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Articles

Between two science curricula: the influence of international surveys on the Israeli science curriculum

 

Abstract

International surveys have served as agents of change for the introduction of reforms in curricula worldwide. The Israeli Ministry of Education set a goal of raising Israel's ranking in international surveys so that Israel will be among the 10 leading countries in the Program for International Student Assessment and Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS). The Ministry of Education therefore acted to reduce the gap between the intended and the attained science curriculum by intervening on two curricular levels: the intended and the implemented. Over the years, documents that contributed to the adoption of contents and skills from the international surveys were added to the science curriculum, until the publication of the new science curriculum. The intervention was successful and in TIMSS 2011, Israel ranked 13 out of the 42 participating countries. The present research examines the influence of international surveys on science education in Israel, over the course of time (1996–2011). Analysis of documents accompanying the curriculum shows a clear message that international surveys are standards that should be used for teaching, and every additional document closes the gap between the science curriculum and the international surveys.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Aviva Klieger

Aviva Klieger holds a PhD in science education. She is the chair of the master of teaching program at the Faculty of Education at Beit Berl College in Israel. Her research interests are science education, integrating technology in teaching and teacher education. Her studies in these fields were published in scientific journals.

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