Nazarbayev Intellectual Schools

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The Nazarbayev Intellectual Schools (NIS) is a network of schools for exceptional students of age 5 to 18 throughout Kazakhstan.[1] The schools are named after Nursultan Nazarbayev, former president of Kazakhstan, who has promoted the idea as a means of developing the intellectual life of the country.[2] Previously, each school focused primarily on a specific set of subjects: either physical sciences and mathematics, or chemical and biological sciences, as well as foreign languages.[2] Although this division is still represented in the names of schools, most schools share the same curriculum based on Cambridge O Level and A Level, except for NIS IB in Nur-Sultan. Instruction is trilingual, in Kazakh, Russian and English,[1] shifting to exclusively English by the junior year.[2]

Partnerships[]

The program was initially set up with the assistance of faculty members from the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education.[3] Subsequently, Nazarbayev Intellectual Schools partnered with the University of Cambridge Faculty of Education on curriculum development; Cambridge Assessment on design of the assessment system; CiTO, Netherlands on the testing and measurement; and Johns Hopkins University on working with talented youth.

Schools[]

Nazarbayev Intellectual school in Shymkent

Currently there are 20 NIS or associated schools located in the following localities:

  • Nur-Sultan: Two schools (NIS Astana PhM, NIS Astana) and International Baccalaureate.
  • Semey: One school (NIS Semey PhM)
  • Kokshetau: One school (NIS Kokshetau PhM)
  • Taldykorgan: One school (NIS Taldykorgan PhM)
  • Uralsk: One school (NIS Uralsk PhM)
  • Oskemen: One school (NIS Oskemen ChB)
  • Aktobe: One school (NIS Aktobe PhM)
  • Karaganda: One school (NIS Karaganda ChB)
  • Shymkent: Two schools (NIS Shymkent PhM and NIS Shymkent ChB)
  • Taraz: One school (NIS Taraz PhM)
  • Kyzylorda: One school (NIS Kyzylorda ChB)
  • Pavlodar: One school (NIS Pavlodar ChB)
  • Atyrau: One school (NIS Atyrau ChB)
  • Almaty: Two schools (NIS Almaty PhM and NIS Almaty ChB)
  • Kostanay: One school (NIS Kostenai PhM)
  • Petropavlovsk: One school (NIS Petropavlovsk ChB)
  • Aktau: One school (NIS Aktau ChB)

Currently NIS operates twenty intellectual schools throughout the country, in addition to an international school and specialist mathematics school in Nur-Sultan.[1]

Conferences[]

The NIS International Conference is one of the largest educational conferences in Central Asia, and the largest focusing exclusively on preschool, primary and secondary education, typically attracting around 1000 participants. Previous keynote speakers have included Colleen McLaughlin, Patrick Griffin, Fred Genesee, William Schmidt, Richard Phelps, Miho Taguma, David Bridges, and John Elliott.

Criticism[]

The Nazarbayev network has been criticized for its concentration on only the best and brightest at the expense of the bulk of the rest of the student population.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "Nazarbayev Intellectual Schools" (PDF). Randstad: Teach Anywhere. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 September 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d Bartlett, Paul (22 February 2012). "Kazakhstan: Elite Schools May Limit Opportunities". EurasiaNet. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  3. ^ Weinberg, Rachel (10 February 2011). "GSE works to improve Kazakh schools". The Daily Pennsylvanian. Retrieved 3 July 2013.

External links[]

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