Many spheres of society identify closing equity gaps as an explicit goal of the global agenda, such as in the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). For example, SDG 4 indicators concern education and, with regard to curriculum, 4.7.1 sets the following goal:
“By 2030 ensure all learners acquire knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development, including among others through education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence, global citizenship, and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s contribution to sustainable development”.1
More precisely, the indicators are constructed around the extent to which education for global citizenship and sustainable development are mainstreamed into 1) national education policies, 2) curricula, 3) teacher education, and 4) student assessment.2
Students develop competencies for global citizenship and literacy for sustainable development through various learning experiences, including formal, non-formal, and informal learning. Therefore, the types of curriculum innovation discussed in this report, which promote various aspects of student competencies, should be considered opportunities and means to achieve the global agenda. However, these curriculum innovations do not scale.
One of the main reasons is difficulty in assessing types of competencies gained through such innovations. For example, digital learning3 provides alternative pathways to disadvantaged students (e.g. full online courses for students who have dropped out of school or are bound to prolonged stays at the hospital for health reasons). While this opens new opportunities to not leave anyone behind, the recognition of qualifications acquired through digital curricula may be limited. Resistance to recognising competency-based qualifications may come from established institutions, such as formal public schools that deliver traditional qualifications based on what is taught by teachers and the number of hours taken as credits, or may reflect the value universities and general public place on mainstream qualifications.
Furthermore, mindsets and assessment should, therefore, shift to value learning processes as well as competencies and achievements gained from those processes. Assessment for learning, for instance, regards assessment as an opportunity to provide feedback that will advance students’ learning. From the equity perspective, high-stakes assessment, such as university entrance exams should consider system change, for example, shifting from emphasis on competitive entry points towards valuing rigorous efforts at the exit point in order to maximise learning gains and contribute to the diversity and inclusion of universities.
The COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 pushed deeper thinking about equity issues in curriculum and assessment. Students with disabilities long experienced challenges, like access to testing accommodations, and the pandemic further exacerbated these obstacles. Recognising that, while all students had access to testing disrupted by the pandemic, students with disabilities faced greater barriers, a state court in California, United States, issued a preliminary injunction barring University of California campuses from considering SAT or ACT scores in admissions or financial aid decisions, noting that the pandemic has restricted the ability of students to take the exams.
On the technical side, the educational technology industry started to invest in numerous initiatives to develop digital tools, offering an array of benefits for students in terms of equity and democratisation. Blockchain technology, for example, enables the creation of learning records that are permanent, transparent and give direct access to users, allowing them to document their lifelong learning path (Jirgensons and Kapenieks, 2018[3]). Thus, blockchain can be used in the education sector and offer new ways to recognise and validate a range of learning outcomes or competencies students already had or learned (see the Research section of this report). This suggests that students can be recognised for any type of learning – anytime, anywhere – and for their gains across different spheres of learning, including formal, non‑formal, and informal, with concrete value-added for the labour market. As another example, migrant students could be given credits for native language proficiency as part of their prior knowledge, and students who dropped out of school could still be given credits for their prior learning and/or experiential learning in the community or at home if this led to achieving the intended goals of the curriculum. Thus, this tool has the potential to make lifelong and life-wide learning more visible in a legitimate way.
If blockchain technology can be further explored, the legitimacy of competencies that students gain through project-based learning, for example, could be assessed by people directly involved in their projects and who observe the learning processes and outcomes in addition to their teachers. This could embed transparency in the assessment process for high-stakes university entrance requirements or e‑portfolios, and avoid fake reporting or fraudulent statements about such learning activities and attainments. This will require a more rigorous approach to assessment, refining the purpose, scope, and measures for assessing competencies, along with a change in mindsets, expectations, and values about assessments and qualifications. Such potential is challenged by unconscious biases among teachers and school leaders about students’ ability, as well as by parents’ limited expectations and awareness of the potential for every student to succeed. In turn, these biases, and limited expectations and awareness are often fed by high-stakes exams themselves, which exert pressure limiting the benefits of curriculum innovation (see “Lessons Learned” section in the forthcoming Ecosystem report – What gets measured gets treasured (OECD, forthcoming[2])).