PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving
The PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving assessment measures students’ capacity to effectively engage in a process whereby two or more agents attempt to solve a problem by sharing the understanding and effort required to come to a solution, and pooling their knowledge, skills and efforts to reach that solution.
- PISA 2015 Results (Volume V): Collaborative Problem Solving
- PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving Framework
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What is Collaborative Problem Solving?
The PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving assessment built on the PISA 2012 Creative Problem Solving assessment framework , incorporating additional concepts that focus on the collaborative aspects of problem solving. These aspects reflect the skills found in project-based learning and in collaboration in workplace and civic settings, namely communicating, managing conflict, organising a team, building consensus and managing progress.
Why is it important for students to develop collaborative problem solving?
Today’s workplaces demand people who can solve non-routine problems, and who can do so in concert with others by sharing ideas and efforts. Digitalisation is also increasing opportunities for collaboration in both the workforce and civic contexts, such as volunteering and social networking, through technologies such as e-mail and web conferencing. Students emerging from schools into the workforce and public life will therefore encounter collaborative situations and be expected to have the necessary collaborative problem-solving skills to thrive.
Collaborative problem solving is increasingly recognised as an important 21st century skill as it has several advantages over individual problem solving: labour can be divided equally, a variety of perspectives and experiences can be applied to try and find solutions, and team members can support and stimulate one another, in turn enhancing the creativity and quality of solutions. Yet collaboration, if managed poorly, can also quickly lead to communication issues, interpersonal conflict and inefficiencies. It is therefore important that students develop the skills needed to engage in successful collaborative problem solving.
What is innovative about the PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving assessment?
The PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving assessment was the first large-scale, international assessment to evaluate students’ competency in collaborative problem solving.
It required students to interact with simulated (computer) in order to solve problems. These dynamic, simulated agents were designed to represent different profiles of team members, and responded to students’ responses following a script in a virtual chat.
The assessment included several types of collaborative problem-solving tasks in order to elicit different types of problem-solving behaviours and interactions between the students and computer agents. There are three types of tasks:
- group decision-making tasks (requiring argumentation, debate, negotiation or consensus to arrive at a decision);
- group co-ordination tasks (including collaborative work or jigsaw hidden profile paradigms where unique information must be shared); and
- group-production tasks (where a product must be created by a team, including designs for new products or written reports). Explore the example assessment tasks .
Results and supporting documents
The PISA 2015 Results (Volume V): Collaborative problem solving examine students’ ability to work with two or more people to try to solve a problem, highlighting the relative strengths and weaknesses of each school system and exploring how they are related to individual student characteristics, such as gender, immigrant background and socio-economic status. This volume of results also explores the role of education in building young people’s skills in solving problems collaboratively.
- How does PISA measure students’ ability to collaborate?
- PISA in Focus: Collaborative problem-solving results
- Country notes: France ( French ) ( English ), Germany ( English ) ( German ), Japan ( English )
Assessment framework and instruments
- PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving released Field Trial cognitive items
- Description of the Released Unit (Xandar) from PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving Assessment and Scoring Guide
Additional resources
Articles and blog posts.
Are School Systems Ready to Develop Students' Social Skills? , Andreas Schleicher, OECD Education and Skills Today
Girls Better Than Boys at Working Together to Solve Problems, Finds New OECD PISA Global Education Survey, OECD Newsroom
Webinars, podcasts and presentations
Webinar on pisa 2015 collaborative problem solving: key findings (andreas schleicher).
What collaborative problem solving can tell us about students' social skills
Presentation on pisa 2015 collaborative problem solving - key findings (andreas schleicher).
For more information, reach out to the PISA innovative assessments team at edu.pisainnovation@oecd.org .
Related policy issues
- Student performance (PISA)
- Reading literacy
- Mathematics literacy
- Science literacy
- Student financial literacy
- Creative thinking
- PISA 2022 Creative Thinking
- Global competence
- PISA 2018 Global Competence
- Student problem solving skills
- PISA 2012 Creative Problem Solving
- learning-in-the-digital-world
- PISA 2025 Learning in the Digital World
- Foreign language learning
- PISA 2025 Foreign Language Assessment
- Learning time and disciplinary climate
- Students' well-being
- Student engagement and motivation
- Student assessment
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- OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA)
- Technical University of Munich
Collaborative Problem Solving (2015)
The PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving (CPS) assessment was the first large-scale, international assessment to evaluate students' competency in CPS at the end of compulsory education.
Collaborative Problem Solving competence is a person's ability to effectively participate in a process in which two or more parties attempt to solve a problem by sharing their understanding, knowledge, efforts, and skills to arrive at a solution.
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The PISA 2015 Assessment and Analytical Framework presents the conceptual foundations of the sixth cycle of the triennial assessment. This revised edition includes the framework for collaborative problem solving, which was evaluated for the first time, in an optional assessment, in PISA 2015.
The PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving assessment was the first large-scale, international assessment to evaluate students' competency in collaborative problem solving. It required students to interact with simulated (computer) in order to solve problems. These dynamic, simulated agents were designed to represent different profiles of ...
Results from PISA show educators and policy makers the quality and equity of learning outcomes achieved elsewhere, and allow them to learn from the policies and practices applied in other countries. PISA 2015 Results (Volume V): Collaborative Problem Solving, is one of five volumes that present the results of the PISA 2015 survey, the sixth ...
PISA 2015 Results (Volume V): Collaborative Problem Solving, is one of five volumes that present the results of the PISA 2015 survey, the sixth round of the triennial assessment. It examines students' ability to work with two or more people to try to solve a problem. The volume provides the rationale for assessing this particular skill and ...
PISA 2015 Results (Volume V): Collaborative Problem Solving, is one of five volumes that present the results of the PISA 2015 survey, the sixth round of the triennial assessment. It examines students' ability to work with two or more people to try to solve a problem. The volume provides the rationale for assessing this particular skill and ...
This chapter describes the rationale behind measuring 15-year-olds' collaborative problem-solving skills for the first time in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA). It explains the content and processes that are reflected in the collaborative problem-solving items used in the computer-based assessment, and describes how student proficiency in this domain is measured and ...
This chapter introduces the PISA 2015 assessment of collaborative problem solving. It provides the rationale for assessing collaborative problemsolving competence in PISA and introduces the innovative features of the 2015 assessment, particularly in contrast to the individual problem-solving assessment of PISA 2012. The framework for the assessment is discussed and sample items are presented.
The PISA 2015 Collaborative Problem Solving (CPS) assessment was the first large-scale, international assessment to evaluate students' competency in CPS at the end of compulsory education. Collaborative Problem Solving competence is a person's ability to effectively participate in a process in which two or more parties attempt to solve a ...
PISA 2015 Results (Volume V): Collaborative Problem Solving, is one of five volumes that present the results of the PISA 2015 survey, the sixth round of the triennial assessment. It examines students' ability to work with two or more people to try to solve a problem.
Over 4,500 New Zealand students took part in PISA 2015, which included an assessment of their collaborative solving abilities and attitudes towards cooperation. Collaborative problem solving is how an individual works together with others to solve a problem, through establishing and maintaining shared understanding and team organisation.