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N. H. Douma; M. J. Warrens; E. Fleur; M. A. Dijks; H. Korpershoek – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
Dutch secondary education is a multi-tiered system, and many students are placed in a single track in the first year (seventh grade) of secondary education. As part of the placement procedure, all sixth-grade students take an end of primary school test. Although these standardised attainment tests (SATs) are considered high-stakes tests, the…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Exit Examinations, Educational Attainment, Predictor Variables
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Joost C. F. de Winter – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2024
Launched in late November 2022, ChatGPT, a large language model chatbot, has garnered considerable attention. However, ongoing questions remain regarding its capabilities. In this study, ChatGPT was used to complete national high school exams in the Netherlands on the topic of English reading comprehension. In late December 2022, we submitted the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Artificial Intelligence, English (Second Language), Language Tests
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Nguyen, Chi – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2023
This study examines how Vietnamese high school leaders interpreted and implemented policy changes of the Vietnamese National High School Examination--a nationally standardized exam that determines whether students may graduate from high school and attend post-secondary education. The research found that at the national level, the policy is highly…
Descriptors: High Schools, Leadership, Educational Policy, Educational Change
Brendan Sheran; Ashley Carey; Jack Schneider; Rebecca Woodland; Kathryn McDermott – Phi Delta Kappan, 2024
Dialogue, listening, and compromise are essential elements of living in a democracy. In a highly partisan time, is it possible to reestablish common ground when it comes to how best to educate our children in and for democracy? Authors Brendan Sheran, Ashley Carey, Jack Schneider, Rebecca Woodland, and Kathryn McDermott, who are affiliated with…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Citizen Participation, Models, Public Opinion
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Azar Abizada; Sevinj Seyidova – Cogent Education, 2024
This research investigates the impact of class size on student performance in Azerbaijani public secondary schools, utilizing State Examination Center (SEC) final exam scores as a key indicator. Data from the Ministry of Science and Education is analyzed, covering approximately 80,000 9th and 11th-grade students in 4,400 schools. The primary…
Descriptors: Class Size, Academic Achievement, Secondary School Students, Public Schools
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LaTonia M. Amerson; Cynthia Martinez-Garcia; John R. Slate – Education Leadership Review of Doctoral Research, 2024
Although information related to mathematics achievement and participation are accessible, there is limited data associated with the simultaneous intersections of race and gender as it pertains to mathematics achievement. The purpose of this study was to determine the degree to which differences were present in overall mathematics achievement by…
Descriptors: African American Students, Gender Differences, Algebra, Mathematics Tests
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Jim Gleeson – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
Assessment is often described as the tail that wags the curriculum dog. Curriculum has featured more prominently than assessment in Irish scholarship. Drawing on relevant policy documents and interviews with senior National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NCCA) and State Examinations Commission (SEC) officers, and relevant documentation,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Context Effect, Secondary Education, Secondary School Curriculum
Gill, Tim – Research Matters, 2023
Secondary Checkpoint assessments are taken by students at the end of the Cambridge Lower Secondary programme (aged 14) in countries around the world. Many students continue with Cambridge after this and take IGCSE exams two years later. Given that there is a high level of coherence between the curricula in the two stages, performance in Secondary…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Secondary School Students, Achievement Tests, Predictive Validity
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Winter, Christine – Whiteness and Education, 2023
The Black Lives Matter movement has increased attention paid to whiteness and education. This paper contributes to this attention by investigating epistemologies of Geography and their enactment in two 'multicultural' schools. Through textual analysis, lesson observations and interviews with GCSE Geography students and teachers, I inquire into the…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Exit Examinations
Rodeiro, Carmen Vidal; Williamson, Joanna – Research Matters, 2023
In England, GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) qualifications offered to students aged 14-16 were recently reformed. For mathematics specifically, the new GCSE aimed to be more demanding, provide greater challenge for the most able students, and support progression to post-16 mathematics. However, there have been concerns that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Secondary School Students, Mathematics Tests
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Kerrin von Engelhardt – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
This paper describes the Berlin "Abitur" examination in the twentieth century and its written documentation in files. By the late nineteenth century, the "Abitur" examination was fully established in Prussia and with it a graduation certificate that was obligatory for university entrance. Thus, the "Abitur"…
Descriptors: Educational History, Exit Examinations, Secondary School Students, Student Records
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Kevin Woods; Tee McCaldin; Kerry Brown; Rob Buck; Nicola Fairhall; Emma Forshaw; David Soares – Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 2024
In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) has been for the last 35 years the most common qualification by which students' attainment at age 16 has been measured. The range and balance of processes by which the GCSEs' programmes of study have been assessed have varied over the decades, to include…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Grade 11, Educational Certificates
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Michael Smith – English in Education, 2025
This paper addresses the question of how classroom-based peer assessment practices can be improved in relation to student interpretations of subjective assessment criteria. To achieve this, this research study considers the possible pedagogic benefits and implications of using a comparative judgement (CJ) approach to the peer assessment of GCSE…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Exit Examinations, Creative Writing
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Piattoeva, Nelli; Vasileva, Nadezhda – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2023
Nationwide large-scale assessments (NLSA)--an example of cross-border policy mobility--manifest a proliferating means of governing formal schooling. In the Russian context, NLSA takes the form of a compulsory graduation examination called the Unified State Examinations (USE). In this article, we explore how a mobile policy instrument of the NLSA…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Assessment, Performance Technology, Governance
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Daury Jansen; Louise Elffers; Suzanne Jak; Monique L. L. Volman – Oxford Review of Education, 2024
The prevalence of private supplementary tutoring (i.e. shadow education) is growing, particularly in nations with selective school exams. The hypothesis that tutoring attendance rises as pressure to perform increases has not yet been tested. Therefore, our research question is: does the likelihood of attending shadow education increase with an…
Descriptors: Exit Examinations, Secondary School Students, Secondary Schools, Foreign Countries
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