International | PISA tests

The pandemic’s toll on schooling emerges in awful new exam results

Grades in rich countries were sliding even before covid-19 spread

Two children sliding down a large protractor with a downward arrow.
Illustration: Martina Paukova

IT IS ALMOST four years since the world’s classrooms started shutting down to 1.6bn pupils as covid-19 spread. At their height, school closures affected some 80% of all those enrolled globally. Youngsters then learned remotely, or not at all. It was the greatest disruption to education since the second world war. In many countries closures lasted long after it became clear that covid-19 posed a low risk to children’s health, and after vaccines became widely available to adults. Even when schools reopened, social-distancing quarantine rules still disrupted lessons for many.

This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “Class divisions”

How peace is possible

From the December 9th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from International

Paris could change how cities host the Olympics for good

The games will test the success of new solutions to old bugbears

Could America fight its enemies without breaking the law?

The speed and intensity of prospective conflicts could test the laws of war


How China and Russia could hobble the internet

The undersea cables that connect the world are becoming military targets


Trump and other populists will haunt NATO’s 75th birthday party

Threats to Western alliances lie both within and without the club

The rise of the truly cruel summer

Deadly heat is increasingly the norm, not an exception to it

Brainy Indians are piling into Western universities

Will rich countries welcome them the way they did Chinese students?