Kazakhstan’s decision to reform and expand assessment beyond the Unified National Testing (UNT) system marks a significant shift in how the country identifies talent and prepares young people for a rapidly changing world. Recently reported by Times Higher Education, the reform recognizes a growing reality: traditional, memory-based exams are no longer enough in an era shaped by artificial intelligence, automation and constant technological change.
For more than two decades, the UNT has provided a standardized and transparent route into higher education. It brought clarity and fairness at scale, and for that, it deserves credit. Yet its core limitation has become increasingly clear. By focusing largely on the reproduction of subject knowledge, it leaves little room for students to demonstrate analytical thinking, problem-solving ability, or the capacity to work across disciplines. In practice, it rewards exam technique and memorization over deeper understanding.
This matters because the skills now demanded of graduates are changing fast. Across the global labor market, employers are placing greater value on adaptability, technical literacy, and the ability to apply knowledge in real-world settings. International organizations have been clear on this point.
The OECD’s Future of Education and Skills 2030 framework argues that education systems must develop cross-cutting competencies such as critical thinking, creativity, collaboration, and self-direction. The World Economic Forum has made a similar case, urging a move away from static, theoretical learning towards transferable, future-facing skills. As artificial intelligence becomes embedded across industries, assessment models need to keep pace. Evaluating what a student can recall under exam conditions is no longer a reliable proxy for how they will perform in complex, technology-rich environments.
Research increasingly shows that standardized tests capture only part of an applicant’s potential, a point widely discussed in international higher education policy debates and assessments such as the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment. They can also reinforce socio-economic inequalities, as access to preparation resources often matters as much as ability. The result is a system that measures how well students survive exams, rather than how well they think.
Kazakhstan’s new modular examination model is designed to respond directly to these challenges. Instead of testing knowledge in isolation, it aims to assess functional literacy, logic, analytical reasoning and critical thinking alongside mastery of the school curriculum. This more practice-oriented approach offers a fuller picture of a student’s readiness for higher education and, ultimately, for professional life.
I see this shift every day in my work within Kazakhstan’s education ecosystem. The new test does not stand alone; it forms part of a wider effort to build coherence across schools, universities, policymakers and philanthropic organizations. Real, lasting change depends on alignment around shared goals, rather than on pilots or isolated initiatives.
At the NNEF Public Foundation, established by the renowned educator Dinara Kulibayeva, this principle has guided our work for nearly three decades. Through a network of affiliated schools, universities and developmental programs – including Astana IT University, which I am proud to lead – we have helped young people across Kazakhstan learn, grow and realize their potential.
Thousands of graduates now hold leadership roles in industry, research and public service, both at home and abroad. Many of them succeeded because someone recognized strengths that traditional examinations could not fully capture.
From my professional experience, students who thrive in today’s environment are those with cognitive flexibility and mature critical thinking. They can break down complex problems, understand how different elements interact, and consider multiple possible outcomes. Assessment systems should be designed to identify exactly these qualities, rather than relying solely on recall.
The modular structure of the new examination reflects this need. By moving beyond simple knowledge testing, it creates space to identify intellectual adaptability, systemic thinking, and readiness to operate in interdisciplinary, high-tech contexts. In doing so, it aligns Kazakhstan more closely with international assessment practices while remaining grounded in national priorities.
Greater transparency and a broader definition of merit should also strengthen trust in the admissions process. When selection criteria are clearer and more closely linked to real capability, confidence in fairness increases. Over time, stronger student intake feeds directly into academic performance and institutional reputation, reinforcing the quality of the higher education system as a whole.
Ultimately, this reform is about more than modernizing exams. It is about building a pipeline of talent equipped for analytical work, research, and lifelong learning. If implemented consistently and supported across the education system, the new approach has the potential to improve academic outcomes, enhance research capacity, and strengthen the international standing of Kazakhstani universities.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the publication, its affiliates, or any other organizations mentioned.
