Ukraine government confirms math remains mandatory for high school graduation test
Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko says mathematics will stay compulsory in Ukraine’s National Multisubject Test for graduating students, according to local source New Voice Ukraine.
What happened
Local English-language source New Voice Ukraine reports that Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko stated on June 8 that mathematics will remain a required subject on the National Multisubject Test (NMT) for Ukrainian high school graduates.
The announcement confirms that mathematics will not be moved to the list of elective subjects, maintaining its status as a mandatory component for students completing secondary education.
While the report does not detail the reasoning behind the decision, this maintains continuity in national educational assessment standards during a period when Ukraine continues to face broader socioeconomic and security challenges.
Known from the source
- Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko provided the statement on June 8.
- Mathematics remains mandatory on Ukraine's National Multisubject Test for high school graduation.
- The source of this information is New Voice Ukraine, a local English public source.
What remains unclear
The requirement affects exam preparation and curriculum planning nationwide for students aiming to graduate this academic year and beyond.
What remains unclear: Official confirmation from the Ministry of Education or equivalent Ukrainian education authority. Any formal documentation or press release detailing the NMT subject requirements. Verify any recent changes or exceptions to the exam policies after June 8. Confirm the scope and impact for students in different regions, including those affected by conflict.
Evidence note
Outside Brief has treated the source material as confirmed within the supplied source context, while retaining attribution to the original publisher.
Original source: New Voice Ukraine. Open the source.
Outside Brief note: this story keeps the main source visible and separates what is reported from what remains unclear.