
Since gaining independence in 1991, Uzbekistan has gradually repositioned English language education from a limited school subject to a strategic instrument for international integration, human capital development, and employability. This article reviews the post-independence development of English language education through a policy-and-practice lens and proposes a structured interpretation of reforms as an evolving “access–quality–accountability” agenda. Using document analysis of major legal and policy acts and a thematic synthesis of secondary educational reports, the study maps four reform phases: foundational restructuring (1991–1997), institutional consolidation (late 1990s–2011), system-wide acceleration (2012–2017), and quality and governance expansion (2018–present). Particular attention is given to the 2012 presidential resolution that introduced earlier and more continuous foreign-language instruction in general education (including English from Grade 1) and expanded infrastructure and teacher preparation; subsequent measures strengthened curricular standards, assessment capacity, and professional incentives. The results show that Uzbekistan’s reforms combined three mutually reinforcing levers: (1) early-start and continuity across the education ladder, (2) infrastructural and digital support, and (3) institutional mechanisms for quality monitoring and certification. However, persistent challenges remain, including uneven teacher proficiency, rural–urban disparities, exam-oriented pedagogy, and limited integration of English-for-Specific-Purposes (ESP) into vocational tracks. The discussion offers practical recommendations for aligning policy goals with classroom methods, particularly in professional education institutions, emphasizing competency-based outcomes, teacher professional development, and risk-sensitive assessment practices.
