Improving the Methodological Training of Future Specialists Based on The TIMSS International Assessment Framework
Annotatsiya
The growing role of international large-scale assessments has shifted attention from narrow content coverage toward demonstrable competencies, transferable reasoning, and instructional quality grounded in evidence. This article examines how the TIMSS (Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study) assessment framework can be used as a methodological “spine” for improving the methodological training of future specialists—particularly future teachers and education-oriented professionals working with mathematics and science learning. Relying on analysis of the TIMSS assessment frameworks and context questionnaire framework, the study proposes a structured model of methodological preparation aligned with TIMSS content domains and cognitive domains (knowing, applying, reasoning), and with the logic of item design, performance expectations, and learning context indicators. A design-based implementation was conceptualized for teacher education programs through framework mapping, task engineering, microteaching cycles, and feedback based on cognitive demand and evidence of student thinking. The results section synthesizes expected program-level outcomes and evaluation indicators, including changes in instructional planning quality, cognitive demand distribution in teacher-designed tasks, assessment literacy, and data-informed reflection. Discussion highlights opportunities and constraints: risks of “teaching to the test,” alignment issues with national curricula, and the need to treat TIMSS as a reference framework for balanced competence development rather than as a bank of isolated items. The article concludes that integrating TIMSS frameworks into methodological training strengthens coherence between curriculum, instruction, and assessment; improves teachers’ capacity to design cognitively rich tasks; and supports evidence-based professional growth.
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