International Standard Classification of Education
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The International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) is a way to organize and compare education systems around the world. It helps people understand how different countries structure their schools and learning programs.
ISCED is part of a group of important economic and social tools created by the United Nations. These tools help countries share information and work together on issues that affect everyone.
By using ISCED, researchers, governments, and schools can compare things like school levels, training programs, and adult learning in a fair and clear way. This makes it easier to see how education systems are similar or different across the globe.
History
ISCED was created in the 1970s to help countries compare their education systems fairly. The first version, called ISCED 1976, was approved in 1975 and officially supported by UNESCO in 1976.
A second version, ISCED 1997, was approved in 1997. It added 7 education levels and categories for different subjects of study. The UNESCO Institute for Statistics worked on a third version, adopted in 2011. ISCED 2011 added two more levels, making 9 in total, and included programs for children under three years old.
During the updates for ISCED 2011, it was decided to review education subjects separately. This review is still happening to create a new classification just for education subjects.
Related materials from the European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training and Eurostat offer more details about education categories.
2011 version
The International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) helps organize and compare education systems around the world. It groups education into different levels and categories to make it easier to understand.
ISCED 2011 levels, categories, and sub-categories
Source:International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED).
- 0 EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
- 01 Early childhood educational development
- 02 Pre-primary education
- 1 PRIMARY EDUCATION
- 10 Primary education
- 2 LOWER SECONDARY EDUCATION
- 24 General
- 25 Professional
- 3 UPPER SECONDARY EDUCATION
- 34 General
- 35 Professional
- 4 POST-SECONDARY NON-TERTIARY EDUCATION
- 44 General
- 45 Professional
- 5 SHORT-CYCLE TERTIARY EDUCATION
- 54 General
- 55 Professional
- 6 BACHELOR'S OR EQUIVALENT LEVEL
- 64 Academic
- 65 Professional
- 66 Orientation unspecified
- 7 MASTER'S OR EQUIVALENT LEVEL
- 74 Academic
- 75 Professional
- 76 Orientation unspecified
- 8 DOCTORAL OR EQUIVALENT LEVEL
- 84 Academic
- 85 Professional
- 86 Orientation unspecified
| Level | Label | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Early childhood education (01 Early childhood educational development) | Education designed to support early development in preparation for participation in school and society. Programmes designed for children below the age of 3. |
| Early childhood education (02 Pre-primary education) | Education designed to support early development in preparation for participation in school and society. Programmes designed for children from age 3 to the start of primary education. | |
| 1 | Primary education | Provides foundational skills in reading, writing, and mathematics and to establish a solid foundation for learning. |
| 2 | Lower secondary education | The first stage of secondary education with a subject-oriented curriculum. |
| 3 | Upper secondary education | The final stage of secondary education preparing students for higher education or employment. Usually with an increased range of subject options and streams. |
| 4 | Post-secondary non-tertiary education | Programmes providing learning experiences that build on secondary education and prepare for labour market entry or tertiary education. The content is broader than secondary but not as complex as tertiary education. |
| 5 | Short-cycle tertiary education | Short first tertiary programmes that are typically practically-based, occupationally-specific and prepare for labour market entry. These programmes may also provide a pathway to other tertiary programmes. |
| 6 | Bachelor's or equivalent | Provides undergraduate-level academic or professional education. |
| 7 | Master's or equivalent | Programmes designed to provide advanced academic or professional knowledge, skills and competencies leading to a second tertiary degree or equivalent qualification. |
| 8 | Doctorate or equivalent | Focuses on advanced research leading to a doctoral degree. |
1997 version
The 1997 version of the International Standard Classification of Education helps organize different kinds of learning around the world.
ISCED 1997 fields of education
This version groups education into different areas, such as basic learning, arts, science, and health services. It includes fields like teaching, business, engineering, farming, and many more to help compare education systems globally.
| Level | Label | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Pre-primary education | Initial stage of organized instruction, designed primarily to introduce very young children to a school-type environment and to develop their cognitive, physical, social and emotional skills. Designed for children from age 3 to the start of primary education. |
| 1 | Primary education or first stage of basic education | Normally starting between the ages of 5 โ 7, designed to give a sound basic education in reading, writing and mathematics along with an elementary understanding of other subjects. |
| 2 | Lower secondary education or second stage of basic education | Designed to complete basic education, usually on a more subject-oriented pattern. It builds upon the learning outcomes from primary education (ISCED level 1) and aims to lay the foundation for lifelong learning and human development. |
| 3 | Upper secondary education | More specialized education typically beginning at age 15 or 16 years or completes secondary education in preparation for tertiary education, or to provide skills relevant to employment, or both. |
| 4 | Post-secondary non-tertiary education | Programmes that straddle the boundary between upper- and post-secondary education from an international point of view. ISCED level 4 programmes, considering their content, cannot be regarded as tertiary programmes. They are often not significantly more advanced than programmes at ISCED level 3 but they serve to broaden the knowledge of participants who have already completed a programme at level 3. |
| 5 | First stage of tertiary education | Tertiary programmes having an educational content more advanced than those offered at ISCED levels 3 and 4. These programmes may be academically based or practically oriented / occupationally specific. Entry to these programmes normally requires the successful completion of ISCED level 3A or 3B or a similar qualification at ISCED level 4A. All degrees and qualifications are cross-classified by type of programmes, position in national degree or qualification structures and cumulative duration at tertiary. |
| 6 | Second stage of tertiary education | Tertiary programmes leading to the award of an advanced research qualification, e.g. Ph.D. These programmes are therefore devoted to advanced study and original research and are not based on course-work only. It typically requires the submission of a thesis or dissertation of publishable quality which is the product of original research and represents a significant contribution to knowledge. |
Comparison between versions
| ISCED 2011 | ISCED 1997 |
|---|---|
| Level 0: Early childhood education (01 Early childhood educational development) | None |
| Level 0: Early childhood education (02 Pre-primary education) | Level 0: Pre-primary education. |
| Level 1: Primary education | Level 1: Primary education or first stage of basic education. |
| Level 2: Lower secondary education | Level 2: Lower secondary education or second stage of basic education |
| Level 3: Upper secondary education | Level 3: Upper secondary education |
| Level 4: Post-secondary non-tertiary education | Level 4: Post-secondary non-tertiary education |
| Level 5: Short-cycle tertiary education | Level 5B: First stage of tertiary education: typically shorter, more practical/technical/occupationally specific programmes leading to professional qualifications. |
| Level 6: Bachelor's or equivalent | Level 5A: First stage of tertiary education: largely theoretically based programmes intended to provide qualifications for gaining entry into more advanced research programmes and professions with higher skills requirements. |
| Level 7: Master's or equivalent | Level 5A: First stage of tertiary education: largely theoretically based programmes intended to provide qualifications for gaining entry into more advanced research programmes and professions with higher skills requirements. |
| Level 8: Doctorate or equivalent | Level 6: Second stage of tertiary education (leading to an advanced research qualification). |
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on International Standard Classification of Education, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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