INCLUSIVE ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORKS
SHOULD INCLUDE ALL LEARNERS
Information from learning assessments is critical to guide
teaching for all students. Yet summative assessments,
which generate feedback only after a course of study
is complete, tend to prevail in national frameworks and
serve as a basis for important decisions on student
certification and placement, whether in segregated or
inclusive settings. Summative assessments provide
little information on how teaching should be adapted or
modified to help learners with special education needs
to progress and achieve. When used for accountability
purposes, these high-stakes assessments can lead to
negative practices such as selective admission, strict
discipline policies, student reassignment, and greater
focus and time given to those most likely to succeed.
According to head teacher reports from countries taking
part in the 2015 Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development Programme for International Student
Assessment, 38% of tested students were in schools
where academic performance was an important
determinant of admission. In Bulgaria and Croatia, more
than 8 in 10 schools used performance as a criterion
(OECD, 2016).
Yet, while exclusionary practices are a common result of
assessments, assessment and inclusion need not be seen
in opposition. To support inclusive education, assessment
systems need to abide by principles that ‘promote the
learning of all pupils as far as possible’ (European Agency,
2007, p. 47). First, all students’ learning progress and
achievement should be identified and valued, and all
students should have the opportunity to demonstrate
their progress and achievement. Second, assessment
procedures should be complementary, coherent with the
goal of supporting learning and teaching, and coordinated,
avoiding segregation through labelling. Third, students
should be entitled to reliable and valid assessment
procedures that accommodate and, where possible,
are modified to meet their needs (European Agency for
Development in Special Needs Education, 2007, 2008).
The importance of a balanced assessment system is
increasingly recognized in the region. In Kyrgyzstan,
a formative assessment system is scheduled for
introduction. Teachers in Lithuania are encouraged to
provide feedback and use other formative assessment
methods that support each student’s development.
Research in North Macedonia showed that formative
assessment, with a focus on ongoing monitoring, had
the biggest influence on improving outcomes of students
with learning difficulties (Aleksovska et al., 2015).
An OECD review of Serbia
recommended a move away
from reproducing facts in school graduation examinations
and towards a wider range of transversal competences
and levels of achievement (Maghnouj et al., 2020). In
Tajikistan, the Ministry of Education and Science, with
international support, is developing guidance on the use
of formative assessment in classrooms.
Out of the 30 education systems reviewed, 27 reported
having a national assessment framework for all learners
to specify procedures guiding data collection and use.
In most countries, such frameworks operate at the
national level and are described in laws, regulations or
even the national curriculum, as in Estonia and Georgia.
A few countries regulate the assessment framework at
local level. In Lithuania, for example, schools develop their
own student assessment procedures, approved by the
head teacher, and publish them on the school website.
In Poland, each school adopts its own assessment
system, guided by national legislation. However, this
process is not always straightforward. Latvia and Slovenia,
for instance, reported that enhancing evaluation and
assessment tools aligned with education goals so as to
improve student outcomes was challenging and that
assessment data were used mainly to make decisions
about student retention or promotion.
Countries whose assessment frameworks differentiate
learners with special needs essentially refer only to
learners with disabilities. Few countries’ curriculum-
based assessment guidelines cover a wider range of
learners. In Belarus, assessment guidelines state that
ethnic minority or immigrant learners not proficient
in Belarusian or Russian may be exempt from grading
in the corresponding language classes for up to two
years. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, guidelines refer to
gender, ethnicity, language, culture and special needs; in
Hungary, to socio-cultural background; and in the Russian
Federation, to immigrant and bilingual children.
High-stakes assessments can lead to negative practices such as selective
admission, strict discipline policies, student reassignment, and greater focus
and time given to those most likely to succeed
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While assessment frameworks should support ethnic
minority learners’ needs, some countries’ frameworks
do not always meet those needs, especially with respect
to high-stakes examinations. They may in fact act as a
barrier to demonstrating learning achievement at the end
of school and for gaining access to tertiary education. This
is a challenge for students of Uighur- and Uzbek-language
schools in Kazakhstan and for most students educated in
languages other than Russian in the Russian Federation.
In the case of learners with disabilities, two approaches
can be distinguished. In some countries, such as Armenia,
teams of professionals, including special teachers and
therapists, assess learners with disabilities in accordance
with their individualized education plan, while all other
learners’ assessments are based on general procedures.
Other countries have general assessment procedures
that apply to all learners, but are adjusted and modified
for learners with disabilities. In Kazakhstan, learners
with disabilities are assessed using the same criteria
and indicators as other children but adaptations take
into account needs and limitations imposed by a
range of impairments. Teachers set learning targets
for assessment of learners with disabilities as part of a
differentiated and individualized teaching approach that
combines a common and special education curriculum.
Most countries have guidance documents on assessment.
Azerbaijan approved new guidelines for school-based
assessment in 2018, although they do not refer to
special education needs. Croatia has an Ordinance on the
Methods, Procedures and Elements of the Evaluation
of Primary and Secondary Schools and special provision
for evaluating achievement of students with disabilities.
Serbia has a rulebook with guidelines on exercising the
right to an individualized education plan. In Uzbekistan,
guidebooks developed in compliance with the State
Educational Standard provide guidelines to teachers on
conducting learner assessment. Countries without formal
guidance for teachers use other approaches. Mongolia has
trained teachers in a few provinces on general assessment
and the new assessment regulations. Turkey, as part
of its Education Vision 2023, will implement a School
Development Model and a Learning Analytics Platform.
Countries offer various accommodations to
learners with disabilities in examinations
Assessment methods should meet all learners’ needs.
In the case of learners with disabilities, reasonable
accommodations may be needed to ensure these learners
can be assessed without lowering expectations (Yaoying,
2013). Accommodations take various forms. They may
be made to testing equipment and technology (
Box 5.5
).
Specific examination materials and tests for learners with
disabilities are prepared in the Czech Republic, Mongolia,
North Macedonia, the Russian Federation, Slovakia and
Ukraine. In Montenegro, individual adjustments are made
for each examination. Depending on type and degree
of disability, students are exempted from parts of the
examination they cannot take.
Additional time may be given to students with disabilities,
ranging from 30 minutes in Hungary to one hour in
Azerbaijan. In Kazakhstan, students with disabilities
have longer break times. Setting accommodations are
also made. Bulgaria provides an independent room with
a personal development support team. Ukraine offers
a room with a nurse, ramps, an accessible toilet and an
accessible table. Examination facilities with accessibility
features are also available in Montenegro.
Test procedure accommodations are common. Students
with severe oral communication difficulties can take
written instead of oral examinations in Croatia, Georgia,
Mongolia, North Macedonia, the Republic of Moldova and
the Russian Federation. In Hungary, students with severe
writing difficulties can take an oral examination or choose
another subject to be assessed on in the secondary
school leaving examination.
Teacher consultants and additional teaching staff are
often made available. Assistants write down student
answers in Bulgaria, specialists interpret in sign language
in Kazakhstan, administrators and assessment centre
staff provide support in Lithuania, and an external
person is permitted to enter and leave the examination
auditorium to provide support in Ukraine.
Some countries lack national guidelines on assisting
assessment of learners with special education needs. In
Belarus, children with learning difficulties who study in
mainstream schools are assessed according to the regular
norms. In Latvia, all learners with disabilities except
those with intellectual disabilities follow the general
education curriculum based on the National Standard
of Basic Education, which means they must take tests
and examinations like their peers without disabilities. In
Uzbekistan, school graduation examinations are waived
for learners with disabilities upon a medical commission
recommendation. Learners who do not pass graduation
Specific examination materials and tests
for learners with disabilities are prepared
in the Czech Republic, Mongolia, North
Macedonia, the Russian Federation,
Slovakia and Ukraine
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GLOBAL EDUCATION MONITORING REPORT 2021
examinations in some subjects may repeat them in the
following two months or sit a different examination.
A 2% quota in university admissions for people with
disabilities was introduced in 2018 (Yusupov, 2019).
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