Secondary school graduates will not take their final exam, known as “maturita” in Slovak, this year. The decision was adopted due to the current developments with the Covid-19 pandemic. The final exam should reflect their four-year work, the Education Ministry suggested.
Secondary school graduates will not take their final exam, known as “maturita” in Slovak, this year.
After the Education Ministry cancelled the external part of the exam earlier this year, it now decided on scrapping the
internal part as well.
The decision was adopted due to the current developments with the Covid-19 pandemic.
“Given the bad pandemic situation, several schools in Slovakia have been closed for a long time,” Education Minister
Branislav Gröhling (SaS) said. “This complicates the situation of secondary school graduates and their preparation for the
exams.”How it will work
The ministry officially cancelled the written part of the internal exam. As for the oral part, the grade that will appear on
their final school report will be calculated as an average of the school year’s end grade, from all previous years and the half
year’s grade, from the last two years in a respective subject or a group of subjects.
In the case of eight-year grammar schools, the final grades from the final four years and the grades from the half year of the
last two years will be taken into account.
“The maturita grade will reflect the students’ work and their continual results during their entire studies at secondary
school,” Gröhling added.
By May 3 secondary school principals should determine the group of related subjects that will be included in the final
evaluation. The schools should complete the classification of the final school report by May 10, and students are expected to
receive their maturita grades from the selected subjects by May 19.
If students want to improve their grade, they will be able to ask for a traditional oral exam, the ministry said. These exams
should take place from May 31.
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