Minnesota's educators and business community have long stressed that the state's students need to be able to compete internationally when it comes to math and science. It seems they're doing just that. Minnesota's students have made considerable international progress in math during the past 12 years, and retained their spot near the top of the world in science, according to the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) released Tuesday. The study, published by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement, shows that Minnesota's students are outperformed by only four of 36 countries in fourth-grade math, five of 49 countries in eighth-grade math, one of 36 countries in fourth-grade science and four of 49 countries in eighth-grade science.
"I think we ought to have a party," said Ellen Delaney, associate principal at Spring Lake Park High School, and a former math teacher. "We made amazing gains, and this is reason for us to celebrate that our teachers stepped up to the plate."
Minnesota was one of two states -- the other being Massachusetts -- that participated in the 2007 study as a "micro-nation," so its results can be compared internationally.
The most encouraging results to educators are the fourth-grade math scores. Minnesota's fourth-graders improved their performance at more than three times the rate of the entire United States.
"Those are really quite stunning and impressive gains," said Mike Cohen, a former assistant secretary of education and the president of Achieve, a Washington, D.C.-based education reform group.
Minnesota educators say the math gains are due to dramatic increases in time spent on math instruction and new, rigorous state math standards that are based on international standards of what kids should be taught.
Minnesota's toughest competition comes from Asia, with Singapore leading the world in science and Hong Kong and Taiwan leading the charge in math.
"We know that our children are going to be competing in a global economy," said Minnesota Education Commissioner Alice Seagren. "We want our students well prepared."