Geografia na maturze – zróżnicowanie merytoryczne i ocena zadań z arkuszy egzaminacyjnych w latach 2005–2011
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Author:
Wójcik, Jan
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 148, Studia Geographica 4 (2013), s. [84]-100
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Subject:
matura z geografiiocena zadań maturalnych
wiedza
umiejętności
zróżnicowanie treści zadań maturalnych
Date: 2013
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Dokument cyfrowy wytworzony, opracowany, opublikowany oraz finansowany w ramach programu "Społeczna Odpowiedzialność Nauki" - modułu "Wsparcie dla bibliotek naukowych" przez Ministerstwo Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego w projekcie nr rej. SONB/SP/465103/2020 pt. "Organizacja kolekcji czasopism naukowych w Repozytorium UP wraz z wykonaniem rekordów analitycznych".Abstract
The paper presents a substantive and methodological assessment of the tasks and the trends
in changes in the scope of knowledge and skills tested during the final examinations (matura)
at Polish high schools in the years 2005–2011.
The examination sheets contained a various number of tasks (27–38). They included
open-ended and closed-ended tasks. With a total of 14 sheets, closed-ended tasks predominated
in 9 sheets, open-ended tasks prevailed in 4 sheets, while the number of open-ended
and closed-ended tasks was equal in one sheet (Table 1). Typically, more tasks were prepared
to verify knowledge than to check skills (Table 2). The number of closed-ended tasks and the
tasks verifying knowledge increased, while the number of open-ended tasks and the tasks
checking skills decreased. These unfavourable trends were observed at the high school final
examinations in the years 2005–2011.
Out of the 14 sheets, tasks related to geography of the world predominated in 9 sheets, while
tasks related to geography of Poland prevailed in 5 sheets (Table 2). At the high school final
examination at the basic level, a greater emphasis was put on the knowledge of geography of
Poland, while at the extended level – on the geography of the world.
At high school final examinations prevailed tasks related to socio-economic geography (42%).
33% of the tasks concerned physical geography, 15% – regional geography, and 10% – cartography
and world time calculation. In individual sheets at the basic level, the tasks related
to socio-economic geography accounted for 29–44% of all tasks, while at the extended level
– 32–56%. In the extended version of high school final examinations, a considerable number
of tasks (25–45%) was associated also with physical geography. Typically, significantly fewer
tasks of this type were prepared for the basic level (9–32%). However 18–30% of the tasks
put there were related to regional geography – considerably more than in the sheets at the
extended level (10–21%). The smallest number of tasks at high school final examinations
concerned cartography and world time calculation (basic level: 10–19%, extended level:
3–17%). The number of points for the tasks in the aforementioned groups was not always
proportional to the number of tasks.
The highest number of tasks and related points at the basic and extended examinations was
associated with the knowledge of facts and the ability to draw conclusions from the texts,
illustrations, maps, and models attached to the tasks (36% of the tasks and points). The second
most numerous group included tasks related to the knowledge of events concerning the
contemporary political, social and economic situation in Poland, and in the world (basic level:
22% of tasks and 23% of points, extended level: 26% of tasks and points). In the extended-
level sheets, there were more tasks concerning explanation of the processes and phenomena
occurring in the geographical environment than in the sheets at the basic level; also more
points were awarded for them (17% and 18%; 15% and 14%). In the basic version of the high
school final examination, twice as many tasks relating to the work with maps were included
than in the extended version (16% and 8%) and twice as many points (16% and 6%) could
be obtained. Tasks related to the astronomical bases of geography and related points at both
levels of requirements constituted 3%/6% and 3%/7% respectively, of the total number of
tasks. The number of tasks verifying the knowledge of concepts and definitions, as well as the
number of points were similar in the sheets at both levels (8%/9% and 7%/7% respectively)
(Table 4).
Some errors and inaccuracies were unfortunately not avoided at the high school final examinations
(Table 16). The highest number of mistakes was observed in the basic level sheet of
the high school final examination of 2005 (in 29% of the tasks). At subsequent examinations,
errors occurred in a few tasks. The model of the sheet developed for the first high school final
examination has not changed significantly for 7 years