Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is the list of schools providing secondary education in Zagreb, Croatia. [1]Archdiocesan Classical Gymnasium. Agricultural School Zagreb; Archdiocesan Classical Gymnasium ...
Srednja škola Metković - Metković Srednja poljoprivredna i tehnička škola - Opuzen Srednja škola Blato - Korčula Srednja škola fra Andrije Kačića Miošića - Ploče Turistička i ugostiteljska škola - Dubrovnik Srednja škola Petra Šegedina - Korčula Srednjaškola - Vela Luka Umjetnička škola Luke Sorkočevića - Dubrovnik
Primary and secondary education is essentially free because it is mostly sponsored by the Ministry of Education of the government of Croatia.Higher education is also mostly free because the government funds all public universities and allows them to set quotas for free enrollment, based on students' prior results (usually high school grades and their scores on a set of exams at enrollment).
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
School of Electrical Engineering Zagreb (Croatian: Elektrotehnička škola Zagreb) is a IT and Engineering school. It was founded in 1959 as Center for educating " Rade Končar " . In 1991 the school changed its name to School of Electrical Engineering which is still its name.
The First Gymnasium (Croatian: Prva Gimnazija), commonly known as I. gymnasium, is a co-educational public secondary school in Zagreb, Croatia. It was the first secular gymnasium to be established in Zagreb, and second throughout Croatia. [1] It was founded in 1854, as a three-year schooling institution for exclusively boys.
Fifteenth Gymnasium (Croatian: XV. gimnazija, Petnaesta gimnazija), previously called, and still better known as MIOC (Matematičko informatički obrazovni centar; Mathematical Informatical Educational Center) is a public high school in Zagreb, Croatia. It specializes in mathematics and computer science.
In 1886, two book printers completed their apprenticeship in the school. Eight years later, in 1894, another group of 19 book printers finished their education there. By 1945, more than 1,500 students had completed their studies at Grafička škola u Zagrebu.