Measuring Student Knowledge and Skills
14
OECD 1999
sciences and earth and space sciences, they will need to be applied to
the content of the items
and not just recalled. The main item content will be selected from within three broad areas of
application: science
in life and health, science in earth and environment and science in technology.
– Second,
scientific processes, centred on the ability to acquire, interpret and act upon evidence. Five
such processes present in OECD/PISA relate to:
i) the recognition
of scientific questions;
ii) the
identification of evidence;
iii) the drawing of conclusions;
iv) the communication of these conclu-
sions; and
v) the demonstration of understanding of scientific concepts. Only the last of these
requires a pre-set body of scientific knowledge, yet since no scientific process can be “content
free”, the OECD/PISA science questions will always require an understanding of concepts in the
areas mentioned above.
– Third,
scientific situations, selected mainly from people’s everyday lives rather than from the
practice
of science in a school classroom or laboratory, or the work of professional scientists. The
science
situations in OECD/PISA are defined as matters relating to the self and the family, to the
wider com-
munity, to the whole world and to the historical evolution of scientific understanding.
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