Education in Argentina
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Education in Argentina has a convoluted history. There was no effective educational plan until President Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (1868–1874) placed emphasis on bringing Argentina up to date with practices in developed countries. Sarmiento encouraged the immigration and settling of European educators and built schools and public libraries throughout the country, in a programme that finally doubled the enrollment of students during his term. In Argentina, Teacher's Day (on September 11) commemorates his death.
The first law mandating universal, compulsory, free and secular education (Law 1420 of Common Education) was sanctioned in 1884 during the rule of Julio Argentino Roca. The non-religious character of this system harmed the relations between the Argentine State and the Catholic Church, leading to resistance from the local clergy and a heated conflict with the Holy See (through the Papal Nuncio).
Religious education was re-established in 1943, during the brief dictatorship of Pedro Pablo Ramírez. During the rule of Juan Domingo Perón (1945–1955), public education was used to further the president and his wife's personality cult (pictures of Perón and Evita were prominently displayed in them, pieces of their writings were used as reading materials, etc.). Perón first re-affirmed the religious education decree of 1943, and then, for political reasons, repealed it in 1954.
After the Revolución Libertadora (the military coup d'état of 1955) deposed Perón, all propaganda books were removed, and the very mention or depiction of Perón and Evita was forbidden. The ensuing weak constitutional governments and short-lived military regimes each employed censorship and propaganda in education after their own ideological biases.
Public education, like the rest of Argentine culture, greatly suffered the economic crisis of 2001-2002. While the economy has steadily recovered since 2002, most public educational institutions (schools and universities) are chronically underfunded, and often suffer disruptions due to teacher strikes. However, according to the UNESCO, Argentina has the best level of education of Latin America, and one of the best of the world.
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[edit] Achievements
In spite of its many problems, Argentina's higher education managed to reach worldwide levels of excellence in the sixties. The country can claim three Nobel Prize winners in the sciences: Luis Federico Leloir, Bernardo Houssay and César Milstein.
[edit] Characteristics
Education in Argentina is divided in three phases. The first comprises grades first to ninth, and is called Educación General Básica or EGB (Spanish, "Basic General Education"). EGB is divided in three stages, called ciclos ("cycles"):
- EGB I: 1st, 2nd and 3rd school years
- EGB II: 4th, 5th and 6th school years
- EGB III: 7th, 8th and 9th school years
Once the EGB is completed, the student finishes the mandatory schooling period and can choose to start secondary education, called Polimodal, which usually last two to three more years. EGB is mandatory to all students, although desertion is high in some parts of the country and laws intended to prevent this are rarely enforced.
The third stage is college education.
[edit] Primary education
Primary education comprises the first two EGB cycles (grades 1–6). Because of the system that was in place until 1995 (7 years of primary school plus 5 or 6 of secondary school), primary schools used to offer grades 1–7, although most are already converted to accept 8th and 9th, others chose to eliminate 7th grade altogether, forcing the students to complete the 3rd cycle in another institution.
[edit] Secondary education
Secondary education in Argentina is called Polimodal ("polymodal", that is, having multiple modes), since it allows the student to choose his/her orientation. Polimodal is not obligatory but its completion is a requirement to enter colleges across the nation. Polimodal is usually 3 years of schooling, although some schools have a fourth year.
Conversely to what happened on primary schools, most secondary schools in Argentina contained grades 8th and 9th, plus Polimodal (old secondary) but now are converting to accept also 7th grade students, thus allowing them to keep their same classmates for the whole EGB III cycle.
[edit] College education
There are plenty of public, free universities in Argentina. Private universities are also abundant, but sometimes they are reserved only to the most affluent students. See University reform in Argentina and List of Argentine universities.
[edit] External links
- Learning in Argentina
- Ministry of Culture: Argentine Education
- Statistics and more statistics about education in Argentina
- Ministerio de Educación, Ciencia y Tecnologia