Haïti – Baccalauréat : Inscriptions des élèves HPI (surdoués)

In a move aimed at building a more inclusive, responsive national education system that accommodates the unique needs of all learners, Haiti’s Minister of National Education Vijonet Déméro has formally announced new, structured procedures for early baccalauréat registration for high-potential intellectually gifted (HPI) students, ahead of the 2026-2027 academic year’s first permanent baccalauréat session.

Gifted students, who exhibit far faster learning paces than their peer group, often require targeted support to reach their full potential—most commonly through grade acceleration that allows them to advance through the education system at a rate matching their abilities. Until now, however, formal pathways to clear these accelerated tracks for official national examination eligibility have been inconsistent. Déméro’s new circular, labeled C-11 / 1137, formalizes eligibility requirements and institutional roles to regularize these exceptional students’ academic journeys and guarantee them legitimate access to the baccalauréat, Haiti’s key secondary school completion and university entrance examination.

To qualify for early examination access as a gifted candidate, student’s original schools must submit a complete, verified application package that meets four core requirements. First, applications must include a psycho-pedagogical evaluation report completed by a licensed school psychologist, which has been validated by the ministry’s own School and Professional Orientation Unit (UNOSP). This report must confirm both the student’s intellectual giftedness and sufficient socio-emotional maturity to handle advanced academic work and early examination. Second, candidates must provide graded academic transcripts demonstrating sustained academic excellence and an exceptional overall grade average. Third, applications require a formally justified recommendation letter from the director of the student’s original school, which explains and validates any grade skips the student has already completed. Finally, written, signed consent from the student’s parents, legal guardian or social worker is required to move forward with the application.

The circular also outlines clear, segmented responsibilities for the four national education bodies involved in the process to ensure accountability and transparency. Departmental Education Directorates (DDE) are tasked with receiving, reviewing, and validating individual student applications. After confirming that grade acceleration procedures are compliant with national rules, DDEs will send a certified additional candidate list to either the Directorate of Fundamental Education (DEF) or the Directorate of Secondary Education (DES), depending on the student’s track. The DEF and DES, in turn, are responsible for centralizing all incoming requests, issuing final rulings on the equivalence of accelerated academic pathways, and issuing a formal technical compliance statement for eligible candidates. Finally, the National Bureau of State Examinations (BUNEXE), which administers the baccalauréat, is authorized to bypass standard age and curriculum track restrictions in the national online registration system once it receives a compliance notice validated by the Directorate General, allowing the bureau to generate official examination access cards for these gifted candidates.

All heads of the involved institutions are required to enforce the new rules strictly and transparently, with the policy taking effect immediately upon publication of the circular. The Ministry of National Education emphasized that it relies on the proactive, diligent collaboration of all actors across Haiti’s education ecosystem to implement the new framework effectively. The policy is rooted in a core goal: to celebrate academic excellence, and give young Haitian gifted talents the structured opportunity to fully develop their skills and advance their education on a timeline that fits their unique abilities.