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dc.contributor.authorOECD. Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
dc.date.accessioned3/9/2016 10:03
dc.date.available3/9/2016 10:03
dc.date.issued2014-04
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12799/4171
dc.description.abstractTo do well on PISA’s first assessment of creative problem-solving skills, students need to be open to novelty, tolerate doubt and uncertainty, and dare to use intuition to initiate a solution. Just because a student performs well in core school subjects doesn’t mean he or she is proficient in problem solving. In Australia, Brazil, Italy, Japan, Korea, Macao-China, Serbia, England (United Kingdom) and the United States, students perform significantly better in problem solving, on average, than students in other countries who show similar performance in reading, mathematics and science. Many of the best performers in problem solving are Asian countries and economies, where students demonstrate high levels of reasoning skills and self-directed learning. Meanwhile, compared to students of similar overall performance, students in Brazil, Ireland, Korea and the United States perform strongest on interactive problems that require students to uncover useful information by exploring the problem situation and gather feedback on the effect of their actions.es_ES
dc.language.isoenes_ES
dc.publisherOECDes_ES
dc.relation.ispartofseriesPISA in Focus;38
dc.subjectResolución de problemases_ES
dc.subjectEvaluación PISAes_ES
dc.subjectComprensión lectoraes_ES
dc.subjectMatemáticases_ES
dc.subjectCienciaes_ES
dc.subjectEvaluación del rendimiento escolares_ES
dc.titleAre 15-year-olds creative problem-solvers?es_ES
dc.typeTechnical Reportes_ES


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