Changes Toward the SEA Framework 2025 – Simplified
Understanding the key differences in the 2025-2028 framework compared to previous versions
What’s Changing in the SEA Framework?
The 2025-2028 SEA Framework introduces significant updates that shift focus toward critical thinking, real-world application, and international alignment. These changes represent a modernization of assessment practices to better prepare students for future challenges.
Main Differences from the Previous SEA Framework
Shift Toward “Thinking Processes”
The 2025–2028 framework introduces three explicit types of thinking processes for both English Language Arts and Mathematics: Knowing, Applying, and Reasoning. These processes replace the older model that focused mainly on “knowledge and application.”
This means the new SEA tests students not only on recall but also on critical thinking, problem solving, and reasoning across real-life contexts.
Revised Paper Weighting
| Paper | Weight (New 2025–2028) | Earlier SEA (Pre-2024) |
|---|---|---|
| Mathematics | 100% | 100% |
| ELA | 60% | 50% |
| ELA Writing | 40% | 50% |
The new weighting increases the value of ELA Reading/Grammar relative to Writing, reflecting a greater focus on comprehension and language in context.
New Paper Structure and Timing
The total administration time remains about 4 hours 30 minutes, but the breakdown of working time and paper order is now standardized:
- ELA Writing – 50 minutes
- Mathematics – 75 minutes
- ELA – 75 minutes
This aligns with international standards (TIMSS and PIRLS references) for test length and cognitive load.
Explicit Link to the 2013 Curriculum
While older SEA frameworks were derived from curriculum guides implicitly, the 2025–2028 version explicitly states:
“The Assessment is based on the English Language Arts and Mathematics outcomes in the Curriculum Guides (2013).”
This ties each test item directly to specific Standard 3–5 curriculum objectives, ensuring continuity with National Tests and better curriculum alignment.
Implementation Timeline
2024
Preparation and teacher training for new framework implementation
2025
First administration of new SEA framework
2026-2028
Full implementation with ongoing evaluation and adjustments
Summary of What’s New
| Area | What Changed | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Thinking Framework | Added Knowing, Applying, Reasoning | Moves beyond recall to reasoning |
| Math Structure | Clear strands with mark distribution | Balanced skills across Number, Geometry, Measurement, Statistics |
| ELA Structure | Text-type comprehension and contextual grammar | Reflects modern literacy standards |
| Weighting | ELA 60%, Writing 40% | Shifts emphasis toward comprehension |
| Real-Life Application | Increased contextual and multi-step problems | Encourages problem solving |
| International Benchmarks | TIMSS & PIRLS references | Ensures comparability to global standards |
SEA Framework Comparison (Old vs New)
| Category | Old SEA (2019–2023) | New SEA (2025–2028) |
|---|---|---|
| Curriculum Base | Based loosely on Primary Curriculum Guides | Explicitly based on 2013 Curriculum Guides (Std 3–5) |
| Subjects | ELA Writing, Mathematics, ELA | Same three papers |
| Paper Weighting | Math 100 : ELA 50 : Writing 50 | Math 100 : ELA 60 : Writing 40 |
| Time Per Paper | Varied slightly by year | ELA Writing 50 min • Math 75 min • ELA 75 min |
| Math Strands | Number, Geometry, Measurement, Data | Number, Geometry, Measurement, Statistics |
| Math Focus | Knowledge + Application | Knowing • Applying • Reasoning (new thinking processes) |
| ELA Reading Types | Mostly prose passages | Non-fiction • Fiction • Poetry • Graphic text |
| ELA Question Levels | Literal focus | Literal • Inferential • Evaluation/Appreciation |
| Grammar & Spelling | Tested with isolated sentences | Tested in context within short texts |
| Question Style | Mostly recall and computation | Contextual, multi-step, real-life problems |
| International Reference | Local standards only | Aligned to TIMSS & PIRLS (global benchmarks) |
| Overall Goal | Content mastery | Higher-order thinking & reasoning |
Key Benefits of the New Framework
Enhanced Critical Thinking
Students develop reasoning skills beyond simple recall, preparing them for complex real-world challenges.
Global Competitiveness
Alignment with TIMSS and PIRLS ensures students meet international educational standards.
Balanced Assessment
More comprehensive evaluation across different thinking processes and subject areas.
Practical Application
Contextual problems help students connect learning to real-life situations.
