Vietnam's students perform mysteriously well on tests, and researchers have figured out why

classroom
classroom

(Kham/Reuters)

Vietnam is one of education's biggest outliers: It's basically the only low-income country that performs at the same level as rich countries on international academic tests.

There's a clear positive relationship between a country's economic strength and how well its students perform on certain tests.

But Vietnam, with a GDP per capita that is a fraction of the US', actually performs significantly better than you'd expect for a country at its level of income, and no one really knows why.

Researchers have studied two internationally comparable tests in an attempt to understand the "Vietnam effect." One is the TIMSS test, a modified version of which shows that* the Vietnamese vastly outperform people in other countries of similar GDP per capita. Check out the chart:

graph 1
graph 1

(RISE)

A 2014 paper by Abhijeet Singh analyzed results from the Oxford Young Lives study that were comparable to the TIMSS results* and found that Vietnam's advantage starts early — Vietnamese children are slightly outperforming those in other developing countries even by age five, and the gap grows each year.

The paper found that "a year of primary school in Vietnam is considerably more 'productive' in terms of skill acquisition than a year of schooling in Peru or India," Lee Crawfurd wrote in a blog post for Research on Improving Systems of Education. "The question this research raises — and the Vietnam experience suggests — is: 'Why is learning-productivity-per-year so much greater in some countries than others?' Or to put it more simply, why are schools so much better in some countries?"

Now, a new paper by World Bank researchers Suhas D. Parandekar and Elisabeth K. Sedmik is attempting to answer that question. They studied the Programme for International Student Assessment, or PISA, using scores from 2012.

Seven developing countries other than Vietnam participate in the PISA, and at $4,098, Vietnam has the lowest per capita GDP out of all of them. And yet, Vietnam still scores higher than the other developing nations. Check out the chart for math scores versus per capita GDP:

graph 2
graph 2

(Parandekar and Sedmik)

Vietnam's scores are way above what you'd expect — more on par with Finland and Switzerland than Colombia or Peru.

For math, there's a 128-point difference between Vietnam's score and the average score of the other seven low-income countries. Seventy points in the math section corresponds to "an entire proficiency" level, which represents about two years of schooling in the typical Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development country. That means there's a nearly three-year difference in educational attainment between Vietnam and the other developing countries that took the PISA.