Media neglect of indigenous student performance in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2001-2015

Periodical
Australian Journal of Indigenous Education
Volume
50
Year
2021
Issue number
1
Page range
136-146
Relates to study/studies
PISA 2012
PISA 2015

Media neglect of indigenous student performance in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2001-2015

Abstract

This research explores media reporting of Indigenous students' Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) results in two national and 11 metropolitan Australian newspapers from 2001 to 2015. Of almost 300 articles on PISA, only 10 focused on reporting of Indigenous PISA results. While general or non-Indigenous PISA results featured in media reports, especially at the time of the publication of PISA results, there was overwhelming neglect of Indigenous results and the performance gap. A thematic analysis of articles showed mainstream PISA reporting had critical commentary which is not found in the Indigenous PISA articles. The three themes identified include: a lack of teacher quality in remote and rural schools; the debate on Gonski funding recommendations and the PISA achievement gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous students. This study concluded the overwhelming neglect is linked to media bias, which continues to drive mainstream media coverage of Indigenous Australians.