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Saudi Education Survey and
Curriculum Assessment

 

This week SUSRIS presented two items related to education. The first was a review of the World Bank's assessment of the region and the second was Fatin Bundagji's essay, "Have We Failed Them?" which addressed education in the Kingdom. It included the trenchant observation that, "great expectations cannot be achieved if we keep on placing our children in an educational system that advocates the very opposite of innovation and creativity, and which aborts the entrepreneurial mindset and spirit." Today we follow those items with a report describing an upcoming survey of schools by the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Education  in order to assess curriculum in the Kingdom. 

These items will join the collection of SUSRIS reports and related materials indexed in a new special section. Click Here 

   

Ministry Plans to Assess Quality of Education in Kingdom
Lulwa Shalhoub, Arab News 

JEDDAH � In an attempt to improve the quality of education in the Kingdom, the Ministry of Education is planning to assess the curriculums used in the system.

�The assessment has nothing to do with the students� performance on a personal level and will not count in their GPAs,� said Saleh Al-Shamrani, the assessment�s project manager at the Ministry of Education. �They are not evaluated for the exams they take. We want to assess the quality of education in schools and thus in the Kingdom.�

The assessment will review different sample groups of students: three grades in the first phase of the survey. The fourth, eighth and twelfth grades (boys and girls) will be assessed next year. The courses to be assessed are: Islamic studies, Arabic, mathematics and science. �These are the courses that are important for academic advancement,� Al-Shamrani said. 

These samples will represent all students in the Kingdom. They are chosen depending on criteria including the location of the school. �We have included schools, private and public, small and big, in all cities and villages,� he said. 

This is to guarantee that the survey will apply to different samples applied to the fourth grade in next semester and on the eighth and twelfth grade starting next year.

�We chose these academic levels only after we discussed them at meetings and decided that these levels wrap up the subjects that students study in the previous years,� Al-Shamrani said.

There will be one exam for each subject in each grade. Exams given to the samples are the same for all schools and given at the same time. This is the first step in the national assessment system. 

�As the project manger, I am not responsible to change the curricula after counting results of the assessment. We only give reports of the results,� he said.

Source: Arab News

 

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