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The educational system of Myanmar (also known as Burma) is operated by the government Ministry of Education.Universities and professional institutes from upper Burma and lower Burma are run by two separate entities, the Departments of Higher Education (Lower Burma and Upper Burma), whose office headquarters are in Yangon and Mandalay respectively.
The Myanmar Education Committee was established in 1991 and was renamed the National Education Committee in 2011 The committee remains responsible for up-keeping cultural, social, and traditional values within the education system, while respecting the economic and political visions of the country.
The following is a comprehensive list of universities in Myanmar, categorised by state and region. [1] [2] Nearly all major and national universities in Myanmar are in Yangon Region and Mandalay Region. The Burmese higher education system is entirely state-run, and its universities and colleges are organised along their fields of studies.
The Ministry of Education aims to nurture future oriented advanced science and technology professionals, support national economic development and promote research. [3] In order to rectify and strengthen its objectives, Ministry of Education expanded into new Ministry of Science and Technology in 1996.
High schools in Myanmar (Burmese: အစိုးရအထက်တန်းကျောင်း) are operated by the Department of Basic Education under the Ministry of Education in Myanmar. The present education system has not changed since the re-opening of the schools in 1989, under the SLORC. After the collapse of socialist regime, the ...
This is a list of all Basic Education High Schools, the predominant type of Secondary education in Myanmar. Arrawady Region. BEHS 1, Labutta; BEHS 2, Labutta;
Department of Higher Education (DHE) was created for administration and coordination of higher education institutions under the Ministry of Education (Myanmar). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In 2020, there were 134 universities and colleges under this department.
On December 12, the Ministry of Education formed a teacher union consisting of two teachers from each department of Yangon University of Foreign Languages. Myanmar Teachers Federation promptly rejected the ministry's attempt to form a union stating that it violated the internationally accepted principles of freedom of association. [27]