Education Today
Centre for Educational Research and Innovation
- Frequency
- Annual
- ISSN:
- 2219-0430 (online)
- ISSN:
- 2219-0422 (print)
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/22190430
Each year, Education Today aims to present OECD's key findings and orientations for education policy in an accessible way so that they can be used by different audiences – our own national contacts, other sections of governments, experts, media and the wider public – who do not have the time to stay abreast of all of the OECD’s work on education. It is designed to encourage readers who know about only one or two of our studies to look further into those that they have been missing so far.
We have chosen to limit the scope of this report so that it includes only published results and policy orientations, and those applicable to most OECD countries (rather than, for example, single country reviews). The coverage is limited to work produced by the Directorate for Education, but it includes some analyses that have been conducted jointly with other OECD Directorates. A recent example is the OECD’s horizontal "Innovation Strategy" to which the Directorate for Education made an important contribution regarding education and skills for innovation.
Latest Edition
Education Today 2013
The OECD Perspective
- Replaces
- Education Today 2010 | Education Today 2009
Centre for Educational Research and Innovation
- READ
- Author(s):
- OECD
- 17 Dec 2012
- Pages:
- 132
- ISBN:
- 9789264186811 (PDF) ;9789264177109(print)
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/edu_today-2013-en
What does the OECD have to say about the state of education today? What are the main OECD messages on early childhood education, teacher policies and tertiary education? What about student performance, educational spending and equity in education? OECD work on these important education topics and others have been brought together in a single accessible source updating the first edition of Education Today which came out in March 2009.
Organised into eight chapters, this report examines early childhood education, schooling, transitions beyond initial education, higher education, adult learning, outcomes and returns, equity, and innovation. The chapters are structured around key findings and policy directions emerging from recent OECD educational analyses. Each entry highlights the main message in a concise and accessible way, with a brief explanation and reference to the original OECD source.
