The geographical area covered in this report is vast.
Indeed, it is questionable whether the Baltic Assembly
countries; the Central European Visegrád countries;
south-eastern Europe; Belarus, Ukraine and the Russian
Federation; Turkey and the Caucasus; the Central Asian
republics; and Mongolia constitute a region.
In the SDG
classification, for instance, they belong to four different
regional groups. However, except for Turkey, they were
brought close historically in 1945 when state socialism
welded them into a region with similarities in social
and economic organization, including in their education
structures and approaches.
The transition paths they followed after 1989 were varied,
but defined with reference to this shared experience.
Many of them continued to
share experiences and
compare records during the highs and lows of transition.
While their education development accelerated in
the second half of the 20th century, their education
systems had weaknesses and needed to adjust rapidly
to new social and economic realities. An immediate
priority was removal of certain curriculum content. More
substantive reforms later focused on democratization,
decentralization, competence-based curricula, external
assessment at the end of general education and
liberalization of teacher professional
development,
often with the influence and support of international
organizations (Anderson and Heyneman, 2005; Berryman,
2000; Fiszbein, 2001; Radó, 2001; UNICEF, 2007).
Implementation of reforms varied greatly across the
region. Both destructive and constructive forces were
released. On the one hand, the
number of countries in the
region tripled in the 1990s, in some cases peacefully, in
others tragically through violence and war. Some tensions
remain unresolved. As no country is homogeneous from
an ethnic, linguistic or religious perspective, many reforms
focused on peacebuilding, interethnic understanding, and
minority and other human rights.
Countries also went
through one or several economic shocks that affected
governments’ capacity to finance and deliver education of
good quality.
On the other hand, a common point of reference for
many countries has been the aspiration to either fully
integrate or engage more closely with the structures
and systems of their western European neighbours.
In total, 11 countries of the region joined the European
Union (EU) between 2004 and 2011, 6
are candidates or
potential candidates, and another 6 participate in the
European Neighbourhood Policy. EU accession aims to
ensure that ‘inclusion, tolerance, justice, solidarity and
non-discrimination prevail’ (European Commission, 2020).
Countries subscribe to common strategic objectives and
take part in open policy coordination processes,
including
on education. A 2018 recommendation notably commits
countries to promote common values and inclusive
education (European Council, 2018). Association and
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