Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Santos-Febres was born in 1966 to parents who were both schoolteachers. Her mother, Mariana Febres Falu was an Elementary School teacher of Spanish. Her father, Juan Santos Hernandez, was a high school teacher of Puerto Rican History. He was also a baseball player.
First female university student: Betty Pettersson. [137] Japan Compulsory elementary education for both girls and boys. [144] Ottoman Empire The first government primary school is opened for both genders. The Women's Teacher's Training School opens in Istanbul. [145] [146] Russia Establishment of the Guerrier Courses. [147] Spain
The number of female university students in Spain in 1900 was only 9 nationwide, a rate of only one female student per every 15,000 male students in Spain. [11] [26] This had increased by 1919, this number had increased to 439, though they represented only 2% of the total university student population.
Ángela Ruiz Robles (March 28, 1895 in Villamanín, León – October 27, 1975 in Ferrol, A Coruña) was a Spanish teacher, writer, pioneer and inventor of the mechanical precursor to the electronic book, invented 20 years prior to Michael Hart’s Project Gutenberg, commonly referred to as the true inventor of the e-book, and over half a century before present-day e-books.
For example, in Spanish, the masculine gender generally precedes the feminine, and the default form of address for a group of students is the masculine plural los estudiantes, regardless of the gender composition of the group. On the other hand, the feminine plural las estudiantes refers to a group consisting only of female students. [2]
A mathematics class organized by Institución Libre de Enseñanza in 1903 with a female teacher. The Institución Libre de Enseñza (ILE) was founded by persecuted Spanish intellectuals, and catered to freethinkers in educational facilities removed from government control.
Spanish Language and Literature, as well as the co-official language, where applicable ... "Female teachers and the rise of primary education in Italy and Spain, 1861 ...
The Spanish government also established a school for midwives in 1879, and a Normal School for female teachers in 1892, the Escuela Normal Superior de Maestras. [37] By the 1890s, free public secondary schools were opening outside of Manila, including 10 normal schools for women.