Skip to main content

OECD reviews of evaluation and assessment in education: Turkey

Submitted by admin on
Abstract

How can assessment and evaluation policies work together more effectively to improve student outcomes in primary and secondary schools? The country reports in this series provide, from an international perspective, an independent analysis of major issues facing evaluation and assessment policy to identify improvements that can be made to enhance the quality, equity and efficiency of school education. Turkey’s education system stands out internationally as a success story. In recent decades, participation has been vastly expanded, becoming universal at lower levels of schooling and outperforming other middle-income countries in upper secondary education. However, the education system is also marked by disparities, with only around half of 15-year olds acquiring the essential competencies they need for life and work. This review, developed in cooperation with UNICEF, suggests how student assessment can be used more effectively to better support all students to do well. It provides recommendations for enhancing teachers’ classroom assessments, assessing a broader range of skills through national examinations and using the new national assessment to support improvements in learning and teachers’ assessment practice.

Author
Kitchen, Hannah
Bethell, George
Fordham, Elizabeth
Henderson, Kirsteen
Li, Richard Ruochen
Corporate Author
OECD
Year of publication
2019
Pages
258
Series
OECD reviews of evaluation and assessment in education
Country (Geographical area)
ISBN
9789264921238 (HTML), 9789264448056 (EPUB), 9789264891500 (PDF)
Source database
library
Language