SEA-PLM 2024: Philippines Grade 5 reading scores stagnant, math improves amid rising inequality

The Southeast Asia Primary Learning Metrics (SEA-PLM) 2024 report shows no significant progress in Philippines Grade 5 reading scores over five years, with over 70% lacking basic proficiency. Mathematics saw modest gains, but disparities between high- and low-performing students widened, signaling deepening educational inequality.

The SEA-PLM 2024 report indicates the Philippines' average reading score at 289.5 points, unchanged from 287.7 in 2019. Over 27% of Grade 5 students remained at very low proficiency, struggling with simple texts, while 52% fell below the minimum proficiency band 4, unable to handle texts beyond personal experience. For reading, the share meeting minimum proficiency (band 5) rose slightly to 27% from 22%, and highly proficient readers to 14% from 10%, but the lowest performers held steady, widening inequality.

In mathematics, scores improved by 4.9 points to 292.8 from 287.9, with 46% meeting minimum proficiency (up from 35%) and 26% highly proficient (up from 17%).

Socioeconomic disparities were starkest among the six countries: the reading gap between poorest and wealthiest households grew to 34.5 points from 29.7, or two years of learning. Language barriers persisted, with only 10% speaking test-language English at home scoring higher. The Philippines recently suspended mother-tongue-based multilingual education, emphasizing Filipino and English.

The assessment covered 5,070 Grade 5 students across 156 schools, 68% of which faced over six months of COVID-19 closures (2020-2022). Three-quarters attended schools short on digital tools.

These findings come as the Department of Education rolls out a new curriculum and national learning recovery program focused on reading and math basics.

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A new report shows that 15% of South African Grade 3 pupils cannot read a single word, highlighting a deepening literacy crisis. Data from the Funda Uphumelele National Survey indicates stark disparities across languages, with only 30% of early-grade pupils performing at level. Provinces are launching targeted interventions to address the issue.

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The Second Congressional Commission on Education (EDCOM 2) reported that 41.47 percent of learners nationwide are struggling readers. This figure comes from the Department of Education's Comprehensive Rapid Literacy Assessment at the start of School Year 2025-2026, totaling 2,243,059 learners from Grades 1 to 3.

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