Dath Ilan is a parallel Earth on which human civilization has its act together, in ways that actual-Earth does not. Like actual-Earth, citizens of Dath Ilan sometimes take standardized tests, both to figure out what sort of jobs they'd be suited for, to make sure that its educational institutions are functioning, and to give people guidance about what they might want to study. Unlike Earth's, Dath Ilan's tests have had a lot of thought put into the choice of topics: rather a lot more economics, rather a lot less trigonometry and literature. Topics are selected based on cost/benefit; something that takes a long time to learn would need to be a lot more useful, or have major positive externalities to more people knowing it.
I want to create a test, that will tell people what topics they ought to learn, and enable people to make their knowledgeability legible.
What topics belong on it?
There's more that's going into a good test. A good test is not about whether a person learned a topic but about whether the person is likely perform well in whatever they want to do.
Dath Ilan is going to have many different tests for different jobs. There will be regular evaluations of how the test predicts performance in the job and the test will be adapted to optimize for predicting performance.
Instead of picking topic by putting in "a lot of thought" the main way will be picking topics empirically by looking at whether the knowledge predicts performance.
The only thing that does need thought is thinking about how to prevent goodharting.
That completely depends on the job. It doesn't make sense to have a uniform test that everyone is taking given that as a society you want diversity in skills in your population.
That's fine, but choosing the question set to give the self-motivated children on which you provide the instant computer driven feedback is the same type of question; what is it that we want the child interested in X to learn?
Concretely, my 8 year old son likes math. He's fine with multiplication and division, but enjoys thinking about math. If I want him to be successful applying math later in life, should I start him on knot theory, pre-algebra equation solving, adding and subtracting unlike fractions, or coding in python? I see real advantages to ... (read more)