12 September 2008

OECD Education at a Glance 2008

The Annual survey by the OECD found the following for the UK (note this refers to all education, including HE):


- Below average class sizes are afforded through an above average teaching load for teachers.
- The highest spenders on educational institutions are Denmark, Iceland, Korea and the United States, with at least 7% of GDP accounted for by public and private spending on educational institutions.

- The proportion of GDP spent on tertiary institutions in Belgium, France, Iceland, Mexico, Portugal, Switzerland and the United Kingdom is below the OECD average; these countries are among the OECD countries in which the proportion of GDP spent on primary, secondary and post secondary non-tertiary education is above the OECD average.
- For all levels of education combined, public and private investment in education increased in all countries by at least 8% between 1995 and 2005 in real terms and increased on average by 42%, with the UK increasing spending by more than 50%.
- The UK comes fourth out of 30 OECD countries for per-pupil funding in early years and enrolment is far above the OECD average.
- Teacher salaries at primary school level are above the OECD average.
- Secondary school class sizes are below the OECD average.

- The rate of increase for teacher salaries is above the OECD average.
- The UK has the highest private rate of returns to upper secondary education or post-secondary non-tertiary education.

- High completion rates of full degree courses which results in a flow of graduates that remains above the OECD average and the UK continues to be an attractive destination to foreign students, especially in science and technology subjects, and is only second to the USA overall.

- The UK has the 6th highest number of science graduates per 100,000 employed aged 25-34, placing us ahead of Japan and Germany.

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