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Tampere Vocational College Tredu (Finnish: Tampereen seudun ammattiopisto Tredu) is a vocational college based in Tampere, Finland. [1] It is part of the Tampere Upper Secondary Education and offers study vocational programmes in Finnish secondary education. In 2013, Pirkanmaa Educational Consortium and Tampere College united to become Tampere ...
Haaga-Helia offers Bachelor and Master level courses in business, information technology, sport and leisure education, hospitality, tourism and event management, journalism, and vocational teacher education. It has about 11,000 students, of whom 1,000 are international students, and about 730 employees, of whom over 400 are full-time teachers.
The Police University College (Finnish: Poliisiammattikorkeakoulu (Polamk), Swedish: Polisyrkeshögskolan) is a university of applied sciences in Tampere, Finland providing police academy training and research under the Ministry of the Interior for the Police of Finland and other Finnish law enforcement units.
Information on education in Finland, OECD - Contains indicators and information about Finland and how it compares to other OECD and non-OECD countries; Diagram of Finnish education system, OECD - Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages. Also in country language; Vocational Education in Finland, UNESCO-UNEVOC
Salpaus provides vocational upper-secondary and adult education and training in the fields defined by the Ministry of Education: Culture; Humanities and education; Natural resources and the environment; Natural sciences; Social science, business and administration; Social services, health and sport; Technology, communication and transport
The first Finnish citizen to obtain a driving licence was author and businessman Yrjö Weilin [] (1875–1930), who obtained his driver's licence in 1907. [1] The first driving schools in the country were established in the 1910s, and in 1922 the Eduskunta approved several regulations on automobile traffic which also standardised on Finnish driver licences for the first time.
Alandica Shipping Academy's courses are certified by both Finnish Traficom and Swedish Transport Agency. The courses also meet the international criteria of the STCW convention. [4] ASA has since 1999 offered STCW courses. [5] Survival crafts and rescue boats (basic and advanced) STCW A-VI 2.1; Basic Safety Training STCW A-VI/1
There are 24 different universities of applied sciences across the country. All polytechnics in Finland operate under the jurisdiction of the Finnish Ministry of Education except the Högskolan på Åland and Police College, which are administered by the Government of Åland and Ministry of Interior respectively.