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In the first sixteen years of communist governance, elementary school enrollment tripled, secondary school enrollment increased by a factor of 8.5, and college enrollment more than quadrupled. [21] Since the end of the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), the education system in China has been geared towards economic modernization.
Primary and secondary education is free only for public/state schools. Various private primary and secondary schools (including international schools) that charge fees are available in first- and second-tier cities with developed economies); in 2015, the proportion of private schools reached 10%, and the education market exceeded 315 million yuan.
Primary school availability and middle school education in rural China. Labour Economics, 48, 24–40. doi: 10.1016/j.labeco.2014.03.008 Lin, J. (1999). Social Transformation and Private Education in China. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group. Wang, H. (2005). The motivation of public and private school teachers in China (Master's thesis ...
In school year 2009-2010, Vietnam had 15,172 primary schools and 611 combined primary and lower secondary schools. The total enrollment was 7.02 million pupils, of whom 46% were girls. [ 10 ]
In the first sixteen years of the PRC, elementary school enrollment tripled, secondary school enrollment increased by a factor of 8.5, and college enrollment more than quadrupled. [13] By 1979, participation by Chinese youth in primary school was nearly universal. [14] The Chinese Academy of Sciences was set up in 1949.
The setting of primary schools should be beneficial for school-age children and teenagers to enter the school nearby.” “Nearby enrollment” aims to regulate the government’s implementation of compulsory education. As for children, “nearby enrollment” is a kind of right granted to them by law. [5]
As of 2003 Beijing had 1,430 kindergartens, 1,652 primary schools, 730 secondary schools - including 263 combined lower and upper secondary (junior and senior high), 401 lower secondary, and 66 upper secondary - , 97 vocational secondary schools, 62 secondary specialty schools, and 74 institutions of higher education.
In 2009, there were 974 preschool educational institutions in Shenzhen, a city in Guangdong, China: 346 elementary schools with 589,500 students, 285 primary and secondary schools with 316,000 students, and 20 secondary vocational schools with 47,000 students. There were also nine full-time higher education institutions based in the city, one ...