 1% of all remaining students) reported that the language they speak at home most of the time is different from the language in which they took the PISA assessment.
In mathematics, the average difference in performance between immigrant and non-immigrant students was 8 score points in favour of non-immigrant students, a significant difference. After accounting for students’ socio-economic profile, a not significant difference was observed.
In reading, the average difference in performance between immigrant and non-immigrant students was 13 score points in favour of non-immigrant students, a significant difference. After accounting for students’ socio-economic profile, a not significant difference was observed.
How is school life in Ireland?
Copy link to How is school life in Ireland?Students’ sense of belonging at school and satisfaction with life
Copy link to Students’ sense of belonging at school and satisfaction with lifeIn 2022, 81% of students in Ireland reported that they make friends easily at school (OECD average: 76%) and 71% felt that they belong at school (OECD average: 75%). Meanwhile, 14% reported feeling lonely at school, and 14% like an outsider or left out of things at school (OECD average: 16% and 17%). Compared to 2018, students’ sense of belonging at school did not change significantly in Ireland.
Students’ satisfaction with life, more generally, declined in many countries and economies over recent years. In 2022, 19% of students in Ireland reported that they were not satisfied with their lives: they rated their satisfaction with life between 0 and 4 on a scale ranging from 0 to 10. In 2018, about the same number of students were not satisfied with life (18%). On average across OECD countries, the proportion of students who are not satisfied with life increased from 11% in 2015 to 16% in 2018 and 18% in 2022.
Support and discipline in mathematics lessons
Copy link to Support and discipline in mathematics lessonsIn Ireland, 66% of students reported that, in most mathematics lessons, the teacher shows an interest in every student’s learning (OECD average: 63%), and 74% that the teacher gives extra help when students need it (OECD average: 70%). In 2012, the corresponding shares were 67% and 73%. Mathematics results in 2022 tended to decline less, on average, in education systems where more students reported that teachers give extra help when students need it, compared to ten years earlier.
Some students study mathematics in a disciplinary climate that is not favourable to learning: in 2022, about 18% of students in Ireland reported that they cannot work well in most or all lessons (OECD average: 23%); 29% of students do not listen to what the teacher says (OECD average: 30%); 20% of students get distracted using digital devices (OECD average: 30%); and 16% get distracted by other students who are using digital devices (OECD average: 25%). On average across OECD countries, students were less likely to report getting distracted using digital devices when the use of cell phones on school premises is banned.
Feeling safe at and around school
Copy link to Feeling safe at and around schoolPISA 2022 data show that in education systems where performance remained high and students’ sense of belonging improved, students tended to feel safer and less exposed to bullying and other risks at their school.
In Ireland, 3% of students reported not feeling safe on their way to school (OECD average: 8%); 4% of students reported not feeling safe in their classrooms at school (OECD average: 7%); 7% of students reported not feeling safe at other places at school (e.g. hallway, cafeteria, restroom) (OECD average: 10%).
Some 13% of girls and 19% of boys reported being the victim of bullying acts at least a few times a month (OECD average: 20% of girls and 21% of boys). On average across OECD countries, fewer students were exposed to bullying in 2022 compared to 2018: for example, only 7% of students reported that other students spread nasty rumours about them in 2022, compared to 11% in 2018. In Ireland, too, the corresponding proportions shrank (4% in 2022 compared to 8% in 2018).
Parental involvement in learning
Copy link to Parental involvement in learningPISA data collected from school principals show that the percentage of parents who were involved in school and learning decreased substantially between 2018 and 2022 in many countries/economies. This was not the case in Ireland. In 2022, 14% of students in Ireland were in schools whose principal reported that during the previous academic year at least half of all families discussed their child’s progress with a teacher on their own initiative (and 34% on the teacher’s initiative). In 2018, the corresponding number was 23% (and 38%). Systems that had more positive trends in parental involvement between 2018 and 2022 (i.e. systems in which the share of parents who discussed their child’s progress with a teacher on their own initiative shrank less) tended to show more stable or improved performance in mathematics.
Learning during COVID-related school closures
Copy link to Learning during COVID-related school closuresIn Ireland, 80% of students reported that their school building was closed for more than three months due to COVID-19. On average across OECD countries, 51% of students experienced similarly long school closures. In education systems where performance remained high and students’ sense of belonging improved, fewer students experienced longer school closures.
During remote learning, 39% of students in Ireland had problems at least once a week with understanding school assignments and 25% of students with finding someone who could help them with schoolwork (OECD averages: 34% and 24%). In education systems where performance remained high and students’ sense of belonging improved, fewer students encountered problems during remote learning.
Support for students’ well-being was often limited when their schools were closed. In Ireland, 69% of students reported that they were supported daily through live virtual classes on a video communication program. Only 9% of students reported that they were asked daily, by someone from the school, how they were feeling (OECD averages: 51% and 13%).
If school buildings have to close again in the future, many students across the OECD feel confident about using digital technology for learning remotely but fewer students feel confident about taking responsibility for their own learning. Some 81% of students in Ireland feel confident or very confident about using a video communication program and 48% of students feel confident or very confident about motivating themselves to do school work (OECD averages: 77% and 58%).
What else does PISA tell us?
Copy link to What else does PISA tell us?Resources invested in education
Copy link to Resources invested in educationExpenditure on education is related to student performance only to a certain extent. Among the countries/economies whose cumulative expenditure per student, over all primary and secondary school years between the ages of 6 and 15, was under USD 75 000 (PPP) in 2019, higher expenditure on education was associated with higher scores in the PISA mathematics test. But this was not the case among countries/economies whose cumulative expenditure was greater than USD 75 000 (PPP). For this latter group of countries/economies, the ways in which financial resources are used seems to matter more for student performance than the level of investment in education. In Ireland, the cumulative expenditure per student, over ten years of age between 6 and 15, was equivalent to about USD 94 200 (PPP).
In about half of all countries/economies with comparable data, school principals in 2022 were more likely than their counterparts in 2018 to report a shortage of teaching staff. This was also the case in Ireland. In 2022, 68% of students in Ireland were in schools whose principal reported that the school’s capacity to provide instruction is hindered by a lack of teaching staff (and 31%, by inadequate or poorly qualified teaching staff). In 2018, the corresponding proportions were 45% and 11%. In most countries/economies, students attending schools whose principal reported shortages of teaching staff scored lower in mathematics than students in schools whose principal reported fewer or no shortages of teaching staff.
How students progress through schooling
Copy link to How students progress through schoolingWhen they sat the PISA test in 2022, 57% of 15-year-old students in Ireland were enrolled in 10th grade.
In Ireland, 95% reported that they had attended pre-primary education for one year or more (OECD average: 94%). On average across OECD countries, students who had attended pre-primary education for one year or more scored higher in mathematics at the age of 15 than students who never attended or who had attended for less than one year, even after accounting for socio-economic factors.
Some 4% of students in Ireland reported that they had repeated a grade at least once (OECD average: 9%) after entering primary school. Grade repetition tends to be less prevalent in high performing systems.
School autonomy
Copy link to School autonomyIn Ireland, 87% of students were enrolled in a school where teachers had the main responsibility for choosing which learning materials are used (OECD average: 76%). Many high-performing school systems tend to entrust principals and teachers with these responsibilities.
Key features of PISA 2022
Copy link to Key features of PISA 2022The content
Copy link to The contentThe PISA 2022 survey focused on mathematics, with reading and science as minor areas and creative thinking as the innovative area of assessment; Ireland did not participate in the assessment of creative thinking. PISA 2022 also included an assessment of young people’s financial literacy, which was optional for countries and economies. Results for mathematics, reading and science are released on 5 December 2023 and results for creative thinking and financial literacy in 2024.
The students
Copy link to The studentsSome 690 000 students took the assessment in 2022, representing about 29 million 15-year-olds in the schools of the 81 participating countries and economies.
In Ireland, 5569 students, in 170 schools, completed the assessment in mathematics, reading or science, representing about 65 500 15-year-old students (an estimated 100% of the total population of 15-year-olds).
The assessment
Copy link to The assessmentStudents took two hour-long tests, each devoted to one subject. Different students were given different test questions and different combinations of subjects (e.g. mathematics followed by reading, or science followed by mathematics, etc.). Test items were a mixture of multiple-choice questions and questions requiring students to construct their own responses.
Students also answered a background questionnaire, which took about 35 minutes to complete. The questionnaire sought information about the students themselves, their attitudes, dispositions and beliefs, their homes, and their school and learning experiences. School principals completed a questionnaire about school management, organisation, and the learning environment.
Some countries/economies also distributed additional questionnaires, to students, parents and/or teachers, to elicit more information. The findings from these optional questionnaires are not covered by this note.
References
OECD (2023), PISA 2022 Results (Volume I): The State of Learning and Equity in Education, PISA, OECD Publishing, Paris, https://doi.org/10.1787/53f23881-en
OECD (2023), PISA 2022 Results (Volume II): Learning During – and From – Disruption, PISA, OECD Publishing, Paris, https://doi.org/10.1787/a97db61c-en
This work is published under the responsibility of the Secretary-General of the OECD. The opinions expressed and arguments employed herein do not necessarily reflect the official views of the Member countries of the OECD.
This document, as well as any data and map included herein, are without prejudice to the status of or sovereignty over any territory, to the delimitation of international frontiers and boundaries and to the name of any territory, city or area.
For more information about PISA 2022 visit www.oecd.org/pisa
Explore, compare and visualise more data and analysis using http://gpseducation.oecd.org.
Questions can be directed to the PISA team at the Directorate for Education and Skills: edu.pisa@oecd.org.
This note was written by Francesco Avvisati and Rodolfo Ilizaliturri, Directorate for Education and Skills.
This work is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 IGO (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO). For specific information regarding the scope and terms of the licence as well as possible commercial use of this work or the use of PISA data please consult Terms and Conditions on www.oecd.org.
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