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National Assessment Program (NAP)

Writer's picture: Preeti DubeyPreeti Dubey

Updated: Apr 6, 2022

Citizens in an educated, just, and open society must have the knowledge, understanding, skills, and values necessary to establish the foundation for a productive and meaningful life. The achievement of this ambition hinges on high-quality education.



The National Assessment Program (NAP) is a metric used by governments, education authorities, schools, and the general public to assess whether young Australians are attaining critical educational goals.

In today's environment, the majority of students can anticipate to live and work in a variety of locations both in Australia and abroad. It's critical that there are uniform and well-understood measures of student accomplishment utilised across the country, and that the results of these assessments are used to drive future policy creation, resource allocation, curriculum planning, and, if necessary, intervention programmes. The NAP provides valuable data of student accomplishment that is comparable across the country. Schools benefit not only their own kids, but pupils in every state and territory as well, by participating in these exams.


Benefits of the NAP

The NAP has two advantages: it can assist students get better results and it can help the community be more accountable.



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