A Global Study of Intended Instructional Time and Official School Curricula, 1980-2000
A Global Study of Intended Instructional Time and Official School Curricula, 1980-2000
Aaron Benavot
2004
This paper was commissioned by the Education for All Global Monitoring Report as background
information to assist in drafting the 2005 report. It has not been edited by the team. The views and
opinions expressed in this paper are those of the author(s) and should not be attributed to the EFA
Global Monitoring Report or to UNESCO. The papers can be cited with the following reference:
“Paper commissioned for the EFA Global Monitoring Report 2005, The Quality Imperative”. For
further information, please contact efareport@unesco.org
A Global Study of Intended Instructional Time and
Official School Curricula, 1980-2000*
by
Aaron Benavot
Massimo Amadio
November 2004
*Acknowledgements
Major institutional support for the Comparative Curriculum Project, including the
analyses reported herein, was provided by the International Bureau of Education.
Additional funding was provided by the UNESCO-EFA Global Monitoring Report, the
Education Sector of the World Bank, and the Israeli Ministry of Education’s Pedagogical
Secretariat and National Commission for UNESCO. The ideas and opinions expressed in
this report do not necessarily represent the views of any of the aforementioned
institutions. Special thanks goes to Tsafrir Gazit, Sky Gross, Einat Idan, Natalia Roitman,
Yonatan Rosenzweig, Nhung Truong, Didi Shammas, Ruth Waitzberg and Iana Zaika,
who provided extremely valuable research assistance. All correspondence should be sent
to: a.benavot@ibe.unesco.org
I. Introduction
International education policies have mainly focused on the quantitative expansion of formal
schooling and tended to give lip service to 'qualitative' issues such as re-structuring curricular
contents or enhancing pupils’ school-based learning experiences. This imbalance in
international policy circles reflects, in part, the state of academic research. While scholarly
accounts of educational expansion (Meyer et al 1992; Clemens 2004) and its impact on
economic or political outcomes (Hannum and Buchmann 2003) have accumulated,
comparative studies of school-based experiences and educational processes remain relatively
underdeveloped and typically rely on comparisons of select system inputs (e.g., educational
expenditures, the prevalence of classroom materials, pupil-teacher ratios) and outputs (e.g.,
drop-out or repetition rates, educational achievement, years of schooling obtained). Such
input-output models of education, which reflect deep-rooted, economistic conceptions of
‘quality’ schooling, have become the basis for evaluating the ‘efficiency’ of national
education systems and a framework for donor institutions and national policy makers to
consider the ‘effectiveness’ of alternative educational policies (e.g., Barro and Lee 1996; Lee
and Barro 1998; Cummings and Riddell 1994; Ross and Mahlek 1990; Hanushek and Kimko
2000; Ginsburg et al. 2001).
The present report examines two critical, yet under-researched, aspects of children's school-
based experiences: first, the amount of intended time – that is, yearly instructional hours -
- countries expect enrolled pupils to be in school and given the opportunity to learn, and
second, the curricular structuring of intended school time according to officially defined
school subjects.
Drawing upon extensive collections of official educational sources, mostly compiled by the
International Bureau of Education (IBE), this paper reports global and regional patterns on
intended instructional time and the prevalence of, and relative emphasis on, curricular
subjects throughout primary and lower secondary education (grades 1-8) and in two historical
periods (1980s and 2000s). Specifically, this report addresses the following questions:
• How many hours of school-based instruction do educational authorities typically
mandate during each year of primary and lower secondary education?
• How do countries structure this instructional time in official timetables?
• Which curricular categories are defined and what school subjects are taught?
• To what extent do official subject emphases change between grades 1 and 8?
• To what degree do policies concerning intended time and curricular emphases vary
across education systems and how have they changed over the past two decades?
The report is organized into five parts: Following this introduction, Section II briefly reviews
relevant background literature and previous research. Section III describes the methodology
of the study, including the compilation of curricular data, and the coding and construction of
the study’s main variables. Section IV presents empirical findings regarding intended
instructional time, the organization of the official curriculum, with special attention to
language education, mathematics and several additional subject areas, and lastly the
‘overloading’ of school timetables. Section V briefly discusses the report’s main findings in
the context of emergent scholarly debates. A special methodological appendix is included,
which details the data sources used for instructional time estimates and measures of the
official curriculum.
II. Background
Interest in the contents of education -- that is, the valued cultural knowledge that is selected
and systematically organized in school curricula -- has a rather discontinuous history in
scholarly debates and policy-oriented discussions. During the 19th and the early 20th
centuries, when national school systems underwent consolidation in the West, considerable
attention was devoted to the cultural knowledge deemed appropriate for boys and girls in
public schools (Maynes 1985; Goodson 1993; Glenn 1988). State authorities, university
scholars, labour union leaders, religious leaders and teacher associations argued over the
inclusion (or exclusion) of school subjects and curricular topics, the contents of textbooks,
and the appropriateness of pedagogical methods and testing practices (Goodson 1993;
Kleibard 1986; Popkewitz 1987). Curricular issues were explicitly addressed by leading
educators and social theorists and extensively discussed in international education meetings
like the International Conference on (Public) Education, which first convened in the early
1930s (UNESCO 1979).
In the decades following WWII, international interest in the substance of the curriculum
waned. School expansion -- rather than the re-structuring of curricular contents -- became the
preferred solution for a host of pressing economic and social ‘challenges’ such as economic
development, high fertility, the need for trained manpower and reducing poverty. ‘Education
for development’ became the dominant theme of models advanced by social science experts
and policy makers in relation to newly independent nations (Benavot and Resnik 2004).
Among most social theorists and educational researchers, what schools actually taught
mattered less than the social inequalities stemming from curricular differentiation or the
nature of the "hidden" curriculum (Dreeben 1968; Lynch 1989; Bowles and Gintis 1976;
Oakes, Gamoran and Page 1992). The main outlines of the school curriculum became, as
some have argued, an obvious, taken-for-granted feature in the drive for modernity and
economic growth (McEneaney and Meyer 2000).
In recent decades, debates about the curricular contents of national education systems -- how
they are structured, how they have changed over time, and how they affect what kids know
and learn -- have intensified. Due in large part to the highly publicised, comparative studies of
educational achievement conducted by the IEA (e.g., TIMSS and CIVICS), as well as others
supported by the OECD (e.g., PISA) and UNESCO (e.g., Casassus et al. 2002 in Latin
America; the Southern and Eastern African Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality;
and the Monitoring Learning Achievement Project), renewed academic interest and public
debate over curricular contents have been generated (see Heyneman and Loxley 1983; Keeves
1996; Baker and LeTendre 2000). Earlier research on school ‘quality’ carried out by the
World Bank (e.g., Fuller 1986; 1987; Lockheed and Verspoor 1991) and the growing
emphasis on ‘quality’ issues by UNESCO (e.g., EFA Global Monitoring Report 2005) have
also had an impact. As a result, greater analytical and policy attention is being paid to key
school resources such as available instructional time, the organization of the school
curriculum, languages of instruction, teacher effectiveness and the scope, pace and
complexity of classroom life.
The spread of comparative studies of pupil achievement and school curricula has also
problematised widely held assumptions about the curriculum among comparative education
scholars and social scientists. For example, many comparative educationalists maintain that
the curricular contents of education systems fundamentally reflect national priorities and/or
distinctive cultural worldviews, which make broad comparisons of school curricula not only
difficult, but of little validity (see Holmes and McLean 1989; Cummings 1999). In addition,
researchers in the field of curriculum history, who examine historical changes in the
configurations of educational knowledge, assume that "internal" societal actors – for example,
national political stakeholders, economic elites, discipline gatekeepers and education
specialists -- play the dominant role in determining what counts as official school knowledge
(Goodson 1995; Kleibard 1986). From this latter analytical framework, comparative studies of
school curricula, which highlight the impact of institutional models and global forces and
downplay national political contestations over subject contents, are viewed as inappropriate
accounts of how and why school curricula change.
Overall, this body of research highlights the growing isomorphism of national policies
concerning the school curriculum. Official statements of subjects to be taught and time
emphases, mainly at the primary level and, to a lesser degree, at the upper secondary level, are
increasingly standardized worldwide. These findings not only underscore the predominance of
the nation-state as the site at which school curricula are constructed and sanctioned, but also
the spreading influence of international organizations and trans-national professionals in
diffusing rationalized prescriptions of educational knowledge and legitimated curriculum
models (Meyer et al. 1997; McNeely 1995; Schafer 1999). Cultural distinctiveness and
national historical legacies continue to shape curricular structures, but they are often
transformed or reshaped by highly institutionalized models at the global level.
1) They exclusively focus on pre-1985 trends and leave unexamined recent patterns of
curricular organization. Given that the past two decades are characterized as a period
of heightened globalisation, both in economic and cultural terms, it is germane to
examine whether trends towards curricular homogenisation and standardization are
continuing, or whether various forms of diversification are apparent.
2) They examine curricular policies at the two ends of national education systems -- the
initial years of mass schooling in primary schools and the final grades of upper
secondary schools. Cross-national investigations of the official curriculum at the lower
secondary education level are lacking. Not only is this the fastest growing sector in
many education systems, but also interest in reforming ‘conventional’ and highly
selective forms of secondary education has intensified, especially in international
organizations such as UNESCO (e.g., the 47th session of the International Conference
on Education) and the World Bank (see the forthcoming policy paper on secondary
education). Moreover, due to the extension of compulsory schooling and expansion of
general/comprehensive programmes, lower secondary education represents an
important analytical context to investigate the impact of trans-national forces on
curricular contents.
In short, the present study directly addresses several areas in which previous comparative
studies were limited: it examines changes in curricular policies for the 1980-2000 period, for
both primary and lower secondary education, and according to grade level (i.e., grades 1
through 8).1 In doing so, it represents the most extensive and up-to-date study of its kind. It
seeks not only to present a global perspective on the organization of the official school
curriculum, including variation by grade level, geopolitical region and over time, but also to
reconsider major conclusions from previous research.
In almost all education systems, government authorities mandate a certain number of years --
and a set quantity of hours per year – during which pupils are required to be in school and
engaged in classroom learning. To be sure, not all school and classroom time is devoted to
formal instruction or pupil learning. Nevertheless, the organisation of school time is the object
of sustained attention by educational officials. Especially important are decisions regarding
how this time should be distributed in light of general educational objectives (see Amadio et
al 2004) and specific curricular goals. Moreover, given the inextricable links between schools
and the surrounding society, professional associations, trade unions, teachers and the business
community often voice concerns about official determinations of school time and its
distribution across curricular subject areas. Parents are also interested in time policies -- not
only due to their impact on learning outcomes and school success, but also how they address
the building up moral character, life aspirations, community responsibility and extended
family loyalty. And for children from poorer families, the time spent in school represents a
relatively protected space outside the vicissitudes of rural or urban life – often an alternative
to long hours in low paying jobs or unpaid labour. In short, school time is not simply an issue
of teaching and learning, it is also an institutionally embedded time interval where societal
demands, educational purposes and parent-child ties intermesh.
1
Some analyses of grade 9 curricula have been carried out. However, in many countries during the 1980s this
grade level already marked the start of upper secondary education, with an array of academic tracks and more
specialized programs. Thus, the number of countries in which the 9th grade has been a continual part of lower
secondary education is limited, and creates problems of interpretation when longitudinal comparisons are
carried out. Detailed analyses of curricular organization in grades 9 to 12 will be addressed in a future report.
A widely held assumption in the research literature concerns the impact of instructional time
on pupil learning (Bloom 1974; Smyth 1985; Anderson 1994; Millot 1995). Simply stated, the
more time that educational authorities require that pupils be present in classrooms, the greater
the chances of positive time effects on desired learning outcomes (e.g., knowledge acquired,
skills mastered, values and attitudes internalised). More complex models of allocated time
take into account school and classroom contingencies such as teacher absences due to strikes,
in-service training, conferences or illnesses, and time allocated to non-instructional activities
such as recreation, breaks, examinations, holiday celebrations or classroom management
(Harnischfeger and Wiley 1977). Nevertheless, the core, intuitively sound, notion remains:
pupil achievement increases when students are given greater opportunities to learn, especially
when ‘engaged learning time’ is maximized. Although some studies raise doubts about the
learning effects of more instructional time (e.g. Karweit 1978; Anderson 1984; Demfer 1987),
the presumed positive benefits of instructional time have considerable currency among
international and national policy makers.
The present report makes no attempt to examine the empirical validity of the aforementioned
claims. Rather, it advances a different argument: the educational rhetoric claiming that
instructional time has a positive impact on pupil achievement has diffused rapidly in the
world. As a result, and regardless of the scientific merit of this claim, we expect that countries
in different world regions will, over time, increase the intended amount of instructional time.
In short, this report examines whether the institutionalisation of the ‘more time-more learning’
principle has contributed to a global increase in the quantity of intended instructional time
mandated by educational authorities.
III. Methodology
This section describes the operationalisation of the main dependent and independent variables
employed in this study. A special methodological appendix lists the various data sources from
which information on these variables was drawn.
Dependent variables
Intended instructional time may be defined as the number of hours during the school year
that educational authorities expect local schools to allocate for the teaching of all required
(and optional) curricular subjects as well as other planned school activities. Such
administrative expectations or guidelines are typically operationalised in decisions concerning
the length of the working school year and, more importantly, in official timetables (or school
plans) which list the subjects to be taught at each grade level (or educational cycle) and the
mandated number of weekly ‘periods’ or instructional ‘hours’ for each subject (see Kamens,
Meyer and Benavot 1996: 121). In short, policies delineating system wide expectations
concerning annual instructional hours are inextricably linked to the official school curriculum
and subject-based timetables.
Official plans and intentions regarding yearly instructional time should not be confused with
the actual amount or intensity of instructional time that students receive. School surveys
carried out in both more and less developed countries show that, for a variety of reasons (e.g.,
school closures, teacher absenteeism and strikes, political disruptions, agricultural cycles,
natural disasters), the disjuncture between official policies and classroom realities is
significant, and that students almost invariably receive less than the prescribed amount of
instructional hours (Millot and Lane 2002; Benavot and Gad 2004).
The findings on annual instructional time reported below are based on a newly constructed,
international database prepared by the IBE.2 The estimated figures assess, as carefully as
possible, the number of hours that students were expected to be present in formal, school-
based learning situations.3 In calculating the intended yearly hours of instruction for each
country, three components were taken into account:
1) the duration of the ‘working’ school year, expressed as the number of days or weeks
that schools are open and classroom instruction is taking place;
2) the number of teaching ‘periods’ (lessons, or instructional ‘hours’) allocated to each
subject in each grade level as specified in official curricular timetables or other
curriculum-related documents; and
3) the average duration of ‘periods’ (lessons or ‘hours’), expressed in minutes.
While information on the last two components is relatively precise in national documents and
reports, there are problems determining the exact number of working days or weeks in a
typical school year. This is due to the fact that some systems devote certain days or school
periods to examinations, teacher in-service training, in-school holiday celebrations or extra-
curricular activities, which are included in official reports of ‘working’ weeks. Sustained
efforts were made to verify, and subsequently revise, national figures on the actual number of
working school days or weeks for each grade level. In addition, daily or weekly time set aside
for breaks and recreational activities was, whenever possible, deleted from our estimates of
intended instructional time.
In the case of federal states like India and Brazil, a national average was calculated based on
recommendations at the federal level (India) or on curricular timetables adopted in individual
states with similar system structures (Brazil). In other cases, however, an estimate at the
federal level was not calculated due to significant variations across Provinces/Territories
(Canada), Lander (Germany) or Cantons (Switzerland). The federal states in this latter group
have been excluded from the analyses until more detailed sub-national data becomes
available.
In general, the reliability of instructional time data for the 2000s period is significantly better
than that for the 1980s. The main reasons for this include: the use of a single source of data
compilation (IBE), rather than multiple sources; the growing detail and precision of official
national documents; and the ability to cross-check questionable figures by examining national
sources via the Internet as well as personal contacts with official authorities. In the end,
several ‘problematic’ cases were dropped from the analyses due to unclear or grossly
imprecise figures, usually for the 1980s. Finally, in analyses of over-time comparisons, only
2
Since an earlier version of this background report was submitted to Global Monitoring Report team, additional
estimates on instructional time were compiled, and have been incorporated in the present report’s tables.
These revisions and updates have not significantly altered the observations and conclusions found in the EFA
Report (2005) The Quality Imperative.
3
In the future, by combining data on intended instructional hours with new figures on school life expectancy
(see UNESCO 2004), it may be possible to examine cross-national variation in the accumulated time that
pupils are likely to be exposed to classroom instruction during the first years of basic education. Such an
indicator of school ‘quality’ (or intensity) would supplement more conventional measures like educational
expenditures, teacher qualifications, class size and textbook availability by highlighting crucial institutional
conditions that directly affect children’s school-based experiences.
countries with instructional data at both time points were included. This constant case base
was used in order to enhance the validity of the conclusions. In short, the figures reported
below represent the best available estimates.4
The official school curriculum was analytically conceived as encompassing several basic
components: a list of the subjects to be taught, an amount of instructional time to be allocated
to each subject, a definition of authorized textbooks to accompany classroom instruction, a
delineation of detailed topics to be covered by teachers in course or subject syllabi, and
official directives concerning teaching methods and pedagogy. The present report focuses
solely on the first two of these components. In most countries the subjects to be taught and
intended time allocations are mandated in official curricular or lesson timetables by
authorized educational authorities, usually at the national level. Official timetables embody a
schematic plan defining the subjects schools should teach at each grade level (or educational
cycle) and the number of weekly ‘periods’ or instructional ‘hours’ per subject (see Kamens,
Meyer and Benavot 1996: 121).
For the present study, hundreds of official timetables were identified, divided by historical
period and coded according to a set of standard procedures and rules. These rules specified
how to code all subjects listed in timetables including combined subjects, interdisciplinary
subjects and electives, and also how to deal with timetables accommodating regional,
linguistic, cultural or religious differences.5 During the coding process, instructional time for
each grade level (1 through 8) and for all curricular ‘subjects’ and educational activities was
allocated into a basic classification scheme of 33 subject areas.6 At a subsequent stage, the
initial list of 33 curricular categories was re-classified into 10 general curriculum areas (see
Table 1). Most analyses in the findings section report trends for the 10 subject areas listed in
column B; others, however, examine patterns for subjects listed in column A. Again, we
reiterate that our data sources and coding scheme do not provide information about the actual
contents behind the labels listed in the official timetables.
4
Developing reliable cross-national estimates of annual instructional time, especially at multiple time points,
presents a formidable methodological challenge. In addition to recent IBE studies (Amadio 1998; UNESCO-
IBE 2000), earlier attempts at assessing national variation in this measure include Benavot (1991; 2002) and
UNESCO (1991). A close examination of national figures from different sources reveals the many definitional
and reliability problems associated with this research tradition. Nevertheless, we believe that the estimation
procedures carried out in the context of this report, in addition to the constant case analyses performed,
represent the most accurate study to date.
5
Examples of ‘combined’ subjects include ‘Pensamiento, acción social e identidad nacional’ or ‘Histoire,
éducation civique et géographie’.
6
The Comparative Curriculum Project also examined the organization of upper secondary education, although
an expanded list of 45 subject areas was employed in order to capture the greater diversity of knowledge areas
included in official timetables.
Table 1: The Re-classification of Curricular Subjects Found in Official Timetables
* The language classification was altered in our report to the EFA Monitoring team in Paris (see below)
After completing the coding of official timetables, we constructed three variables for cross-
national and longitudinal comparisons:
1) a dichotomous variable based on whether a subject (area) was (or was not) taught in an
official timetable. This variable enabled us to estimate the proportion of countries in
the world (or geographical region) that require instruction in a specified subject area;
2) a ratio variable based on the percentage of total class periods or instructional hours
that were allocated to each subject area in the timetable. This variable estimated the
percentage of total instructional time allocated to different subject areas i.e., the
relative emphasis/importance of different subject areas in the official curriculum
3) an interval variable based on the number of yearly hours of instruction devoted to each
subject area, per grade level or educational level (primary, lower secondary, upper
secondary). This variable estimated the quantity of annual instructional time that
students are expected to learn a subject area.7
Our initial classification of subjects related to language education drew on previous cross-
national research (Cha 1991), which divided language instruction into four categories:
national, official, local/regional and foreign language education. At the request of the EFA
Global Monitoring team, this scheme was slightly altered. In the revised classification
scheme, all subjects related to language instruction were re-coded and re-classified according
to designations of "official" and "non-official" languages listed in Table 6 of UNESCO’s
(2000) World Culture Report. As a result, four categories of language education were
constructed:
1. Official Language: this category combines all instructional time allocated to the
"official" languages of each country as specified in the World Culture Report. In
practice, this meant combining previous estimates of instructional time for "national"
and "official" languages.
2. Local/regional Language: This category refers to time devoted to the instruction of
"non-official" (according to UNESCO) indigenous languages; namely, those spoken
by a significant cultural minority in the country.
3. Foreign Language: This category refers to instructional time allocated to "non-
official" international or exogenous languages.
4. Literature: This category refers to time devoted to a subject listed in the timetables as
‘literature’. We assume that instruction in this subject involves, by and large, books,
short stories, poetry, etc. related to one of the “official” languages of the country,
although this cannot be ascertained from the timetables themselves.
Independent variables
Several independent variables were employed in the reported analyses. These include: world
region based on the UNESCO classification scheme, the duration of the primary education
cycle, gross and net primary enrolment rates, population size, and national income levels
based on gross domestic product per capita (in price purchase parities or PPPs). The education
variables were coded from UNESCO’s Statistical Yearbooks (published annually until 1999);
the population and economic variables were coded from the 2000 edition of the World Bank’s
World Development Report.
7
All of the tables in the present report are based on the first two variables. Future analyses will highlight trends
for the third variable.
IV. Findings
This section examines global, regional and longitudinal trends for the following variables:
intended instructional time, the overall organization of the school curriculum, official
curricular intentions concerning language education, mathematics, and several additional
school subjects. It also explores the issue of timetable “overload” -- that is, the tendency of
countries to mandate a relatively high number of required subjects for pupils at a particular
grade level.
Table 2 reports global patterns for annual instruction time in grades 1 to 8 at two time points:
circa 1985 and circa 2000. The descriptive statistics found in this table are based on a constant
set of cases at each grade level in order to enhance the validity of over time comparisons.8
Several interesting results are apparent: First, during the first 2 years of primary education
countries mandate, on average, about 710-740 hours of instructional time per year. Intended
instructional time increases in each subsequent grade level and reaches approximately 900
annual hours in grade 8. This pattern translates into an average supplement of about 25 annual
instruction hours per grade level, although these increases are not linear. There are significant
jumps during grades 3-5, and then again between grades 6 and 7, when the transition between
primary and lower secondary education typically occurs. With few exceptions, these global
patterns in instructional time by grade level are found in both historical periods, regardless of
the estimation procedure employed.
Third, Table 2 examines whether countries have expanded (or reduced) the amount of yearly
instructional time their school systems are supposed to deliver during the 1985-2000 period.
An examination of global means for the same grade level indicates that there have actually
been slight decreases in intended instructional time for all grade levels except grade 7. While
consistent, these declining trends are small, representing less than 10 hours of yearly
instructional time. The greatest decrease is in grade 6 (19 hours), which translates in absolute
terms to less than one week of schooling in most countries and in relative terms to less than
3% of the total intended instructional time. Given that many sources were employed in
calculating the reported figures and some measurement error remains, evidence of a broad-
based, statistically significant global decline in intended instructional time does not obtain.
Rather, the findings suggest -- based on mean figures -- that time allocated for classroom
instruction in primary and lower secondary education worldwide has remained fairly stable
during the past 15-20 years.
8
Two non-constant case tables reporting mean estimates of annual instructional time, by EFA region, are
included in the Appendix (see Tables A1 and A2). These tables include information on grade 9, even though
figures are based on a smaller, less representative set of cases.
An examination of median instruction hours in Table 2 actually shows that there were
increases in instructional time in grades 1-3, followed by decreases in grades 4-5, and finally
increases in grades 6-8. Given that medians are less sensitive to outliers than means, the
longitudinal trends based on medians provide a more reliable and informative picture. In both
estimation procedures, the over time differences are relatively small both in absolute and
percentage terms. In sum, there is little conclusive evidence of a significant global decline (or
increase) in annual instructional time between the 1980s and the most recent period.
Table 3 reports regional differences in intended instructional time. In the early grades of
primary education (grades 1-4), median instructional hours tend to be higher in the education
systems of Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Western Europe and
North America. They tend to be lower in Central Europe and the former Soviet Union and, to
a less extent, in East Asia and the Pacific and the Arab States. Nevertheless, despite initial
regional differences in intended instructional time in the early grades, all regions show
increases -- albeit uneven -- in intended time policies in subsequent grade levels, resulting in
less regional variation by the lower secondary grades. In general, significant increases in
instructional time tend to occur in grades 3 or 4, and then again in grades 6 or 7. These
patterns hold true for both the 1980s and the 2000s.
The findings reported in Table 3 contradict the previously discussed hypothesis, according to
which we expected to find broad-based increases in intended instructional time over time in
almost all geopolitical regions. Region-specific realities are considerably more complex than
conjectured, and necessitate more context-specific explanations and interpretations. Beyond
the issue of measurement error, the following explanations may account for the declining
trend in intended instructional time in certain countries and regions:
First, when national educational budgets are severely strained -- due to economic stagnation,
economic restructuring, or global recession -- reductions in instructional time represent an
attractive policy alternative. Substantial savings in expenditures – for example, in teacher
salaries and building maintenance -- can be realized by reducing the number of hours that
schools are open, and teachers and pupils are in class. This explanation has face validity in
countries of all development levels.
Second, educational authorities often grapple with a trade-off between quantity and quality.
For example, the adoption of policies to ensure universal access to education of primary
school-age children, especially for girls, may necessitate a reduction in the school year and,
consequently, intended instruction time. Indeed, developing countries are under considerably
more pressure – and under the scrutiny of systematic monitoring -- to achieve Education For
All, than to address issues of school quality such as maintaining or increasing the amount of
instructional time. A related example can be seen in countries that introduce double- or triple-
shift schooling in the primary grades, which nearly always reduces intended instructional
time. Finally, there is some evidence that the World Bank and different NGOs have placed
greater emphasis on the efficiency of existing time policies rather than extending the amount
of instructional hours. Overall, this explanation is more relevant to trends in the developing
world.
Third, reductions of instructional time may be part of a broad structural reform in the
educational system. For example, countries increasing the number of years of compulsory
schooling, or integrating primary and lower secondary systems into a single basic education
framework, may reduce instructional time as a "temporary" measure to ensure the reform’s
success without additional budgetary outlays. This explanation appears particularly valid in
understanding changes in the Central and Eastern Europe region, and possibly elsewhere.
Fourth, reducing instructional time may represent a basic re-orientation of a country’s official
curricular goals. For example, instructional time may be reduced as part of:
• a policy to reduce curriculum ‘overload’ – that is, the number of school subjects
student must learn (i.e. Japan),
• a policy to abolish or weaken non-academic subjects such as recreation, agriculture,
labour experience, or
• a policy to transform previously required subjects into electives or options, thus
reducing the number of weekly school periods.
In summary, the results show that most countries in the world mandate between 700 to 900
formal hours of instruction during each year of primary and lower secondary education.
Intended time policies tend to be lower, with greater regional variation, in the primary school
grades and higher, with less regional variation, in the lower secondary school grades. These
global patterns have not changed significantly during the past two decades. Indeed, there is no
conclusive evidence of a worldwide increase in intended instructional time during the period
under question. Having said that, interesting regional differences were uncovered: whereas the
educational systems in some regions (e.g., Latin America, Caribbean, Arab States and in parts
of sub Saharan Africa) have expanded annual instruction time, in other regions (e.g.,
Southwest Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, and Western Europe) the intended time has been
reduced during the 1985-2000 period. Different economic, political and educational
conditions apparently account for these divergent tendencies.
How do countries structure intended instructional time in major curricular areas and according
to officially defined school subjects? The results in this and subsequent subsections paint a
broad portrait of the organization of official curricular intentions in both primary and lower
secondary education and reveal the directions in which countries have reformed official
curricular policies throughout the past two decades.
The initial set of findings, based on the dichotomous variable described in Section III,
indicates the proportion of countries worldwide that require instruction in major subject areas.
To simplify the presentation of global and longitudinal patterns, data have been aggregated
into 10 general subject areas, in three combined grade levels (grades 1-3, 4-6 and 7-8) and in
two historical periods (1980s and 2000s).
To begin with, Table 4 shows that practically all countries require instruction in six core
subject areas: languages, mathematics, sciences, social sciences, aesthetic education, and
physical education/sport. Within this set of core areas, there are several noteworthy patterns.
First, instruction in language education and mathematics is universally required in all grade
levels (1-8). Second, with a minor exception, at least 90% of countries require some
instruction in aesthetic education and physical education/sport in all grades; the prevalence of
the former tends to decline across grade levels while that of the latter increases. Third, the
vast majority of countries require instruction in the sciences and the social sciences (this
combines information on history, geography, social studies, citizenship and/or environment):
both subjects gain prominence in the curricular guidelines dealing with upper grade levels.9
Table 4 also reports results for four “non-core” subject areas: religion/ moral education,
computer/ technology, practical education/ vocational skills and electives/other subjects.
About 50-60% of all countries require some form of religious or moral education in their
official school curriculum -- its prevalence remains fairly constant across grade levels and
time periods. Fewer countries are requiring instruction in practical education and vocational
skills, especially during the years of primary education. In grades 1-3, 72% of all countries
required instruction in this subject area in the 1980s, only 56% did so circa 2000; in grades 4-
6 the decline was from 85% to 71% and in grades 7-8, a smaller decline from 77% to 67%. By
contrast, more and more countries are including elective and optional subjects in the official
school curriculum: in the 1980s elective and optional topics were offered in only 37-46% of
countries, whereas in the 2000s over half of all countries include such subjects in their
timetables. Finally, the prevalence of subjects related to computers and technology in national
curricula has increased at all grade levels between the 1980s and 2000s. This subject area is
presently taught in about one-fourth of all primary-level grades and about 40% of all lower
secondary grades.
Next we examine the relative importance of the ten major subject areas in official curricula
for grades 1-8, based on the ratio variable described earlier. The global patterns reported in
Table 5 refer to official curricular policies obtaining in the 2000s only. In contemporary
education systems the dominant subject areas mandated by education authorities in primary
school curricula are language education and mathematics. Taken together, the percentage of
total instructional time devoted to these subject areas ranges from 60% in grades 1 and 2 to
45% in grades 7 and 8. The relative importance of each of these subject areas declines across
grade levels: whereas instruction in language education comprises 40% of total instructional
time in grades 1-2, it receives only 30% of total instructional time in the lower secondary
grades. The relative emphasis on mathematics declines from about 20% to 13-14% of total
instructional time. Similar patterns obtain in the analysis of national curricular policies in the
1980s (see Table A3 in the Appendix).
9
In unreported analyses we have found that the sciences tend to be taught in an integrated fashion in the early
grades of primary education and begin to be broken down into separate subjects (i.e., biology, chemistry and
physics) in the upper primary and lower secondary grades.
In the other core subject areas, we find contrasting trends: in aesthetic and physical education
there are reductions in relative emphases from the primary to lower secondary grades.
However, in the sciences, social sciences and, to a lesser extent, computers/technology and
practical skills we find increases in emphases across grade levels, especially between grades 6
and 7. In general, there appear to be two major transition points in the structuring of official
curricular policies: one between the lower and upper grades of primary education (typically
after grade 3) and one between the end of primary and the start of secondary education
(typically after grade 6).
Finally, there is evidence of greater isomorphism in the structuring of lower secondary versus
primary school curricula. An examination of the standard deviations around global means (see
Table A4 in the Appendix) shows that curricular policies in lower secondary education for the
core subject areas (i.e., languages, mathematics, social sciences, aesthetic education, physical
education, religion/moral education) are more homogeneous worldwide than those for
primary education. These findings suggest that national differences – be they political,
cultural and economic – have less impact on the formation of the official, intended curriculum
in lower secondary education.
We turn now to examine more detailed results in selected subject areas of the official
curriculum, and highlight variations by world region, as classified by UNESCO.
As we have seen, language education is the core curricular subject in the first eight grades of
mass education. Instruction in all language-related subjects – namely, in ‘official’, foreign,
local and regional languages and in literature -- comprise a preponderant component of the
primary and lower secondary curriculum. (Recall that ‘official’ is defined according to
UNESCO’s World Culture Report). The core status of language education is clearly reflected
in the absolute (and relative) amount of curricular time that this subject area receives in
official timetables. Of additional importance is the fact that ‘official’ language instruction
predominates all other forms of language education in grades 1 through 8. Table 6, which
reports the percentage of total language time allocated to ‘official’ languages and literature,
shows that this curricular activity comprises, on average, 80 percent of all language education
during the first 5 grades of primary education. Even in grades 6-9, over 60 percent of the total
time devoted to language-related subjects involves a country’s ‘official’ language(s).
Although many countries begin instruction in ‘non-official’ (i.e., local, regional or foreign)
languages at the primary level, there is a significant increase in the teaching of these
languages at the start of secondary education (typically grade 7, sometimes grade 6). In the
primary grades ‘non-official’ language instruction is limited to between 5-10% of all language
education, whereas in grades 7-9 it increases to one-third or more of all language instruction.
Table 6 also shows that during the past two decades, countries have, on average, increased
their emphasis on ‘non-official’ languages. This is true for all grade levels except grade 9,
which is least representative of global trends due to the relatively small number of cases.
Since ‘non-official’ language instruction includes both foreign and local languages, we
explore which type of ‘non-official’ language is (and has become) more prominent in the
school curriculum. Tables 7 and 8 examine the prevalence and relative emphasis on different
types of language education worldwide, by grade level, for the 1980s and 2000s, respectively.
These tables show quite clearly that the proportion of countries in the world that require
instruction in local/regional languages was small in the 1980s (between 4-9%) and remains
so during the 2000s (5-7%).10 (In absolute terms these percentages translate into 4-6 countries
in the 1980s and 6-9 countries in the 2000s). Among those countries that require local
language instruction in their curricula, mean instructional time devoted to local languages is
higher in the early primary grades and declines by half in the lower secondary grades.
Especially noteworthy are the results regarding foreign language instruction. First, the
proportion of countries worldwide that require instruction in foreign languages increases
substantially across successive grade levels: from 4% (grade 1) to 79% (grade 8) in the 1980s
and from 16% to 83%, respectively, in the 2000s. Second, for all grade levels, the percentage
of countries requiring foreign language instruction increased significantly over the past two
decades, with significant increases observable in each of the first five grades. Third, when we
examine the mean percentage of instructional time devoted to foreign language instruction,
we find little evidence of cross-grade level or over-time changes. The values for this measure
remain within a fairly narrow range (12-15% of total instructional time). Nevertheless, in
considering results for both measures – namely, the proportion of countries requiring foreign
language instruction and instructional time allocations -- it is quite clear that more and more
countries are requiring pupils to learn foreign languages and introducing this requirement at
earlier grade levels in primary education. These findings account for the aforementioned
pattern concerning ‘non-official’ language instruction in school curricula.
Moving beyond the empirical results and into the terrain of interpretations, it is worth re-
visiting the UNESCO list of official languages, which was the basis of language
classifications employed in the present report. In examining this list, one is struck by the
extent to which political and cultural factors have profoundly influenced the ‘official’ status
of languages in different countries. The ‘official’ recognition of some languages and not
others by the nation-state, and the requirement that certain languages be included in public
school curricula, reflect historical conditions (e.g., colonialism), economic forces, minority
group status and contemporary political interests. This is the case for most newly independent
countries in the post-WWII period, especially in Africa and Asia.
10
The data collection and coding strategy employed in this study may have underestimated the incorporation of
local and regional languages in the official school curriculum. In Central and South America, for example,
local/indigenous languages have received growing recognition in the last twenty years. Even if Spanish (or
Portuguese, French or English, depending on the country) continues to be the main and exclusive ‘official’
language of the national educational system, various indigenous languages have been granted ‘semi-official’
status at local and regional levels. In recent years, at least 17 Latin American countries have instituted
bilingual education programmes or projects involving the use of indigenous languages in addition to ‘official’
ones, especially in primary schools (Amadio et al 2004). Few of these countries offered such language
opportunities at the end of the 1970s. Most of the ‘official’ (nationwide) curricular timetables coded in the
present study did not provide detailed information about instructional time devoted to indigenous language(s),
owing to the fact that these initiatives were prepared by either local/regional authorities or specialized
ministerial directorates, departments or units. Moreover, curricular decentralization reforms recently adopted
in other countries and regions may result in the setting aside of a certain percentage of instructional time to be
flexibly defined at the local level. Where applicable, instruction in ‘local’ languages may be ensured through
this flexible part of the official curriculum. In the future there is an acute need to explore sub-national
differences in languages taught and languages of instruction, based on a more in-depth data collection of
official curricular policies.
Furthermore, although a comparable list of ‘official’ languages for the 1980s was not
reviewed, anecdotal evidence suggests that the overall quantity of spoken languages in the
world that have received the ‘official’ designation in at least one country has increased as has
the mean number of ‘officially’ recognized languages per country. Nevertheless, it is worth
noting that linguists predict that almost half of the 6,000 languages spoken in the world today
are likely to disappear (become extinct) by 2050 (Wurm 2001). Thus, the long-term viability
of thousands of ‘non-official’ local vernaculars depends on linguistic minorities succeeding in
achieving ‘official’ recognition by state institutions. When such recognition is converted into
explicit bi- or multi-language policies in public school curricula, such viability is definitely
enhanced.
Thus, two key points emerge from the language-related analyses of curricular timetables: first,
local or region-specific vernaculars that are unable to secure official recognition by the
nation-state, have been -- and continue to be -- given minimal attention in public school
curricula. There is little evidence to suggest that this situation will change in the coming
years. Second, mass schooling obviously plays a critical role in the transmission of national
cultures, especially when one considers the overwhelming emphasis on ‘official’ -- typically
national -- language instruction in public schools. However, more and more countries are
requiring instruction in ‘non-official’ foreign languages, a requirement that increasingly
begins in the early grades of primary education rather than in secondary education. More than
anything else, the strengthening of foreign language instruction is a manifestation of
increasingly salient globalisation processes. A complementary interpretation can be noted:
more and more countries want to enrich the linguistic resources that school leavers take with
them upon entering fast-changing, trans-national labour markets.
Another important implication emerges from our analyses. Language education policies in
official school curricula reflect powerful social and political processes. Nevertheless, a
positive relationship between specific language policies, on the one hand, and desirable
educational outcomes, on the other, has not been demonstrated. Whether pupil achievement,
retention or attainment is enhanced in primary schools with mono-, bi- or multiple-language
instructional policies remains unclear; indeed, this is an issue that deserves to be
systematically studied in the future.
After language education, mathematics is the second most prominent subject area in official
school curricula – typically receiving one-sixth to one-fifth of intended instructional time. The
subject label countries use to refer to this curricular area in official timetables is quite
standardized (“mathematics”), although for the higher grades (grades 6-9) timetables
sometimes specify particular topics in mathematics education (e.g., arithmetic, geometry).
Analyses of mathematics education combine instructional time for all mathematics-related
subjects.
The region-based analyses reported in Table 9 show that regional differences in mathematics
education are quite small and rarely consistent across grade levels. Countries in Central and
Eastern Europe and sub-Saharan Africa tended to place greater emphasis on this subject area
in the 1980s; countries in Latin America, the Caribbean and sub-Saharan Africa do so in the
2000s. By and large, the patterns concerning primary and secondary education noted at the
global level are also apparent in each EFA region. In some regions there is a very slight
increasing emphasis between grade 1 and grade 2, but the overall declining trend between
primary and secondary education occurs in all regions. There are minor regional differences
(mostly in the 1980s period) concerning the “critical” transition point (grades 5-6 in EAPA
and SWA, or grades 6-7 in other regions), which appear to be related to the duration of
primary schooling and the start of (lower) secondary education. In the most recent period, the
main decline in the relative emphasis on mathematics education occurs after grade 6.
Previous cross-national research (Kamens and Benavot 1991) reported that over the course of
the 1925-85 period, the emphasis on mathematics education increased worldwide: almost all
countries expanded instructional time in this subject area. During the last two decades several
highly publicised surveys of mathematics achievement (TIMSS, PISA) have furthered
heightened public awareness about the presumed importance of mathematical knowledge and
competencies. For these and other reasons, we expect that most countries in the world will
continue to increase the emphasis on mathematics education during the 1985-2000 period.
We explore this hypothesis in Table 9, which reports constant-case estimates of the relative
emphasis on mathematics education for the 1980s and 2000s, by grade level and region. At
the global level, the analyses suggest that the percentage of instructional time devoted to
mathematics education has remained surprisingly constant, with only slight increases in
grades 1 and 2. At the regional level, the trends are mixed: there are declining emphases in
sub-Saharan Africa, Central and Eastern Europe and in most grades of East Asia and the
Pacific, and increasing emphases in Latin America and the Caribbean and, to a lesser extent,
in the Arab States. Thus, in contrast to our hypothesis, there has not been a significant overall
increase in the emphasis on mathematics education over the 1985-2000 period.
Beyond the core concerns of the school curriculum – literacy and numeracy – we turn to
examine, in greater detail, trends pertaining to select ‘newer’ subject areas. Table 10 examines
global trends for several important subject areas that have been (and continue to be)
prominent in the official guidelines of many countries. Most of the analyses reported in this
11
Preliminary analyses of upper secondary curricula indicate that the percentage of instructional time devoted to
mathematics education continues to decline in upper secondary grades, with the exception of specially
designated mathematics or science tracks.
table are based on the detailed classification scheme (33 categories) discussed in Section III.
Specifically we report the proportion of countries at each grade level (and time period)
requiring instruction in the following select subjects:12
• health education or hygiene
• environmental studies or ecology
• civics or citizenship education
• social studies
• moral education or values education (includes ethics but excludes religion)
• technology-related subjects (excludes computers)
• vocational education/skills (excludes agriculture, manual training, domestic science).
Several of the trends reported in Table 10 reflect, as the reader will note, the construction and
institutionalisation of “new” curricular subjects (Goodson 1987). Since the mean percentage
of time allocated to these curricular subjects tends to be relatively low, the main issue is
whether or not countries have identified these subjects or knowledge areas as worthy of
inclusion in official timetables. Key findings emerging from the analyses are noted below.
12
Detailed tables reporting regional breakdowns and the mean percentage of time allocated to each subject area
are available upon request.
• Civics and citizenship education represent another subject area, whose prevalence
has increased in almost all grade levels between the 1980s and the most recent period.
On average, between one-fifth to one-third of all countries obligate the teaching of this
subject in primary schools, and close to half of all countries require that citizenship
education be taught in the (lower) secondary grades. The increased attention to
citizenship education is particularly apparent in the lower grades of primary education.
Given the major political transformations that resulted from the disestablishment of
the USSR and Yugoslavia into newly independent countries, as well as international
promotion of more open, participatory political regimes, the growing prevalence of
citizenship education as a separate subject is not surprising.
• Social studies, as others have noted (Wong 1991), is not exactly a new subject, but
rather a reconfiguration of several old subjects – namely, history, geography and, to a
lesser extent, civics. Interdisciplinary by nature (as are each of the previously
discussed subjects), its prevalence has not changed very much during the 1985-2000
period. On average, it is a required subject in one-third to one-half of all national
timetables. It is especially prominent in the upper primary and lower secondary
grades.
• Moral and values education has traditionally been an important subject area in Asian
countries. A comparison of timetables from the 1980s and the 2000s suggests that this
subject has become more prevalent in the lower secondary grades over the past two
decades. Moreover, it would be worthwhile to investigate which non-Asian countries
have institutionalised this subject area in their official curricular guidelines.
• Electives and optional subjects: Several authors (Meyer 1999; Ramirez and Meyer
2002) have argued that the expansion of mass education has been accompanied by a
celebration of individualist and participatory forms of knowledge and instructional
methods, which reflect the growing dominance of progressive, child-centred
pedagogies. As a consequence, they predict that official timetables will place greater
emphasis on curricular electives and options, as a way of allowing pupils (rather than
educational authorities) greater autonomy in choosing the knowledge they deem most
relevant to their lives. Table 11 explores this idea by analysing the proportion of
countries in each EFA region that include electives or optional subjects in their official
timetables for the 1980s and 2000s.13
Overall, the results confirm the hypothesis noted above and indicate a global increase
(from 16% to 48%) in the percentage of countries offering at least some electives or
optional subjects in their official curricular guidelines. The prevalence of curricular
electives or options is stronger in more-developed, rather than less-developed, regions.
Specifically, the percentages are higher in Western Europe and North America,
Central and Eastern Europe, and East Asia and the Pacific and much lower in sub-
Saharan Africa, the Arab States and Southwest Asia. Two caveats are worth noting:
first, the inclusion of electives appears to be more prominent in the upper grades of
primary education and in lower secondary education; second, among the countries that
offer some optional component, this typically involves only 4-8 percent of official
curricular time. In short, while there is a basic tendency in this direction, it remains
quite limited in scope and appears strongly associated with individualistic ideologies
and child-centred pedagogies.
One of the long-standing dilemmas facing educational authorities and curriculum developers
concerns the selection of school subjects and the organization of official timetables in light of
the on-going ‘knowledge explosion’ and globalisation of curricular contents, on the one hand,
and pupil needs and parental interests, on the other. ‘Conventional’ discipline-based school
subjects increasingly compete with newer or more integrative school subjects for a place in
the official timetable, which further intensifies this dilemma. Some observers have noted the
phenomenon of ‘timetable overload,’ a solution to the above dilemma in which pupils are
taught a large number of subjects at each grade level. This situation is thought to produce a
sense of fragmentation and superficiality in the educational knowledge pupils encounter.
We explore the extent to which official school curricula have become overloaded, by counting
the number of required "subjects" or subject categories found in primary and lower secondary
timetables at the 1980s and 2000s (see Table 12). We then set two somewhat arbitrary
standards – namely, ten or more subjects in grades 1 to 5 and eleven or more subjects in
grades 6 to 8 – in order to estimate the prevalence of timetable overload. The rule used for
counting "subjects" or subject categories in official timetables is straightforward: how many
separate lines or distinct subject labels were listed in a timetable for each grade level.14
13
Please note that this table does not include detailed data by grade level nor does it report the percentage of
total instructional time set aside for optional subjects or electives.
14
As an aside, there are some interesting (cultural?) differences in the degree of detail (or conceptions of school-
based knowledge and activities) employed in official curricula. In some cases, (e.g., Venezuela, Italy and
South Korea), countries tended to define required subjects in large ‘combined’ categories: "Pensamiento,
acción social e identidad nacional" or "Histoire, éducation civique et géographie" or "Integrated subjects." In
other cases, countries followed a more conventional classification of subject disciplines with specific time
allocations for each subject. In still other cases (e.g., Saudi Arabia), the official timetable provided detailed
time allocations for specific themes (or skills) within conventional school subjects. Despite these different
timetable "types", we applied the same coding rule to all timetables (in both time periods), thus enhancing
data comparability.
(Table 12 about here)
The findings reported in Table 12 indicate that the phenomenon of timetable overload is
limited in the lower grades of primary education but tends to increase in the grades of upper
primary and lower secondary education. Grade 5 appears to be an important transitional grade
in this regard, with about half of all countries requiring their 5th graders to take 10 of more
subjects during the school year. The proportion of countries officially requiring more than 11
subjects to be taught in grades 6 to 8 is also high.15
Have official timetables become increasingly ‘overloaded’ with required subjects over the
1985-2000 period? Apparently not. With some minor regional exceptions, Table 12 shows
that the proportion of countries with an ‘overloaded timetable’ has not dramatically changed
during the past two decades. If anything, there are signs of a slight decline in the prevalence
of this phenomenon. Future analyses will explore the factors that facilitate or hinder the over-
abundance of subjects in official timetables.
V. Concluding Remarks
The contemporary project of building up and expanding access to basic education permeates
all national societies and the international community. The ideal and reality of ‘education for
all’ has become part a well-organized international social movement, owing in no small
measure to its perceived links to development and progress, the consolidation of the nation-
state, and the creation of sovereign, rational individual-citizens (see Meyer et al. 1997; Boli
1989). This broad-based movement involves many actors and agencies – e.g., national
governments, university academics, international consultants and advisers, and an extensive
network of international governmental (and non-governmental) organisations – who have
successfully turned education in its varied forms into a highly institutionalised reality (see
Chabbott and Ramirez 1998; Boli 1997; Schafer 1999).
With the global legitimacy of public schooling firmly embedded, and enrolment expansion the
norm, a new set of educational objectives are being constructed and debated (see, for
example, Lockheed and Verspoor 1991). The issue nowadays is not only whether young
children are enrolled in school and remain there, but also the nature and ‘quality’ of
their school-based learning experiences. What kinds of educational experiences do
countries organise for their students in public schools? How many hours of instruction do
educational authorities mandate to achieve curricular objectives? How do countries structure
intended instructional time during the typical school week -- according to which curricular
categories and school subjects? What, and how much, do pupils actually learn as a result of
their time in school? These, and similar, questions exemplify the newly emergent policy
agenda in education.
The present report examined two key aspects of the structuring of children's school-based
experiences: first, the amount of instructional time countries expect pupils to be in
school, and second, the organization of the school curriculum, which reflects official
policies of how intended time should be organized according to curricular contents and
school subjects. Based upon an extensive compilation and systematisation of official reports
15
In unreported analyses we find that extent of cross-national variation remains fairly consistent across grade
levels. : heterogeneity is slightly greater in the 1980s at the lower primary grades than in the 2000s period.
submitted by national ministries of education to the International Bureau of Education since
the 1980s, this report focused on global, regional and longitudinal patterns of intended
instructional time as well as the prevalence of, and relative emphasis on, curricular subject
areas in primary and lower secondary education. An underlying objective of the report was to
extend and revise earlier comparative and longitudinal studies of official curricular policies
(Amadio 1997; Meyer et al 1992; Kamens, Meyer and Benavot 1996).
• It is estimated that most countries in the world allocate between 700 and 800 yearly
hours of instructional time for pupils in grades 1 to 4 and between 800 and 900 yearly
hours in grades 5 to 8. (These figures approximate, to the greatest degree possible,
intended instructional time by deducting official time for non-instructional activities
such as breaks, recesses, examinations and the like). Cross-national differences in
intended time policies tend to be greater in primary education and more limited in
secondary education. Despite expectations to the contrary, there is no conclusive
evidence of a worldwide increase in intended instructional time between the 1980s and
2000s. Nevertheless, several divergent regional patterns were uncovered: over the past
two decades many educational systems in Latin America, the Caribbean, Arab States
and in parts of sub Saharan Africa expanded annual instructional time, while many
systems in Southwest Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, and Western Europe reduced
instructional time. Various economic, political and educational explanations are
briefly discussed to account for these divergent tendencies.
• Most of the hours countries officially allocate for instructional purposes are structured
around six core subject areas: languages, mathematics, sciences, social sciences,
aesthetic education and physical education/sport. Language education and
mathematics are universally required in all grade levels (1-8) and together comprise
about half of all curricular time, more during the early grades of primary education
than in subsequent grades. The other core subject areas are required in the school
curriculum of the vast majority of countries, although aesthetic education receives
greater emphasis in the lower grades while sciences, social sciences and physical
education/sport become more prominent subjects in the upper grades. Trends for the
four “non-core” subject areas – namely, practical education/vocational skills,
religion/moral education, computer/technology and electives/optional subjects – vary
to a greater extent by grade level, region and time. The findings show that the latter
three subject areas are given greater curricular emphasis in the most recent period,
while emphasis on practical education and vocational skills is weakening.
• Several ‘newer’ subjects have enhanced their institutional status worldwide and
become more prominent in the school curriculum. These include, for example,
environmental studies/ecology, civics and citizenship education and technology-
related subjects. Moreover, there has been a significant upward shift in the percentage
of countries that include some elective or optional component in the school
curriculum, indicative of the growing dominance of progressive pedagogies and child-
centred curricular policies.
• Finally, there is a tendency for countries to ‘overload’ their official timetables with a
large number of required subjects from about grade 5 onwards. There is little evidence
that this pattern has become more prevalent worldwide in the past two decades.
Overall, the present study of intended instructional time and official school curricula -- global
in scale and relatively detailed in design -- provides a more complete and variegated picture of
the structuring of pupil’s school-based learning experiences than previous analyses of national
curricular policies. Although the reported evidence is primarily descriptive and exploratory in
nature (leaving much room for additional analyses), it highlights on-going trends of stability
and change in the organization of the school curriculum. For example, the analysis of
curricular policies in lower secondary grades, in conjunction with those obtaining at the
primary level, underscores how the structuring of subject areas cuts across grade levels. The
detailed exploration of curricular policies in primary-level grades illustrates the significantly
shorter school year, the predominance of literacy and numeracy subject matter, and greater
heterogeneity of curricular models in grades 1 through 3 in contrast to grades 4 through 6. The
study of longitudinal changes between the 1980s and the most recent period unearthed school
subjects (and subject areas) that have gained institutional status, lost status or whose status has
remained virtually unaltered. The growing importance of foreign language instruction in
school curricula provided convincing evidence of the influence of globalisation processes on
the selection and organization of school knowledge by nation-states; the expansion of greater
pupil choice through options and electives exemplified the impact of educational ideologies
placing children’s needs and interests before those of academic disciplines and knowledge
gatekeepers. Overall, these and other reported patterns provide a fresh perspective in which to
address existing and newly emergent issues among educational scholars, policy-makers and
curriculum developers concerning the official school curriculum.
VI. References
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Intended instructional time was defined as the number of hours during the school year that
educational authorities expect local schools to allocate for the teaching of all required (and
optional) curricular subjects as well as other planned school activities. In practice this quantity
refers to the number of hours that schools should devote to formal, school-based learning
situations. Three components were taken into account:
• the duration of the ‘working’ school year, expressed as the number of days or weeks
that schools are open and classroom instruction is taking place;
• the number of teaching ‘periods’ (lessons, or instructional ‘hours’) allocated to each
subject in each grade level as specified in official curricular timetables or other
curriculum-related documents; and
• the average duration of ‘periods’ (lessons or ‘hours’), expressed in minutes.
The data sources listed below were examined for information on each of these components.
Depending on the precision of the documents that were checked, school days and/or periods
devoted to examinations, teacher in-service training, in-school holiday celebrations or extra-
curricular activities were deducted from our estimates of yearly instructional hours. In
addition, whenever possible, we deducted daily or weekly hours set aside for breaks and
recreational activities.
2. Data Sources
In general, the data for this period refers to the years between 1996 and 2001, and derive from
the following major sources:
(a) The ‘National Reports on the Development of Education’ presented by UNESCO Member
States at the 45th session of the International Conference on Education (Geneva, 30
September—5 October 1996). In the framework of preparations for the 1996 ICE session,
countries were requested to report information on the educational process in their national
reports, and included data on the curriculum and the number of hours of teaching by
discipline/subject at the pre-primary, primary and secondary levels. Additional information or
further clarifications were received from ministries of education and UNESCO National
Commissions in 1997, as the 1996 series of National Reports was used to prepare the 2nd and
3rd editions of the CD-ROM World Data on Education (IBE: UNESCO, Geneva, 1998 and
1999). Most recent information is drawn from the 2001 series of National Reports (Forty-
sixth ICE session, Geneva, 5–8 September 2001) and was incorporated into the 4th and 5th
editions of the CD-ROM World Data on Education.
(c) Various recent documents and reports published by national ministries of education or
national curriculum agencies, departments and units.
(d) For some European Union member states, information on instructional time was drawn
from EURYDICE (The Information Network on Education in Europe), made available
through Eurybase, The information database on education systems in Europe (EURYDICE,
1999 and 2001 editions). Summary sheets on European education systems were also used
(EURYDICE, 2000 and 2001).
In general, the data for this period refers to the years between 1980 and 1985, and derive from
the following major sources:
(a) The ‘National Reports on the Development of Education’ presented by UNESCO Member
States at the thirty-ninth session of the International Conference on Education (Geneva, 16-25
October 1984). In the framework of preparations for the 1984 ICE session, countries were
requested to respond to a questionnaire on the "The universalisation and renewal of primary
education in the perspective of an appropriate introduction to science and technology."
Among the questionnaire items were questions concerning the organization of curriculum and
the length of the school year.
(b) Additional information was gleaned from national reports to a questionnaire that was
circulated to countries prior to the fortieth session of the ICE (Geneva, 2-11 December 1986)
entitled "The improvement of secondary education: objectives, structures, content and
methods."
(c) Educational encyclopedia and published volumes in the area of educational policy and
comparative education were also examined. These include Postlethwaite (1989), Kurian
(1988), Cameron and Hurst (1983), Massialas and Jarrar (1983), Babs Fafunwa and Aisuku
(1982), al-Misnad (1985), Postlethwaite and Thomas (1980) and Thomas and Postlethwaite
(1983; 1984).
National documents and other sources varied in the level of detail they provided about the
basic components needs to calculate annual instructional time. For example, in many
instances, information on instructional time was not reported in relation to an official
curricular timetable. When sources provided official timetables, the degree of precision
varied: for example, some explicitly identified the amount of weekly time (or school periods)
devoted to recreational activities, class breaks or extra-curricular activities, some did not.
Figures for the number of ‘working’ days or weeks in a typical school year sometimes
included days set aside for examinations and revisions and sometimes they did not. This lack
of precision reduced cross-national comparability and longitudinal comparison. In general,
data for the more recent period (2000s) are of higher quality, resulting in more precise
estimates of total annual instructional time.
With respect to the 1980s period, there is a clear possibility that estimated values are inflated.
In some cases, the inclusion of school holidays or examination weeks may have inflated the
annual instructional time figures by 2-3 weeks. Given that the school year in over 80% of
national education systems is between 33-40 weeks, the over-estimation would be 10% or
less. A more significant problem involves national reports and official timetables that were
not entirely clear as to the length of an instructional "hour". For such cases we may have
calculated the instructional "hour" as 60 minutes, when in fact it may have only been 40, 45 or
50 minutes. The lack of precision here would inflate figures by 17-33%. We have checked
and rechecked all our cases, and have excluded countries for which the likelihood of over-
estimation was high. Thus, only cases with relatively ‘precise’ estimates were included in the
tables found in this report.
Table 2: Yearly Instructional Time in Primary and Lower Secondary Education, Worldwide,
circa 1985 and 2000, Constant Cases by Grade Level*
Circa Mean 722 732 769 790 819 831 902 907
2000 Median 741 743 784 798 809 813 900 900
25 percentile 595 630 674 720 733 755 809 833
75 percentile 810 815 850 862 900 903 972 990
S.D 134 129 124 114 112 109 129 120
C.V. .186 .176 .161 .144 .137 .131 .143 .132
Constant Cases 88 88 88 88 86 82 73 71
* All figures have been rounded off. S.D. refers to the standard deviation of the reported mean and C.V. refers to
the coefficient of variation, which is calculated as the standard deviation divided by the mean.
Table 3: Median Yearly Instructional Hours in Grades 1 to 8, circa 1985 and 2000 (constant cases),
by UNESCO Region*
UNESCO Period Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Number
Regions 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 of
Cases
SSA 1985 800 800 847 884 908 908 918 918 9-14
2000 761 795 870 888 925 939 1013 1013
AS 1985 708 725 731 756 791 808 827 855 14
2000 768 768 788 813 813 813 888 888
EAPA 1985 657 674 784 797 863 901 875 875 9-10
2000 676 711 817 821 821 830 867 867
SWA 1985 675 675 793 884 884 972 972 972 3-5
2000 630 630 734 734 734 900 900 900
LAC 1985 726 730 748 758 790 790 922 922 13-18
2000 786 786 796 796 800 800 945 945
NAWE 1985 813 813 859 859 867 860 893 915 13-17
2000 770 770 808 808 840 840 900 900
CEE 1985 617 631 666 709 761 785 825 825 10
2000 561 587 627 645 729 782 818 853
Global 1985 708 717 761 803 828 840 888 893 71-88
Medians 2000 741 743 784 798 809 813 900 900
* Figures in bold indicate an increase in intended instructional time over the 1985-2000 period.
Sciences 76 71 87 93 95 96
Computers & 5 19 5 26 16 41
Technology
Social Sciences* 78 81 94 97 95 100
Religion & 60 59 66 62 61 52
Moral Education
Aesthetic 97 90 97 94 90 89
Education
Sport/ 93 90 91 94 82 97
Physical Education
Skills & 72 56 85 71 77 67
Competencies
Electives, Options & 37 50 46 56 43 56
Other Subjects
* Social Sciences includes social studies, history, geography, civics, citizenship education and environmental studies.
Table 5: Relative Emphasis on Subject Areas in Official Timetables:
Percentage of total instruction time allocated to subject areas for Grades 1 to 8, Worldwide, 2000s only
General Subject Areas Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
All Language 40.9 40.7 38.6 36.4 34.9 33.5 30.7 29.4
Instruction
Mathematics 19.8 20.2 19.4 18.8 17.6 14.7 14.2 13.9
Computers & 0.8 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.5 1.9 2.4 2.6
Technology
Social Sciences* 5.8 5.9 7.3 9.3 10.4 11.5 13.5 13.1
Religion & 4.6 4.4 4.3 4.1 3.9 3.7 3.5 3.3
Moral Education
Aesthetic 9.4 9.2 9.0 8.7 7.9 7.4 6.3 5.5
Education
Sport/ 7.0 6.8 6.7 6.4 6.0 5.8 5.9 5.7
Physical Education
Skills & 3.3 3.3 3.7 3.5 4.5 4.4 5.4 5.6
Competencies
Electives, Options & 4.9 5.0 4.9 5.0 5.2 5.1 5.5 6.4
Other Subjects
Number of Countries (121) (121) (122) (121) (123) (121) (110) (107)
* Social Sciences includes social studies, history, geography, civics, citizenship education and environmental studies.
Table 6: Worldwide Emphasis on Official Language Instruction, by Grade Level and Time Period:
Percentage of total language instruction time allocated to ‘official’ languages and literature*
* See text for details about the classification of languages into ‘official’ and ‘non-official’ categories.
Table 7: The Prevalence and Relative Emphasis on Different Types of Language Education, Worldwide, by Grade Level,
Circa 1985*
% of Countries Allocating Instructional Time to Language Instruction and, Of Those, Mean Instructional Time Allocated to Language Type
Types of Language Education Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 Grade 6 Grade 7 Grade 8 Grade 9
Official % of countries 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
Language(s) that teach Official
Language(s)
Of those, Mean 37.0 36.4 32.2 28.4 25.5 23.7 19.3 17.6 17.6
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 11.8 11.0 10.9 9.8 10.1 10.4 8.9 7.8 7.7
Local/Regional % of countries 4 4 5 4 5 5 9 7 6
Language(s) that teach Local
Language(s)
Of those, Mean 16.5 16.5 13.7 13.6 10.1 8.1 7.0 7.2 6.5
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 9.1 9.1 1.3 1.5 4.5 2.8 2.2 1.2 0.8
Foreign % of countries 4 5 12 21 34 46 72 79 78
Language(s) that teach Foreign
Language(s)
Of those, Mean 12.2 10.2 13.7 15.5 14.3 13.4 12.1 12.0 12.9
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 1.8 4.4 9.1 9.7 7.3 6.8 4.6 4.9 5.6
Literature % of countries 5 4 6 8 7 7 7 9 11
that teach
Literature
Of those, Mean 6.6 4.3 8.3 8.8 5.2 4.6 8.0 8.6 8.8
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 4.9 2.3 9.9 8.7 3.3 2.6 4.2 3.4 3.3
Number of Countries (83-85) (84-86) (84-86) (83-85) (80-83) (76-80) (82-85) (80-83) (69-72)
* See text for details about the classification of languages into ‘official’ and ‘non-official’ categories.
Table 8: The Prevalence and Relative Emphasis on Different Types of Language Education, Worldwide, by Grade Level,
Circa 2000*
% of Countries Allocating Instructional Time to Language Instruction and, Of Those, Mean Instructional Time Allocated to Language Type
Types of Language Education Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 Grade 6 Grade 7 Grade 8 Grade 9
Official % of countries that 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
Language(s) teach Official
Language(s)
Of those, Mean 35.9 34.7 31.2 28.4 24.7 23.5 18.0 16.9 16.5
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 10.5 10.9 9.5 9.4 9.3 9.6 6.8 6.6 6.2
Local/Regional % of countries that 6 6 7 7 6 5 5 6 7
Language (s) teach Local
Language(s)
Of those, Mean 11.7 11.4 11.0 10.2 10.4 10.0 7.8 6.4 6.0
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 5.1 5.2 4.5 4.3 4.5 3.6 2.7 2.3 2.3
Foreign % of countries that 16 18 24 36 50 54 80 83 83
Language(s) teach Foreign
Language(s)
Of those, Mean 12.9 14.5 14.6 12.9 13.4 13.0 12.7 12.2 11.9
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 5.3 8.6 8.3 7.8 6.6 6.4 3.9 3.7 3.5
Literature % of countries that 14 14 15 14 21 21 25 26 27
teach Literature
Of those, Mean 21.5 20.9 18.6 17.6 11.8 10.6 7.9 7.6 8.0
Instructional Time
Standard Deviation 12.1 11.6 10.1 9.0 6.3 5.2 3.3 3.3 3.6
Number of Countries (123-125) (123-126) (123-125) (124-126) (125-128) (123-126) (121-123) (117-120) (91-93)
* See text for details about the classification of languages into ‘official’ and ‘non-official’ categories.
Table 9: Mathematics Education: Mean Percentage of Total Instructional Time Allocated to Mathematics Instruction in
Grades 1 to 8, circa 1985 and 2000 (constant cases), by UNESCO Region*
UNESCO Time Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Number
Regions Period 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 of Cases
SSA 1985 20.8 20.2 19.6 18.6 20.3 20.5 16.6 16.1 8-12
2000 19.2 19.2 19.0 18.2 18.1 17.7 16.5 16.0
AS 1985 18.1 17.9 17.4 16.9 15.3 16.3 14.4 14.0 12-13
2000 17.6 18.5 17.1 17.0 16.8 16.6 14.2 14.0
EAPA 1985 17.5 20.5 19.8 19.6 18.3 15.9 13.8 14.2 5-7
2000 21.0 22.5 17.9 17.1 15.5 15.9 13.3 13.2
SWA 1985 17.8 17.8 16.5 16.4 15.9 15.9 12.4 12.4 2-4
2000 19.1 19.8 15.7 16.4 16.4 12.0 11.0 11.0
LAC 1985 17.7 17.7 18.0 17.5 16.5 17.1 15.4 14.3 12-14
2000 23.4 23.4 23.3 21.8 21.6 21.1 14.6 14.5
NAWE 1985 18.4 18.2 18.0 16.6 16.0 15.1 14.0 12.8 7-11
2000 17.7 17.6 16.8 16.7 15.9 15.4 13.8 13.0
CEE 1985 22.3 21.9 20.0 20.0 18.3 16.4 14.5 13.8 8-9
2000 19.3 19.0 17.8 17.4 15.2 14.2 13.4 13.0
Global 1985 19.1 19.2 18.5 17.9 17.3 17.0 14.8 14.1 57-65
Means 2000 19.4 19.7 18.4 17.9 17.3 16.9 14.3 13.9
Coefficients 1985 .281 .253 .249 .253 .280 .269 .267 .258
of Variation 2000 .279 .256 .237 .221 .219 .229 .175 .181
* Figures in bold refer to an increase in the emphasis on mathematic education between the 1980s and 2000s.
Table 10: Global Trends in the Prevalence of “New” Subjects: Percentage of Countries Requiring Instruction in
Selected School Subjects in Grades 1 to 8, Worldwide, circa 1985 and 2000 (non-constant cases)
School Subjects or Time Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Number
Curricular Areas Period 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 of
Cases
Hygiene/ 1980s 26.2 29.4 31.8 35.3 31.7 32.9 25.9 24.1 72-85
Health Education 2000s 25.0 25.0 26.4 25.0 27.6 27.2 21.3 23.7 93-127
Environmental 1980s 17.9 17.6 15.3 12.9 9.8 7.6 1.2 1.2 72-85
Science/ Ecology 2000s 24.4 26.0 25.6 23.4 16.5 11.2 7.4 5.1 93-127
Civics/ Citizenship 1980s 13.1 14.1 17.6 21.2 26.5 34.1 40.2 45.9 73-85
Education 2000s 21.0 21.8 25.6 28.2 31.5 35.2 39.3 38.7 93-127
Social Studies 1980s 31.3 33.3 40.0 43.5 46.9 43.0 43.5 42.2 72-85
2000s 32.0 31.2 39.7 46.0 42.5 43.7 49.6 46.7 94-127
Moral or Values 1980s 25.0 25.9 23.5 24.7 25.6 20.3 16.7 18.3 72-86
Education 2000s 24.2 25.0 26.4 26.6 27.6 27.2 23.8 21.0 94-127
Technology & 1980s 4.8 5.9 5.9 5.9 6.1 5.1 14.1 15.7 72-86
related subjects 2000s 16.1 16.1 18.4 21.0 25.2 27.2 35.0 35.8 95-127
(excl. computers)
Vocational 1980s 21.4 21.2 22.4 21.2 22.0 26.6 32.6 38.6 72-86
Education/Skills 2000s 17.1 17.1 17.7 19.5 21.4 23.4 30.6 28.8 93-126
Table 11: The Prevalence of Electives and Optional Subjects in Official Primary and Lower Secondary Curricula:
The Percentage of countries that allocate curricular time to electives or optional subjects by
historical Period and UNESCO region (number of countries in parentheses)
Global 16 48
Percentages (99) (101)
Table 12: The ‘Overloaded Timetable’: Proportion of Countries in Which the Official Curriculum Timetable
Includes More than 9 subjects (Grades 1 to 5) or More than 10 subjects (Grades 6 to 8), circa 1985 and 2000,
by UNESCO Region*
UNESCO Regional Time Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Number
Classification Period 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 of Cases
LAC 1985 21 21 21 21 32 22 39 50 18-19
2000 7 7 13 20 31 6 7 7 15-16
EAPA 1985 11 20 0 30 30 14 78 75 7-10
2000 6 6 12 29 47 24 31 31 16-17
SSA 1985 20 27 56 69 60 43 71 69 14-17
2000 17 17 39 44 48 30 45 42 19-23
AS 1985 14 14 36 43 62 43 36 43 13-14
2000 5 5 20 45 70 45 63 63 19-20
SWA 1985 0 0 0 0 0 50 50 60 4-5
2000 0 0 0 0 0 20 40 40 5
CEE 1985 9 9 9 56 89 100 100 100 9-11
2000 0 0 5 22 84 84 95 95 19
NAWE 1985 12 6 18 18 41 41 56 71 14-17
2000 13 13 19 25 50 35 44 50 16-18
CA 1985 - - - - - - - - 0
2000 7 7 17 30 55 40 51 52 7
Table A1: Mean Yearly Instructional Time in Primary and Lower Secondary Education,
circa 1985, Non-Constant Cases, by Grade Level and UNESCO Region*
UNESCO Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Number
Regions 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 of Cases
SSA 822 822 854 913 944 973 1001 991 1020 14-21
AS 715 737 748 782 811 823 861 876 877 13-14
CA - - - - - - - - - 0
EAPA 704 723 782 815 864 908 968 1001 1020 7-12
SWA 787 787 865 914 914 1095 1095 1105 1138 2-6
LAC 774 776 810 815 843 860 977 993 1026 17-19
NAWE 746 758 813 840 863 868 925 930 905 14-19
CEE 685 708 744 783 848 898 924 948 934 6-11
Total 753 764 804 837 870 900 954 968 970 73-100
S.D. 151 147 138 143 142 140 146 149 188
C.V. .20 .19 .17 .17 .16 .156 .15 .15 .19
Table A2: Mean Yearly Instructional time in Primary and Lower Secondary Education,
circa 2000, Non-constant cases, by Grade Level and UNESCO Region
UNESCO Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Number
Regions 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 of Cases
SSA 755 775 812 847 872 871 951 946 965 16-18
AS 725 732 752 792 813 820 862 868 880 17
CA 533 575 620 647 740 754 798 812 830 9
EAPA 704 710 764 784 814 826 911 918 918 14
SWA 646 646 730 769 771 856 885 890 907 5-7
LAC 761 764 781 783 792 796 921 928 943 17-18
NAWE 743 748 790 799 845 847 894 906 933 23
CEE 549 597 624 658 734 773 811 830 855 20
Total 689 705 742 766 804 819 883 891 908 122-125
S.D. 139 128 133 125 110 107 122 115 118
C.V. .20 .18 .18 .16 .14 .13 .14 .13 .13
Table A3: Relative Emphasis on Major Subject Areas in Official Curricula, Worldwide, by Grade level, 1980s
Percentage of total instruction time allocated to major subject areas (number of cases in parentheses)
General Subject Areas Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
All Language 38.4 37.6 34.5 32.6 31.4 30.7 29.2 28.7
Instruction
Mathematics 19.4 19.4 18.7 17.8 17.3 16.7 14.2 13.3
Computers & 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.4 0.3 1.2 1.5
Technology
Social Sciences 6.1 6.4 7.9 9.7 11.0 11.7 12.6 13.0
Religion & 5.7 5.8 5.5 5.4 5.2 4.9 4.1 4.1
Moral Education
Aesthetic 9.8 9.9 9.5 9.3 8.6 7.6 7.0 6.4
Education
Sport/ 7.1 7.1 7.1 6.6 6.1 5.7 6.0 5.3
Physical Education
Skills & 5.6 5.6 6.4 7.0 7.7 8.7 9.5 10.0
Competencies
Electives, Options & 3.4 3.3 3.5 3.1 3.5 3.9 2.9 3.4
Other Subjects
Number of Countries (83) (84) (83) (83) (81) (77) (74) (70)
Table A4: Extent of Cross-National Variation in Mean Percentage of Instructional Time Allocated
to Subject Areas by Grade Level, 2000s
Figures refer to standard deviations around global means (number of cases in parentheses)
General Subject Areas Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade Grade
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
All Language 10.4 10.5 10.4 9.8 9.2 9.0 6.9 7.0
Instruction
Mathematics 5.6 5.1 4.7 4.1 4.3 4.3 3.8 3.6
Computers & 2.4 2.2 2.3 2.6 3.0 3.4 3.6 3.6
Technology
Social Sciences 5.8 6.0 6.0 5.9 5.2 5.1 4.3 4.0
Religion & 7.2 6.8 6.7 6.2 5.7 5.6 5.1 5.0
Moral Education
Aesthetic 5.0 4.8 4.9 4.3 4.3 4.0 3.8 3.8
Education
Sport/ 4.0 3.8 3.6 3.1 2.7 2.7 2.4 2.3
Physical Education
Skills & 5.1 5.1 5.4 5.0 5.1 4.8 5.4 6.6
Competencies
Electives, Options & 8.6 8.6 7.2 7.1 7.6 7.3 8.9 9.7
Other Subjects
Number of Countries (108) (108) (108) (108) (110) (110) (108) (105)