- Home
- Data Catalog
- Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, 2007
Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, 2007
Add to My BasketDescription
The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, 2007 (TIMSS 2007) is a study that is part of the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) program; program data are available since 1999 at https://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/getpubcats.asp?sid=073. TIMSS 2007 (https://nces.ed.gov/timss/) is a cross-sectional study that provides international comparative information of the mathematics and science literacy of fourth- and eighth-grade students and examines factors that may be associated with the acquisition of math and science literacy in students. The study was conducted using direct assessments of students and questionnaires for students, teachers, and school administrators. Fourth- and eighth-graders in the 2006–07 school year were sampled. The final weighted student response rate at grade four was 95 percent, and the final weighted student response rate at grade eight was 93 percent. Key statistics produced from TIMSS 2003 are mathematics and science achievement scores of U.S. fourth- and eighth- grade students compared to that of students in other countries.
Detailed Methodology
The international desired target population is all students enrolled in the grade that represents 4 or 8 years of schooling. The sample design employed by the TIMSS assessment is generally referred to as a two-stage stratified cluster sample: the first stage involves sampling schools and the second involves selecting classrooms within sampled schools. TIMSS guidelines call for a minimum of 150 schools to be sampled per grade, with a minimum of 4,000 students assessed per grade. In the United States, a sample of 300 schools was drawn at 4th-grade and 300 schools at 8th-grade.