Not surprised. Those tests are so poorly written anyways. All they try to do is attempt to trick the test taker and not test the skill being tested.
-pat
Just realized my post didn't make a whole lot of sense. I dropped a few words in my haste. It's corrected here...
A quick comment on China/Japan/the whole Asian area thingy, they aren't necessarily producing
more well educated students than the U.S.. How many of these countries we look at as being successful track the types school a child can attend at an early age based on "scores?"
When scores are being compared (apples to oranges, btw) between countries, many of the countries we are compared to do
not include all students possible at a particular grade level. Many are shipped off to who-knows-where which keeps the overall score inflated.
The U.S. is producing excellent students. We're failing to identify them and foster the culture of success. What's important to us, as a culture? Sports. Enough said.
Do not twist this to mean our education system is awesome/perfect. Obviously, we have issues and I'm trivializing a lot. But, comparing one country to another is fundamentally flawed. It's as flawed as the way many states label passing/failing/excelling schools and excellent teachers by comparing test scores for one class to the previous class in a school. God help the teacher who gets a class entering the 4th grade reading at a 7th grade level one year and the next gets a class entering 4th reading at the 3rd grade level. You can be guaranteed those scores are going to drop on a standardized assessment. I can read it now, "Bad teacher identified by overall class score dropping 20 percentage points."
-pat
(Yes, I do teach. Yes, I've seen the tests. Yes, they are very poorly written. Yes, I know of one teacher, personally, who was fired for cheating in all my years of service. That individual was able to "retire" from his position and keep his retirement. Wow.)