O National Institute of Educational Studies and Research Anísio Teixeira (Inep) made available on the internet detailed data on the performance of schools in the National High School Examination (Enem) from 2005 to 2015. According to Inep, this is the first time that the Enem microdata per School has been released.
The total average and the separate averages of each of the objective tests of the Enem and the writing test were made available, in addition to school data, such as socioeconomic level, performance rate, size of establishment and adequacy of teacher training.
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The microdata are in “.csv” format and need SAS and SPSS programs to be read. Inep made available a database dictionary and technical notes for each Enem edition by School. The dictionary is available in “.ods” format and the notes in “.doc” format, in compliance with the open data policy.
Enem was first publicized by School in 2005, eight years after the exam was created. According to Inep, the averages were calculated to help teachers, directors and other educational managers in identifying deficiencies and good practices.
The last edition of Enem by School was in 2015. In September 2017, Inep announced its closure. The justification was that the data were being used by schools and the media to indicate quality of teaching, something they were not able to measure. The information is from Agência Brasil.