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Croatia's Education System Overview

The document provides an overview of Croatia's education system, including preschool, primary, secondary, and higher education. It discusses the impact of TIMSS 2015 results on education reform in Croatia, including changes made to science curricula and teacher training based on TIMSS performance data. The education system is centralized but cities and counties play roles, and national minorities have rights to education in their native languages.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views13 pages

Croatia's Education System Overview

The document provides an overview of Croatia's education system, including preschool, primary, secondary, and higher education. It discusses the impact of TIMSS 2015 results on education reform in Croatia, including changes made to science curricula and teacher training based on TIMSS performance data. The education system is centralized but cities and counties play roles, and national minorities have rights to education in their native languages.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Croatia

Ines Elezović
Jasmina Muraja
National Centre for External Evaluation of Education

Introduction
Overview of Education System
The education system in the Republic of Croatia is centralized in most areas, and power lies with the
Ministry of Science and Education (MSE). However, cities have rights and duties of the founders of
primary schools, and counties oversee high schools.a Both have an important role in allocating funds
and cooperating with schools on staffing matters. At International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED) Level 0, there are nurseries for children under age 3, followed by kindergarten
and preschool programs. In 2014, it became obligatory for all children to attend a preschool program
for a duration of 150-200 hours in the year prior to starting elementary school. On average,
involvement in preschool programs is much lower than the overall European Union (EU) average
(95 percent in 2016, according to Eurostat) due to uneven availability and attendance of these
programs throughout the country (from almost 90 percent of children in Zagreb to 19 percent of
children in one county in Eastern Croatia). At the age of 6 or 7, children start attending primary
education, which lasts eight years (ISCED 1 and 2). Primary schools are compulsory in Croatia, and
the student-teacher ratio in primary education is 14 to 1.1 Secondary education has two main streams
that represent ISCED Level 3: general education gymnasiums (four-year programs) and vocational
education (high schools with three- to five-year programs). After secondary education, all
gymnasium students are obliged to pass the State Matura exams; for vocational students, these exams
are voluntary but needed when a vocational education student wants to enroll in a higher education
institution. At the tertiary level (ISCED 5 through 8), Croatia, along with 48 European countries,
implemented the Bologna Process, a set of changes that reformed higher education across Europe.
Since 2005, the following innovations were introduced with the purpose of joining the European
Education Area: three educational levels in tertiary education, new academic titles (aligned with the
qualification framesb), and European Credit Transfer System (ECTS) points. All of these adjustments
in higher education were complete by 2010.

a
Units of local government are municipalities (hrv. “općine”) and cities, and units of regional government are counties (hrv.
“županije”). In total, there are 576 units of local and regional government comprising 428 municipalities, 127 cities, and 21
counties. (Note: Zagreb is both the capital city and a county.)
b
The European Qualification Framework (EQF) is available at [Link]
questions/what-european-qualification-framework-eqf; the Croatian Qualification Framework (CROQF) is available at
[Link]

CROATIA
TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 1
In summary, the education system in the Republic of Croatia comprises the following
education cycles:
• Preschool education and childcare for children ages 6 months to 6 years, delivered
through educational, health and social care programs2
• Primary education (Grades 1 to 8), which is compulsory for all students ages 6 to 15
• Secondary education (Grades 1 to 4) in gymnasiums (general or specialized), vocational
or trade schools, and art schools (music, dance, visual arts, etc.)3
• Higher education comprises university and professional studies offered at universities or
polytechnics and schools of professional higher education
The official language in education institutions is Croatian. In certain areas of Croatia, where
ethnic minorities comprise a majority of the population, the minority language is recognized as a
second official language. In Croatia, the languages of instruction may be categorized into two
groups: so-called territorial or minority languages, and nonterritorial languages (in accordance
with the European Charter on Regional or Minority Languages).4 Members of the recognized
national minorities are guaranteed the right to education and can exercise this constitutional right
to education in their native language and letter5 via three basic models:
• In Model A schools, all the classes are conducted in the minority language, and study of
the Croatian language is compulsory for the same number of hours as for the minority
language
• In Model B schools, classes are conducted in two languages, with science subjects taught
only in Croatian and social science subjects taught in the minority language
• In Model C schools, all classes are conducted in Croatian, and an additional two to five
hours are dedicated to fostering the language and culture of the national minority
National minorities that exercise these rights and employ the aforementioned models in
schools are Czech, Hungarian, Italian, and Serbian national minorities (usually for Models A
and B), and Albanian, Austrian, Czech, Hungarian, Italian, Macedonian, Polish, Serbian, Russian,
Rusyn, Slovak, Slovene, Ukrainian, and Jewish national minorities (for Model C). Most schools (97
percent) instruct students in Croatian, and only students in Model A and B schools and classes are
learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) subjects in the minority
language.
Use and Impact of TIMSS
The National Curriculum Framework (2010)6 presents a starting point for systemic changes in
preschool, primary, and secondary education in Croatia. Comprehensive reform of the structure
and content of the curriculum for the primary and lower secondary education restarted with the
adoption of the Strategy for Education, Science, and Technology7 in 2014. In 2015, an expert
working group, aided by a wide range of stakeholders, began work on general curricular reform
drawing information from, among other sources, the results of international large scale studies.

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TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 2
The original plan was to introduce new curricula on an experimental basis in the 2016–2017 school
year, but it was somewhat slowed due to a period of instability in national politics. Nevertheless,
processes restarted, and new curricula were put into place in early 2019, beginning experimentally
in the 2019–2020 school year.
For the first time, indications are strong that TIMSS results have had a direct impact on
education reform and will consequentially influence teaching practices in primary education in
Croatia. After the TIMSS 2015 results and the secondary analysis that followed, published findings
resulted in some changes to the mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, and Nature and Society
curricula. A number of experts were involved in both secondary analyses of the TIMSS 2015 data
and production of the new curricula, and their experience serves as an excellent example of the
direct impact of TIMSS 2015 on national policies. Physics in primary and general secondary
(gymnasium) education has been affected by some of these impacts. While building a new
curriculum for physics, TIMSS 2015 results in science were taken into consideration in relation to
two findings. First, students were fairly familiar with some content, such as hydrostatic pressure
or buoyancy, that was not included at all in the physics curricula. Second, they were familiar with
content that was being taught in higher grades—for example, recognizing materials that conduct
electricity or understanding magnetism. Students’ familiarity may originate from real-life
experiences and other sources of learning outside the formal curriculum (advanced project groups;
home resources, such as scientific magazines or watching specialized TV content; or simply playing
with their parents or peers). Therefore, the physics curriculum introduced some new education
outcomes. Some outcomes were named more precisely; some have been upgraded to higher levels,
such as understanding or connecting concepts; and some—for example, astronomy concepts, such
as lunar changes or starlight, that were present sparsely or not at all—are planned to be introduced
in earlier grades.
Around the same time (2015 to 2018), the Education and Teacher Training Agency, as the
authority in charge of continuous professional development of teachers in Croatia, had organized
series of expert trainings with the main theme being TIMSS results. The goal was to introduce this
research to wider audience of teachers, to present Croatian results in TIMSS (2011 and 2015) on
the international level, to address some national specificities, and to study available TIMSS items.
The focus was on teachers of lower grades (Grades 1 to 4) that participated in TIMSS 2015 and, in
general, on mathematics teachers. TIMSS results were an excellent basis for discussion on learning
and teaching challenges in the line of new approaches to developing students’ competencies,
contrary to more traditional ways of reproducing theoretical knowledge. This change of paradigm
was also a topic of numerous STEM seminars and workshops for lower grades of primary
education.c

c
Students assessed in TIMSS 2019 were still learning according to the 2006 syllabus, and new curricula will be obligatory in the
2020–2021 school year, according to the MSE’s Decisions in Power. New curricula are introduced gradually. Therefore, fourth
grade primary school students will be actively included for the first time in the reform in the 2022–2023 school year.

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TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 3
The Mathematics Curriculum in Primary and Lower Secondary Grades
In 2005, the MSE began to implement the first major school reform project, known as the Croatian
National Education Standard (Hrvatski nacionalni obrazovni standard). The Syllabus for Primary
School (Nastavni plan i program za osnovnu školu)8 was designed and implemented in 2006. It
contains the educational work plan for subjects for Grades 1 to 8 and was effective at the time of
all TIMSS surveys of fourth grade students conducted in Croatia (2011, 2015, and 2019). The
document was not a curriculum per se, but more of a catalog of education goals presented
separately for each subject, grade, and teaching unit.
Exhibit 1 lists competencies students should achieve by the end of fourth grade, according to
the syllabus.

Exhibit 1: Expected Mathematics Competencies by the End of Fourth Grade

Domain Content Area Competencies


Numbers Whole numbers Add, subtract, and compare whole numbers up to 1 million; demonstrate
knowledge of place values; find values on a number line; add and subtract using
a number line; differentiate between natural and ordinal numbers; estimate and
round two-digit numbers to the nearest tenth; recognize multiples and factors of
numbers; learn the multiplication table up to 10 × 10; multiply a two-digit
number by 100; divide multiples of 100 by 100; multiply a two-digit number by a
number with more than two digits; divide a number of three or more digits by a
two-digit number; perform operations with and without brackets; perform
money calculations (in kuna and lipa); know units for measuring liquid (deciliter
and liter) and convert between them; know units for measuring mass (gram,
dekagram, and kilogram) and convert between them; and learn basic algebraic
terms and that letters represent numbers in algebraic equations
Fractions and Use words to express fractions (e.g., one-third of an apple, or 5 is half of 10)
decimals and divide with a remainder
Number Solve word problems and simple equations
sentences with
whole numbers
Patterns and Find the missing term in a sequence
relationships
Geometric Points, lines, and Differentiate among and draw flat, curved, and broken lines; draw and label
Shapes angles lengths, and mark terminal points of lines; draw horizontal and vertical lines;
and draw straight lines that intersect and determine their point of intersection;
Measures differentiate between points that belong to a line and points that do not;
recognize and draw right, acute, and obtuse angles; use informal coordinate
systems (square grids) to locate points on a plane; draw circles with a compass
Two- and three- Identify two-dimensional geometric shapes (circle, triangle, rectangle, and
dimensional square); identify three-dimensional geometric shapes (sphere, cylinder, cube,
shapes parallelepiped, and pyramid); draw and identify triangles according to shape
(scalene, isosceles, and equilateral); draw right triangles; measure the
perimeter of a triangle; measure the perimeter and area of rectangles and
squares; know units of area (cm2, dm2, and m2); use a square grid to measure
area; estimate area and volume; calculate the volume of cubes and
parallelepipeds; and know units of volume (cm3 and dm3)
Data display Read, interpret, organize, and represent data in simple tables, compare
information from bar graphs, and draw conclusions from data

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TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 4
Exhibit 2 lists the competencies students should achieve by the end of eighth grade, according
to the syllabus.

Exhibit 2: Expected Mathematics Competencies by the End of Eighth Grade

Domain Content Area Competencies


Numbers Whole numbers Compare, round, add, subtract, multiply, and divide whole numbers; find
numbers on a number line; determine the absolute value of a whole number;
write, read, compare, add, subtract, and multiply natural numbers larger than 1
million; divide by two-digit numbers; use the commutative, associative, and
distributive properties of multiplication; know the properties of divisibility;
determine common multiples; use pocket calculators; and find square roots
using a calculator
Fractions and Find fractions, decimals, and rational numbers on a number line; compare, add,
decimals subtract, multiply, and divide fractions; write equivalent fractions; convert
fractions to mixed numbers; understand decimal places; compare, round, add,
subtract, multiply, and divide decimals; convert decimal numbers to decimal
fractions and vice versa; and write rational numbers as fractions and decimal
numbers and compare them
Integers Differentiate between positive and negative integers; find integers on a number
line; compare, add, subtract, multiply, and divide integers; and determine the
absolute value of an integer
Ratio, proportion, Recognize proportional quantities and apply ratios and proportionality in simple
and percent everyday situations; present proportionality graphically; calculate percentages;
and determine interest
Algebra Solve simple mathematical formulas and expressions containing one variable;
solve simple linear equations and simple two-variable systems of two linear
equations, and use substitution to verify the accuracy of solutions; substitute
numerical values for variables in formulas and calculate the value of remaining
variables; present simple numerical relationships (e.g., linear, pure quadratic,
and square root) using appropriate vocabulary, associated value tables,
equations, and graphics; convert simple word problems into algebraic notation
(e.g., numerical sentences, linear equations, and systems of two linear
equations), plan and execute solutions, and understand their significance; solve
equations graphically and algebraically; graph linear functions; calculate with
exponents; and perform calculations using scientific notation
Geometry Measure and draw angles; construct angles using the properties of angle
bisectors; identify, create, compare, and classify two- and three-dimensional
geometric shapes, and recognize and describe their geometrical properties,
including translation, axis symmetry, central symmetry, and rotation; recognize
congruence, similarity, and symmetry in two- and three-dimensional forms;
apply Thales’ theorem for right angles inscribed in circles; apply the
Pythagorean theorem as it relates to the measurable features of squares,
rectangles, equilateral triangles, isosceles triangles, rhombuses, and trapezoids;
use the Cartesian coordinate system and read the coordinates of points in the
system; determine perpendicular lines and planes; and apply formulas to
determine length, area, surface area, perimeter, and volume
Data and Collect, classify, and interpret data using tables, frequency diagrams, bar
Probability graphs, and pie charts; determine the number of possible and favorable
outcomes in simple situations; apply the terminology of probability; draw
frequency and relative frequency histograms and find the arithmetic mean,
median, quartiles, mode, range, and interquartile range of a series of numerical
data; and calculate the probabilities of random events and explain them as
relative frequencies

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TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 5
The Science Curriculum in Primary and Lower Secondary Grades
The Syllabus for Primary School9 contains the educational work plan for science topics, combined
until Grade 4 and within separate subjects for Grades 5 to 8. Science is taught mostly as Nature
and Society until Grade 4, followed by separate and more distinguished subjects of biology,
chemistry, geography, and physics in Grades 5 to 8.
According to the syllabus and its areas, by the end of fourth grade, students should meet the
following objectives in the following areas:
• Characteristics and Life Processes of Living Things: Differentiate between the living and
the nonliving world and recognize the correlation between them; recognize parts of the
body and understand that the human body is an organism; recognize changes that occur
in the body during puberty; describe the main parts of plants and understand their main
functions; understand the importance of plants for life; differentiate animal species
according to their diet; explain mutual dependencies between plants and animals;
recognize plants and animals that live in grasslands and understand their mutual
relationship; know the most common forest animals; recognize the interdependence of
plants and animals in the forest; understand the significance of water for humans, plants,
and animals; and recognize the most common plants and animals in fresh water and in
and near the sea
• Life Cycles, Reproduction, and Heredity: Name members of a family and differentiate
between members of the nuclear and extended family; differentiate between ancestors
and descendants; and become familiar with the life cycles of living things
• Interaction with the Environment: Differentiate among the seasons and recognize their
main features; describe seasonal changes and link them with changes in the lives of plants,
animals, and people; and understand the interrelationship of professions, institutions,
plants, and animals in Croatia
• Ecosystems: Recognize that plants need sunlight and food; identify simple food chains;
recognize human impact on the environment; learn how to separate waste into
appropriate containers; understand the correlation between people’s activities and
pollution; understand man’s role in water conservation and consumption; and
understand the importance of protecting the air and sea from pollution
• Human Health: Understand the importance of personal hygiene, a healthy diet, and
health maintenance; become acquainted with health care facilities and staff; describe how
one can maintain health by adhering to basic hygienic, dietary, and physical habits;
understand how infectious diseases are transmitted; and recognize maltreatment and ask
for help
• Classification and Properties of Matter: Describe physical states and properties of water
by conducting simple experiments; describe characteristic differences in shape and
volume of each state of matter, and understand that state changes can occur by heating or
cooling; identify observable changes in materials caused by heating, cooling, and freezing;

CROATIA
TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 6
give examples of materials that dissolve in water and those that do not; and identify
properties of air by conducting experiments, and determine the composition of air
• Energy: Identify sources of energy (e.g., the Sun, electricity, water, wind) and describe
practical uses of energy; identify common light sources (the Sun); and describe the
concepts of rainbow and shadow
• Earth’s Structure, Physical Characteristics, and Resources: Recognize features of the
landscape in Croatia (lowland, hill, mountain, and coastland); describe elements of the
natural environment in students’ local town or village regions; understand the correlation
between climate and living things; name the most common types of wind; understand the
importance of air for life; identify evidence that air contains water; differentiate among
types of soil; differentiate among types of forest; differentiate among types of water;
identify the role of land in the economy and explain the economic importance of different
regions; and recognize the importance of using Earth’s resources responsibly
• Earth’s Processes, Cycles, and History: Describe the movement of water on Earth’s
surface; understand the water cycle; observe changes in nature caused by the seasons; and
understand basic terms associated with fossils
• Earth in the Solar System: Understand the relationship between the Sun and life on Earth;
describe the Solar System as a group of planets, including Earth, each revolving around
the Sun; identify the Sun as a source of heat and light; and relate daily patterns observed
on Earth to Earth’s rotation on its axis (e.g., day and night, appearance of shadows)
By the end of eighth grade, according to the syllabus and its areas, students should be able to
achieve the following objectives in the following areas:
• Biology: Describe types of living things and classify organisms on the basis of major
taxonomic groups and their characteristics; describe the structure and functions of plants
and animals; describe organs in the human body, their functions, and the most common
disorders associated with organ systems; describe how the nervous system and hormones
control processes in the human body; compare structures and functions of human organs
and body systems with those of other animals; describe the main parts and life cycles of
cells and the role of metabolic processes in cells; differentiate between unicellular and
multicellular organisms, and understand the processes of cell division and
photosynthesis; describe the life cycles of plants and animals; differentiate between
asexual and sexual reproduction; recognize the importance and hereditary role of genes;
recognize the evolutionary development of living things and explain the process of
emergence of new species; describe the adaptation of living things to specific types of
habitat and explain how changes in the environment can affect them; describe the
importance of fossils; describe the interdependence and adaptation of living things in
ecosystems and how changes in nature and human activity affect ecosystems, anticipating
possible consequences at the local and global levels; describe food chains and explain the
relationship among producers, consumers, and decomposers; describe causes of common

CROATIA
TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 7
diseases, addictions, and other factors that jeopardize human health and life; understand
immunity; and explain the principles and importance of health protection
• Chemistry: Examine and explain physical properties of substances using experimentation
(density, thermal and electrical conductivity, magnetic properties, solubility, boiling
point, and melting point); differentiate between chemical and physical changes; explain
chemical changes; describe how chemical reactions may be used as a source of energy;
differentiate between metals, nonmetals, and chemical compounds; recognize properties
of acids and bases; differentiate between pure substances and mixtures; recognize
homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures and understand methods for separating
mixtures; describe the structure of atoms and molecules; describe factors that affect the
process of dissolving or making solutions; recognize the physical properties of water and
air; and recognize uses of oxygen
• Physics: Describe transitions that occur between states of matter through heating and
cooling; describe various forms of energy and energy transformations; relate temperature
changes to changes in volume; describe examples of heat transfer; identify basic
properties of light; recognize characteristics of sound; construct and draw direct current
circuits and explain the role of each part of the circuit; differentiate between conductors
and insulators; understand applications of the magnetic effect of electric currents and
uses of electromagnets; describe motion; describe types of force and apply knowledge of
forces to examples from everyday life; compare the density of substances; explore and
apply levers; and explain pressure in terms of force and area
• Geography: Identify renewable and nonrenewable energy sources and discuss their
efficiency and environmental impact; describe methods of waste management; identify
causes of pollution; explain how common methods of agriculture and land use can affect
land resources; describe the importance of water conservation; describe the Solar System;
describe Earth’s motion around the Sun and its effects; recognize features of the structure
of Earth; describe earthquakes and volcanoes; describe uses of minerals and rocks;
differentiate among types of soil; recognize characteristics of and the importance of water
on Earth and the water cycle; describe Earth’s atmosphere; and describe changes in
climate and weather patterns

Professional Development Requirements and Programs


The main provider of continuous teacher education is the Education and Teacher Training Agency
(ETTA). This agency is responsible for professional development of teachers through organizing
education seminars at national, regional, and local levels, as well as providing professional assistance
and guidelines, developing teaching resources and materials, and other activities. Teachers and other
education staff are required to take part in professional development at the national and county level
several times per school year. ETTA is funded by state budgets and provides regular seminars and
workshops with topics that are subject specific but also offer general interest themes, such as
educational methodology, didactics, pedagogy, counseling, administration, policy, and other areas

CROATIA
TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 8
teachers show interest in. Teachers are obliged to pursue continuous professional development
through programs provided by ETTA that were approved by the Ministry of Education. A variety of
seminars and courses are available also from other providers, such as nonprofit organizations or other
educational institutions. Costs incurred by teachers’ continuing professional development are co-
funded by the state and local government bodies as part of states’ investments in education. Employers,
(i.e., heads of schools) can also secure additional sources of funding (such as from renting school
facilities, for example) that they allocate to teacher training and other professional development
opportunities. Another state agency in education, the Agency for Mobility and EU Programmes, is
dedicated to promoting and implementing exchange programs for teachers and similar models of
acquiring additional knowledge and qualifications within the EU-funded platforms.

Monitoring Student Progress in Mathematics and Science


Student achievement is monitored and evaluated throughout the school year. The MSE prescribes
a standardized framework of monitoring and evaluation to measure students’ progress in all areas
prescribed by the national curriculum (and in the prior period, 2006 to 2019, prescribed by the
syllabus). The Regulatory Act on the Methods, Procedures, and Elements of Evaluation of Students
in Primary and Secondary Schools10 provides general guidelines on the use of unified grades and
suggested evaluation criteria.
The frequency of written and oral tests, as well as the evaluation of homework, mostly depends
upon individual teachers. Teachers evaluate students by grading their achievement numerically
and their behavior descriptively. School grades comprise numerical marks and accompanying
descriptors on a scale of 1 to 5 (1 being insufficient and 5 being excellent). The descriptive grades
for student conduct are summarized as “exemplary,” “good,” or “bad.” In the first four years of
primary school, grades are numerical, accompanied by a clear, written explanation.
According to the 2006 syllabus, the general goal of teaching mathematics is acquiring basic
mathematical knowledge necessary for understanding concepts and principles in Nature and
Society, and acquiring basic mathematical literacy and the ability to solve mathematical problems.
Around one-quarter to one-third of all lessons on ISCED 1 were dedicated to teaching
Mathematics.
The goal of teaching Nature and Society is for students to become aware of complexity, diversity,
and interconnectedness of all factors operating in humans’ natural and social environment, to
develop a relationship toward humans and events that is tolerant, that openly accepts different
attitudes and opinions, and that encourages curiosity for discovering new concepts in natural and
societal community. Around one-sixth to one-fifth of all lessons on ISCED 1 were dedicated to
teaching Nature and Society.
For both areas of assessment, achieving the targeted goals of teaching and learning happens in
multiple ways. Besides direct summative evaluation visible in form of school grades, some external
processes are in place for overall quality assurance of evaluation processes. Student knowledge
competitions at the school, regional, and national levels in specific subjects are an additional way

CROATIA
TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 9
to recognize students’ accomplishments. Advisers from ETTA regularly visit school teaching staff,
as well as homeroom teachers (Grades 1 to 4), for consultations to assess their work, locate and
assist in resolving any issues, and/or compliment teachers who are doing exemplary work in their
classrooms. Also, the Primary and Secondary School Education Act foresees a self-evaluation
process in which schools monitor and improve the quality of their work on their own, including
evaluation and improvement of curriculum implementation.
Providing standardized self-evaluation materials in pre-tertiary education is one of the tasks of
the National Centre for External Evaluation of Education (NCEEE). At the primary education
level, there are no real high-stakes exams, but there are occasional national exams in chosen
subjects (usually in Grade 8) to generally assess achievement in a target area. Some national
examinations have been conducted by the NCEEE since its establishment in 2006, in rather
irregular cycles, serving more as a diagnostics tool. International assessments were introduced in
2006, including the first cycle of the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) in
Croatia. In 2011, IEA studies were also introduced, in the form of combined Progress in
International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) and TIMSS assessments (in Grade 4). Since then,
these assessments have represented independent and international approaches to deepening the
understanding of students’ achievements and attitudes in primary education.
At the secondary education level, high-stakes State Matura exams are managed and organized
by the NCEEE. These examinations are administered in the same way and at the same time for all
students, thus making comparative results possible at the national level. Students who have
attended gymnasium are obliged to take these exams to finish their secondary education. Students
finishing their last year of vocational and/or art programs take State Matura exams only if they are
planning to enroll in higher education institutions. The Croatian State Matura comprises of
compulsory and optional exams. Compulsory subjects are mathematics, Croatian language, and
foreign language. Compulsory exams have two levels: higher/extended (A) and lower/basic (B).
Students can choose between the basic and extended level exams, and this decision is mostly
affected by the requirements of the higher education institution in which they plan to enroll. All
other STEM subject exams are voluntary; physics, biology, chemistry, and informatics and they
usually have a large number of attendees.
NCEEE is responsible for external evaluation within Croatian primary and secondary
education, as well as conducting examinations based on national standards and implementation
of international studies. Besides delivering reports to the ministry of education and other
interested public entities, the NCEEE usually delivers these results to schools and assists in their
self-evaluation processes. Aforementioned modes of evaluations are all used to monitor students’
progress in mathematics and science, ISCED 1 to 3.

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TIMSS 2019 ENCYCLOPEDIA 10
Special Initiatives in Mathematics and Science Education
In primary and secondary education, there are noncompulsory subjects, modules, and other
educational programs; supplementary classes; additional or remedial instruction; school, class, and
group projects; excursions; trips; and extracurricular and extramural activities, some of which
focus on mathematics and/or science. The purpose of these nonobligatory activities is to enable
students to develop their knowledge and abilities in areas of special interest. In all schools, high-
achieving students and/or low-achieving students have specific extracurricular programs
organized for them. Remedial instruction is provided for low-achieving students in specific
subjects, while additional instruction is provided for motivated high-achieving students.
According to the National Curriculum Framework (2010), extracurricular activities involve
mathematics and science contents, among other subject areas, in ways that enable students to learn
through personal experience about a range of topics (e.g., man and plants or animals, chemistry
experimentation, chemistry and the environment, everyday chemistry, meteorology, the causes
and effects of natural disasters, cartography, genetics, astronomy, etc.). In recent years, examples
of such projects are initiatives in robotics and programming for students of all ages. Also, many
Croatian primary schools have locally recognized accomplishments in ecology—for example,
growing their own gardens and organizing activities that involve all students and different contact
with the local community.
At the moment, curriculum reform is being implemented in the Croatian education system
(ISCED 0 to 3) that is a comprehensive modernization of teaching and learning practices
refocusing on students and facilitating the development of their competencies. Cross-curricular
topics based on the lifelong learning framework are being also reintroduced and woven into all
subjects, among them, Health and Sustainable Development. Another important cross-curricular
competence is Informational and Communications Technology (ICT). ICT is the backbone of all
described processes and the area in which schools and teachers require the most substantial
investments (in terms of means, equipment, and teacher training). Until recently, computers were
rarely used outside lessons in informatics (which was an optional subject), and the same applied
to instructions in mathematics and science subjects. The State Pedagogical Standards11 stipulated
the minimum of infrastructural and material conditions for primary schools, but it often varied
from school to school and from county to county; the gap is now being leveled nationally. On the
wave of the current national reform, schools are constantly getting better and better equipped, both
through central MSE procurement and individual purchases, and the various modes of the use of
evolving ICT are slowly finding their way into teaching practices.
New curricula were introduced in a limited number of schools on an experimental basis in the
2018–2019 school year, and then overall implementation followed in the 2019–2020 school year.
Without a doubt, some of the changes in STEM curricula were developed with TIMSS experiences
and national results in mind.

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Suggested Readings
Adamović, G., Buljan Culej, J., Gugić, I., Kani, V., Martinec, Z., Pavlić, J., & Viher, J. (2017). Manual for improving
math teaching with examples of tasks from the international research TIMSS 2015. Zagreb: Nacionalni centar za
vanjsko vrednovanje obrazovanja. Retrieved from [Link]
content/uploads/2018/06/[Link]

Buljan Culej, J., Halusek, V., Končić, A., Prusec Kovačić, S., Rafaj-Kostelić, A., Sambolek, M., & Siluković, D.
(2017). Manual for improving STEM teaching with examples of tasks from the international research TIMSS
2015. Zagreb: Nacionalni centar za vanjsko vrednovanje obrazovanja. Retrieved from
[Link]
[Link]

Buljan Culej, J. (Ed.). (2012). TIMSS 2011. Results in science. Zagreb: Nacionalni centar za vanjsko vrednovanje
obrazovanja. Retrieved from [Link]
content/uploads/2016/01/TIMSS-2011.-Izvje%C5%A1%C4%87e-o-postignutim-rezultatima-iz-
[Link]

Buljan Culej, J. (Ed.). (2012). TIMSS 2011. Results in mathematics. Zagreb: Nacionalni centar za vanjsko
vrednovanje obrazovanja. Retrieved from [Link]
content/uploads/2016/01/TIMSS-2011.-Izvje%C5%A1%C4%[Link]

Buljan Culej, J. (2015). The Republic of Croatia. In Ina V.S. Mullis, Michael O. Martin, Shirley Goh, and Kerry
Cotter (Eds.), TIMSS 2015 Encyclopedia: Education policy and curriculum in mathematics and science (pp. 1–
13). Chestnut Hill, MA: TIMSS & PIRLS International Study Center, Boston College. Retrieved from
[Link]

Matković, T., Dobrotić, I., & Baran, J. (2019). What’s kindergarten got to do with it? Access to early childhood
education and care and reproduction of social inequalities in regular education: Analysis of PISA and TIMSS
data. Revija za sociologiju, 49(1), 7–35.

References

1
The World Bank and UNESCO Institute for Statistics. (n.d.). Data for pupil-teacher ratio in the primary
education for the Republic of Croatia (1996-2016). Retrieved from
[Link]
2
Ministry of Science, Education and Sports. (2015). Nacionalni kurikulum za rani i predškolski odgoj i
obrazovanje. [National curriculum for early and preschool education]. Retrieved from [Link]
[Link]/clanci/sluzbeni/2015_01_5_95.html
3
Zakon o odgoju i obrazovanju u osnovnoj i srednjoj školi. [Primary and Secondary Education Act]. (2019).
Retrieved from [Link]
%C5%A1koli
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Council of Europe. (1998). European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. Retrieved from
[Link]
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Zakon o uporabi jezika i pisma nacionalnih manjina u Republici Hrvatskoj. [Use of Language and Letter of the
National Minorities in the Republic of Croatia Act]. (2000). Retrieved from [Link]
[Link]/clanci/sluzbeni/2000_05_51_1128.html
6
Ministry of Science, Education and Sports. (2010). Nacionalni okvirni kurikulum [National Framework
Curriculum]. Zagreb: Author. Retrieved from
[Link]

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7
Ministry of Science and Education. (2014). Strategy for education, science and technology. Zagreb: Author.
Retrieved from [Link]
%20Science%20and%[Link]
8
Ministry of Science, Education and Sports. (2006). Nastavni plan i program za osnovnu školu [Syllabus for
primary school]. Zagreb: Author. Retrieved from [Link]
Nastavni_plan_i_program_za_osnovnu_skolu_-_MZOS_2006_.pdf
9
Ministry of Science, Education and Sports. (2006). Nastavni plan i program za osnovnu školu. [Elementary
school curriculum]. Zagreb: Author. Retrieved from
[Link]
_MZOS_2006_.pdf
10
Pravilnik o načinima, postupcima i elementima vrednovanja učenika u osnovnoj i srednjoj školi [Regulatory Act
on the Methods, Procedures and Elements of Evaluation of Students in Primary and Secondary Schools].
(2019). Retrieved from [Link]
11
Državni pedagoški standard osnovnoškolskog sustava odgoja i obrazovanja [State Pedagogical Standards for
Primary Education]. (2010). Official Gazette 63/08 & 90/10. Retrieved from [Link]
[Link]/clanci/sluzbeni/[Link]

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