Performance » Numeracy » Year 6 Numeracy:
Benchmarking Year 6 numeracy performance: Are standards being met ?
Table CNT6.1 shows the Niue distribution of year six overall numeracy scores against the PILNA numeracy proficiency scale. This scale converts a student’s overall numeracy score into a level ranking from zero to eight. The expected minimum overall numeracy performance for year six students is proficiency level five. Pacific stakeholders expect these students to reach or exceed this proficiency level.
The average overall numeracy score for year six students in Niue in 2021 was 572.04 (SD = 48.01). This corresponds to proficiency level seven in the PILNA numeracy proficiency scale and is almost at level eight (level seven is assigned to scores 550–575). On average, year six students in Niue are achieving above the minimum expected standard in numeracy (Figure CNF6.5).
Figure CNF6.5: PILNA
Assessment strands
- Numbers
- Operations
- Measurement & geometry
- Data & chance
Overall numeracy score
- 0
- 375
- 425
- 450
- 475
- 500
- 525
- 550
- 575
- 600
- 625+
- 600
Proficiency Scale Levels
Expected minimum performance
- 0
- 1
- 2
- 3 Year 4
- 4
- 5 Year 6
- 6
- 7
- 8a
- 8b
Year 4
Mean score: 534.49 (15.15)
Year 6
Mean score: 572.04 (8.02)
The average numeracy score does not tell us the whole story. The proportion of students who are meeting the minimum expected standard is also important. Approximately 93% of students, nine out of ten, performed at or above this expected level (levels 5–8). Conversely, approximately 7% of students performed below the expected proficiency level (levels 0–4). In other words, most year six students are meeting the minimum expected level for numeracy (93%) and only a small proportion (7%) are yet to meet that level. Further, about half of the students scored at level eight, the highest level in the PILNA numeracy proficiency scale (51%).
Niue is performing well in numeracy, not only against the PILNA proficiency level benchmarks, but against the regional and Small Island States performance in PILNA 2021 (Table CNT6.2). On average, year six students in Niue are scoring higher in numeracy (572) than year six students in the region (530.59). Further, about 93% of year six students in Niue met or exceeded the expected minimum numeracy proficiency levels compared with 72% across the region and 73% in Small Island States.
When looking at the Niue distribution of year six numeracy proficiency scores in 2021 by gender (Table CNT6.3), differences can be seen for girls and boys. Approximately 97% of girls performed at or above the expected proficiency level (levels 5–8) compared to approximately 87% of boys. Also, a substantially higher proportion of girls scored in proficiency level eight (61%) than did boys (41%).
Table CNT6.4 shows year six scores for Niue students on the PILNA numeracy proficiency scale over time. Accompanying this is Figure CNF6.6, showing the proportion of year six students in Niue meeting the minimum overall numeracy standard over time. A higher proportion of year six students met this level in 2021 than in all previous PILNA cycles (2012 = 61%, 2015 = 60%, 2018 = 67%, 2021 = 93%).