Korea has been revising its national curriculum for primary and secondary education in an ongoing process that began in 2015. One set of reforms took place between 2015 and 2020, with a focus on moving from a knowledge-based approach to teaching and learning to a competence-based, student-centred approach. With this in mind, the curriculum centres on six core competences to be developed throughout a young person’s education: self-management; knowledge-information processing; creative thinking; aesthetic and emotional competency; communication skills; and community competence. Major reforms at the primary school level included strengthening Korean language education and introducing courses that encourage students’ active participation. Reforms to the middle school curriculum involved full implementation of the ‘free semester’ programme (2013), which lessens the burden of test preparation. As well as reducing student stress, the ‘free semester’ allows students to pursue career-related activities, with innovative assessment methods. A 2014 survey found that the programme had increased student, teacher and parent satisfaction. Since 2018, Korea has been laying the foundations for Artificial Intelligence (AI) education by gradually expanding software education in primary and middle schools. Korea opened 247 AI pilot schools and 34 designated high schools in 2020 to develop models for AI education.
Korea is currently working on further revisions to the curriculum, which will gradually be implemented in primary schools from 2024 and in secondary schools from 2025. This has involved revisiting the core competences with a focus on enabling learners to adapt to future change. Korea also plans to involve key stakeholders such as students, teachers, parents and metropolitan and provincial offices of education in the process, and to establish a curriculum development governance system that encourages the participation of the general public (National information provided to the OECD).
Further reading: OECD (2019[6]), Education Policy Outlook 2019: Working Together to Help Students Achieve their Potential, OECD Publishing, Paris, https://dx.doi.org/10.1787/2b8ad56e-en.