LaDamaX · 5 answers · 10d

If you live outside of the USA, is there a standardized test that all children must take at the end of the school year to demonstrate (growth or not) to the local/regional/federal government? Please tell me about your experience(s).

We have no annual test. As a pupil you get promoted to the following year of education by not failing too many tests and failing work. If you do you must repeat that year. When you end your respective school education that comes usually with a sort of final exam which is a unified exam nationwide.

No. There's the national high school exam that's mostly for university admission, and while everyone can take it, its results are only valid for seniors or those who already finished school.

Years 2 (ages 6-7) and 6 (ages 10-11) have the SAT exam and year 11 has GCSE exams. SAT'S were not a thing when I was at school. GCSE's were a thing, at the bare minimum you took English, Maths and a Science exam with some marks coming from coursework over two academic years.

well wherever ya'll are, hopefully they don't tie school funding to those test scores there

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