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Latin American Experience with Enhancing Quality and Measuring Quality

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The Uruguay Experience (1) ... Now it is a valuable experience. We have changed our practice' ... The Mexican Experience (2) Improve Accountability ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Latin American Experience with Enhancing Quality and Measuring Quality


1
Latin American Experience with Enhancing Quality
and Measuring Quality
  • South Asia Regional Conference on Education
    Quality
  • New Delhi, India
  • October 24-26, 2007
  • Eduardo Velez
  • Sector Manager for Education
  • Human Development Sector
  • Latin America and the Caribbean

2
Current Situation in Latin AmericaAssessment
Systems
  • - Most countries have at least an incipient
    national assessment system based on standardized
    student achievement test, periodically applied to
    samples or all students of certain key grades in
    core academic subjects.
  • - Some countries have sub-national assessments
    systems
  • Most have participated in one or more
    international text
  • -A few countries and sub-national entities have
    been producing school- and system-report cards

3
Report Cards
  • Various models
  • Different variables
  • Different processes
  • All lead to focusing on outcomes, some give more
    space for consideration of processes
  • All promote improvement and accountability among
    various stakeholders
  • -

4
Assessment Systems. What kinds of results are
found?
  • Lower than expected
  • Huge differences in averages between rural and
    urban population, public and private schools,
    poor and non-poor, indigenous and non-indigenous
    populations
  • Increasingly small, if any, differences between
    girls and boys.
  • Slow change in outcomes

5
Assessment Systems. What kinds of results are
found? Positive results
  • The following are important inputs school
    climate, high expectations, principals
    leadership and permanence, homework, peer
    effects, educational materials, teachers
    satisfaction and knowledge of subject matter,
    active pedagogy, parents SES and participation,
    use of classroom assessment as a pedagogical
    tool, Time on homework, interest in subject,
    student perception of relationship with teacher,
    understanding that science math associated w/
    better job opportunities future financial
    security, Mothers education, home educational
    resources, assessment systems, school autonomy
    (process and human resources), less influence
    from unions, ..
  • just like everywhere
    else!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

6
Assessment Systems. What kinds of results are
found? Negative results
  • The following characteristics have a negative
    impact
  • -Memorization, rote learning
  • -Mothers employment
  • -Number of siblings
  • -High student-teacher ratio
  • -Frontal teaching method
  • -Technology has mixed results

7
Assessment Systems Report Cards. Big challenge.
  • Quality of Education is the challenge
  • It should take 2 to 3 (at very most) grades to
    learn to read. If it is taking 4 to 6, are
    systems working at about 50 effectiveness?
  • Poorest 53 countries spend 16 billion on primary
    education, are they wasting 8 billion of it?

8
International Comparisons
9
PISA 2000 Math Scores Dispersion
600
Mean Score
400
200
Dispersion
280
240
340
380
420
10
PISA 2003 Math Scores Dispersion
11
Assessment and AccountabilityThe Uruguay
Experience (1)
  • Participation, consensus building and face to
    face discussion with teachers, principals, and
    supervisors (sample, all schools get results, all
    teachers can apply the test to their students,
    and can compare with national results)

12
Assessment and AccountabilityThe Uruguay
Experience (2)
  • In-service teacher training as the first
    consequence of the assessment (starting with
    assessments results, voluntary and collective
    --involves the teacher team of a school--,
    exchange of experience with other teams, all year
    roundonce a fortnight participants receive 20
    of salary schools in poor areas are priority
    focus on how to teach and emphasis on practical
    activities in the classroom)

13
Assessment and AccountabilityThe Uruguay
Experience (3)
  • Evidence on the impact
  • -70 of teachers support national assessment
  • -70.2 read MOEs publications
  • -55 changed teaching and evaluating practices
  • -78 apply school based assessment
  • When MOE appeared I had a brick in each hand..
    Little by little they convinced us.. Now it is a
    valuable experience. We have changed our
    practice

14
Language, percentage of students achieving an
acceptable level in the test /Primary 6th grade
Poor Rich
EVOLUTION OF THE RESULTS BY SOCIAL CONTEXT
15
Assessment and AccountabilityThe Mexican
Experience (1)
  • Increase Autonomy
  • To improve quality, efforts are needed to move
    decision-making to the school level, thus
    increasing school autonomy
  • Increasing school autonomy can compensate
    disadvantaged schools
  • Autonomy can help raise the schooling outcomes
    of indigenous peoples
  • School autonomy reinforces the role of homework,
    learning styles and future value of education
  • With more autonomy, schools could determine the
    appropriate mix of technology for their students

16
Assessment and AccountabilityThe Mexican
Experience (2)
  • Improve Accountability
  • Accountability mechanisms can improve school
    quality
  • Accountability mechanisms that put people at the
    center of service provision can go a long way in
    making services work and improving outcomes
  • Flexible and wide-ranging accountability
    mechanisms could encompass various types of
    services
  • To improve quality, efforts are needed to move
    decision-making to the school level, thus
    increasing school autonomy

17
Assessment and AccountabilityThe Mexican
Experience (3)
  • Continue learning from the assessment
  • Assessment testing can be used to inform policy
    decisions.
  • Analysis of assessments can foster public and
    civil society involvement in education reform.
  • However, governments must be proactive in
    encouraging public debate using assessment
    results.
  • Expand coverage of the national assessments.
  • National and international assessments could be
    used to inform school reform process

18
PISA 2003 Mathematics
19
Assessment and AccountabilityUsing Early Grade
Reading (EGR)
  • Some start to use it to monitor reading but also
    to increase involvement of parents and other
    stakeholders (an accountability mechanism). It is
    not an alternative to assessment systems. Lets
    see some pros and cons.

20
(No Transcript)
21
Where are the countries?
  • Chile, Grade 1
  • We expect children to read fluently and with
    comprehension. This means that they should be
    able to
  • read, fast enough not to impede comprehension,
    stories of about 200 words
  • identify the type of text read
  • comprehend literal meaning and
  • make simple inferences. (Paraphrase.)
  • This is measurable, or can lead to something
    measurable
  • Peru, Haiti, Honduras

22
Are there any results (from EGR)?
  • To early to say. But in Peru there is some
    evidence that introducing EGR at the school level
    has a significant return. In six schools in five
    municipalities in Peru, after six months of
    introducing EGR the changes were on average 80
    and the worst off the school (in terms of
    education quality) the biggest the impact.
  • Also in Peru the Government decided to use the
    results of an assessment system to evaluate its
    education policy starting with a baseline at the
    beginning of the Administration.

23
  • Some lessons for Assessment Policy
  • Assessment Unit must be committed with producing
    materials useful for teachers and with
    dissemination and use of results. (School reports
    with useful information about their performance
    and activities)
  • Technical legitimacy of tests and frameworks is
    crucial
  • Timely and accurate data to inform policymaking
  • Unit must be autonomous from political
    interests
  • Importance of detailed planning of actions and
    coherent implementation

24
  • Some lessons for Assessment Policy
  • You need an assessment strategy, not just to
    administrate tests policymakers use the results
    of evaluation of existing interventions to inform
    design and implementation of policies
  • A "teacher-friendly" approach to assessment
    facilitates its use by teachers
  • Articulate dissemination of results with an
    effective in-service training program
  • Teachers need space and time to meet, study,
    discuss, try new things

25
  • Some lessons for Assessment Policy
  • Autonomy with support. More autonomous schools
    can implement appropriate education policies
  • Accountability. A more accountable system will
    encourage more active participation by parents,
    teachers, and others, which is key to improving
    learning outcomes
  • Assessment. A system that is based in constant
    assessment and participation in international
    benchmarking exercises will improve
    cost-effectiveness
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