Categories: NewsTRUST FUND

New World Bank platform to help countries strengthen their assessment systems

With more children enrolled in school worldwide than ever before, many countries are looking beyond issues of education access to issues of education quality. Indeed, Quality Education is one of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals for 2030, and a major focus of the World Bank’s Human Capital Project. Effective learning assessments are an important measure of quality, helping to capture information about what students know and can do to ensure they are on track for success in their lives.

Learning assessments can provide vital information on student performance, from helping teachers determine the needs of individual students, to making high-stakes choices about students’ educational progress, to informing policymakers as they make decisions on a national scale. Many countries especially want to know how they compare to others. Large-scale international assessments, like PISA, TIMSS, and PIRLS, provide such international comparisons, but only for participating countries—most of which are high- and middle-income. The World Bank’s Human Capital Project includes harmonized scores from international and regional large-scale assessments for about 160 countries, and countries are stepping up their efforts to implement national and internationally comparable learning assessments, but there are
still some significant coverage gaps.

To help client countries strengthen their assessment systems, and to set the stage for more countries to participate in large-scale national and international assessments, the World Bank in February held an internal launch of its new Learning Assessment Platform (LeAP). Jaime Saavedra Chanduvi, Senior Director of the World Bank’s Education Global Practice, set the stage by stressing the importance of learning assessment within the Bank’s global education agenda. World Bank experts Marguerite Clarke and Harry Patrinos, and UNESCO Director of the Institute for Statistics Silvia Montoya further outlined key topics in assessment. The group also heard perspectives from representatives of four World Bank country teams —Simon Thacker (Djibouti), Saodat Bazarova (Tajikistan), Juan Baron (the Dominican Republic), and An Thi My Tran (Vietnam)—on challenges they face and the progress they made in supporting countries’ priorities on different types of assessment.

Read more in READ Trust Fund Newsletter.

zheta

Recent Posts

Happy New Year!

Dear friends! The Center for International Cooperation in Education Development wholeheartedly congratulates you on the…

4 months ago

Five takeaways from the international PISA exam results

The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) is issued every three years in more than…

4 months ago

UN General Assembly discusses UNESCO’s Report on Education for Sustainable Development

On October 9, 2023, UNESCO unveiled a comprehensive report on the implementation of Education for…

5 months ago

New global UNESCO assessment research: How open is open science?

While open science practices are being adopted worldwide, new UNESCO findings reveal a tale of…

6 months ago

Progress on girls’ access to education: What the new UNESCO data reveals

New UNESCO data reveals that 50 million more girls have been enrolled in school globally…

7 months ago

44 million new teachers must be recruited by 2030 to achieve our education goals

On World Teachers’ Day, new UNESCO projections reveal a serious global shortage of teachers in…

7 months ago