focused on assessment based on learning achieved before
remote
learning kicked in, with guidelines encouraging
the use of formative assessment so as not to let remote
learning achievement play a major role in evaluation.
At the same time, assessment and evaluation are
traditionally focused predominantly on academic learning
rather than socio-emotional development. As schools in
most countries have autonomy, in principle, to decide
how they organize
studies and evaluation, the need to
redefine how learning is organized and assessed has
become starkly apparent.
In Belarus, the Ministry of Education introduced additional
learning days on Saturdays in April and May to catch
up on lost school time. The Czech Republic, Estonia and
Latvia encouraged teachers to use formative assessment
instead of numerical grading and concentrate on
providing feedback and psychological support, even if
that compromised academic
knowledge and curriculum
content coverage. End-of-year evaluations were to be
based mostly on student performance before remote
learning began. In Armenia, grades from the contact
learning period were the basis for final grades, even
though this approach caused dissatisfaction among
teachers and parents. In Kazakhstan, assignments and
tasks for assessment were simplified and the number of
tasks used for assessment reduced.
In Montenegro, the state
guidance on assessment
urged reliance on student creativity, active participation,
engagement and timeliness. Teachers were expected
to grade in students’ favour, with the final grade being
at least as high as grades from the previous period. In
Romania, central guidelines stated that the part of the
curriculum not completed after school closed in March
would be addressed during the following academic year.
In the Russian Federation, national testing was carried out
at the beginning of the new academic year to assess the
degree of learning loss.
Countries chose different approaches to examinations.
They were cancelled in
some cases and delayed in
others, while in some the choice was left to students.
In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the secondary school exit
examination (matura) was cancelled. In Mongolia, all
national examinations except the general university
entrance examination at the end of grade 12 were
cancelled. In Slovenia, national examinations for grades
6 and 9 were cancelled. Examinations were also cancelled
in the Russian Federation.
Examinations took place in the Czech Republic once
the COVID-19 measures were partially lifted. In Estonia,
the examination at the end of grade 12 was voluntary
rather than
compulsory, giving students an opportunity
to graduate without it. Students could also take state
examinations in May and June or later. Examinations
up to grade 9 did not take place, so completion was
certified on the basis of annual grades. In Montenegro,
the exam period was delayed to late May, and content
from the remote learning period was not used,
a choice
also made in Turkey. In Serbia, paper-and-pen graduation
examinations took place in June in school, even though an
online approach had been piloted.
In Kyrgyzstan, transfer examinations between grades
were cancelled. A special committee was formed in each
school to determine the final score for every subject,
taking into account previous exams,
practical and
laboratory work, quarterly and semi-annual grades and
final semester achievements. In Slovakia, administrative
decisions replaced secondary school entrance
examinations, and a formula was used to calculate each
learner’s total score from marks in obligatory, specific
and supplementary subjects, along with additional
criteria set by schools. Schools were
allowed to slightly
exceed region-prescribed admission ceilings, and
regional authorities decided if learners not admitted
because of their score would be transferred to a school
(CEDEFOP, 2020).
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