What does the National High School Exam (enem) tell Brazilian society?


Autoria(s): Travitzki, Rodrigo; Calero, Jorge; Boto, Carlota
Data(s)

10/12/2014

10/12/2014

01/08/2014

Resumo

This article assesses the limitations and potentials of the National High School Exam (ENEM) as an indicator of school effectiveness in Brazil, and considers the effects of introducing contextual variables. A multilevel regression analysis was performed on three levels (individual, school and state) using microdata on 17,359 schools from 2009 and 2010. Contextual factors made it possible to explain 79% of the difference between schools. The raw average and value-added (random effect at the school level) produced contrasting evaluations in 34% of cases; and the average was more stable (r = 0.8) than value-added (r = 0.5) in both years. Various shortcomings in the ENEM as an indicator of school effectiveness were identified. The results show that this league table reveals more about socioeconomic conditions than the schools' own merit, in other words the value-added they are supposedly providing to the students.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/11362/37427

LC/G.2614-P

9

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

CEPAL Review

113

Tipo

Texto