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Showing posts from September, 2021

Finland's education system

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  Finland's education system     The education system in Finland consists of daycare programmes (for babies and toddlers), a one-year "pre-school" (age six), a 11-year compulsory basic comprehensive school (age seven to age eighteen), Nowadays secondary general academic and vocational education, higher education and adult education are compulsory During their nine years of common basic education, students are not selected, tracked, or streamed. There is also inclusive special education within the classroom and instructional efforts to minimize low achievement. After basic education, students must choose to continue with secondary education in either an academic track (lukio) or a vocational track (ammattioppilaitos), both of which usually take three years and give a qualification to continue to tertiary education. Tertiary education is divided into university and polytechnic (ammattikorkeakoulu, also known as "university of applied sciences") systems. Universit...

Ireland's education system

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Ireland's education system   The levels of Ireland's education are primary , secondary and higher  IGrowth in the economy   since the 1960s has driven much of the change in the education system. For universities there are student service fees (up to €3,000 in 2015), which students are required to pay on registration, to cover examinations, insurance and registration costs. Students must go to school from ages 6 to 16 or until they have completed three years of second-level of education. Under the constitution of Ireland  parents are not obliged "in violation of their conscience and lawful preference to send their children to schools established by the State, or to any particular type of school designated by the State." However, the parental right to homeschool his/her child has met legal contests over minimum standards in the absence of constitutional provision for State-defined educational standards. In 1973, the Irish language  requirement for a second level...

NEW ZEALAND EDUCATION SYSTEM

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  EDUCATION IN NEW ZEALAND   The education system in  New Zealand is a three-tier model which includes primary and intermediate schools, followed by secondary schools (high schools) and tertiary education at universities and polytechnics. aim for my future isd to become creative director or CEO of a company . The academic year in New Zealand varies between institutions, but generally runs from early February until mid-December for primary schools, late January to late November or early December for secondary schools and polytechnics, and from late February until mid-November for universities. All New Zealand citizens, and those entitled to reside in New Zealand indefinitely, are entitled to free primary and secondary schooling from their 5th birthday until the end of the calendar year following their 19th birthday.Education is compulsory between a student's 6th and 16th birthdays;however most students start primary school on (or shortly after) their 5th birthday, and the...