PISA for Development Assessment and Analytical Framework
Reading, Mathematics and Science
“What is important for citizens to know and be able to do?” The OECD Programme for
International Student Assessment (PISA) seeks to answer that question through the
most comprehensive and rigorous international assessment of student knowledge and
skills. As more countries join its ranks, PISA is evolving to successfully cater for
a larger and more diverse group of participants. The OECD launched the PISA for Development
initiative in 2014 to support evidence-based policy making globally and offer universal
tools in monitoring progress towards the Education Sustainable Development Goal. Spanning
six years, this unique pilot project aims to make the assessment more accessible and
relevant to a wider range of countries, while maintaining the overall PISA framework
and accordance with PISA’s technical standards and usual practices.
The PISA for Development Assessment and Analytical Framework presents the conceptual
foundations of the project, and covers reading, mathematics and science. PISA for
Development has a school-based component and an out-of-school one. For the school-based
component, a questionnaire about students’ background is distributed to all participating
students. School principals complete a school questionnaire that describes the school,
its students and teachers, and the learning environment. Teachers also complete a
questionnaire about themselves, the school’s resources, their teaching practice and
their students. The out-of-school respondents complete a background questionnaire,
and their parent (or person most knowledgeable about them) answers a questionnaire
about the youth’s background and childhood experiences. A household observation questionnaire
is completed by the interviewer, and information about the location of the household
is collected by PISA for Development National Centres.
Nine countries participated in the PISA for Development assessment: Bhutan, Cambodia,
Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay, Senegal and Zambia.
Published on September 25, 2018
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