Beginning in 2009, and with the ongoing support of the READ Trust Fund, the World Bank and the Governing Board of OECD’s PISA have been working together to find ways to adapt the PISA tests so that low-income countries can more readily benefit from them. As a result of this collaboration, a new reading component skills assessment was developed and made available as an international option for the PISA 2012 survey, of which both Poland and Peru were able to avail. In 2013, OECD announced a new initiative – PISA for Development. Through this initiative, OECD is piloting a modified version of the current PISA, one in which certain enhancements have been made for the developing country context. After initial discussions, six countries were selected to participate in the pilot: Cambodia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Paraguay, Senegal, and Zambia. READ Trust Fund support was used to finance a number of a key activities to launch the initiative, including hosting technical workshops, conducting capacity needs analyses and developing capacity building plans for participating countries, and producing two high-level reports.

More information is here: http://www.oecd.org/pisa/pisa-for-development/

poster

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…

5 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