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Læreplan

Læreplan is the official framework that defines what students should learn in a school system. In Norway, the term refers to the national curriculum that sets goals, content, assessment, and organization for primary and secondary education. Læreplanen guides what is taught, how it is evaluated, and how teaching should be structured across schools.

The Norwegian curriculum is organized into two main parts: the Overordnet del, or the overarching part, and

A notable feature of recent revisions is the inclusion of kjerneelementer in each subject, which summarize

the
Fagspesifikke
læreplaner
for
each
subject.
The
Overordnet
del
outlines
shared
aims,
values,
and
fundamental
skills,
such
as
democracy,
human
rights,
sustainable
development,
and
grunnleggende
ferdigheter
(basic
skills)
in
reading,
writing,
oral
expression,
numeracy,
and
digital
competence.
The
fagspesifikke
læreplaner
specify
the
knowledge
and
skills
that
students
should
master
within
individual
subjects
like
Norwegian,
mathematics,
science,
and
foreign
languages.
essential
competencies
students
should
demonstrate
by
certain
grades.
The
curriculum
is
developed
and
published
by
the
Norwegian
Directorate
for
Education
and
Training
and
is
legally
binding
for
public
schools.
Schools
may
implement
local
or
school-specific
adaptations
that
align
with
the
national
goals,
and
assessment
practices
are
designed
to
reflect
the
aims
of
the
læreplan.
The
term
encompasses
both
longstanding
national
guidelines
and
ongoing
updates,
such
as
major
reforms
undertaken
to
modernize
content
and
pedagogy.