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Education in Poland is compulsory; every child must receive education from when they are 6 years old until they are 18 years old. [1] It is also mandatory for 6-year-old children to receive one year of kindergarten (Polish: przedszkole, literally pre-school) education, before starting primary school (Polish: szkoła podstawowa) at 6 years old.
Poland had a considerable number of day students in its universities, an estimated 57.2 students per 10,000 people in 1964, compared to 14.4 in 1938. This put it at fifth place in the Eastern Bloc (behind the Soviet Union , Bulgaria , Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia ) and in relation to the capitalist world, behind the United States , Canada ...
This category collects all articles about education in Poland. Please use the respective subcategories. Subcategories. This category has the following 20 ...
This is a list of universities in Poland. In total, there are approximately 457 universities and collegiate-level institutions of higher education in Poland , including 131 government-funded and 326 privately owned universities, with almost 2 million enrolled students as of 2010 [update] . [ 1 ]
Higher education in Poland began in the Middle Ages. In 1364, Casimir III established the first Polish university , the Academy of Krakow (now called Jagiellonian University ). [ 1 ] In 1826 the first technical university was established in Warsaw , leading eventually to the establishment of Warsaw University of Technology , the largest ...
This threatened a complete breakdown of education in the Commonwealth. One of the first items on the parliamentary agenda of the Partition Sejm (1773–1775), which acceded to the First Partition of Poland, was the assessment in how to best use the former Jesuit property and declaration of a firm intention to the continuity of the education system.
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The overall number of students of all grades of education in Warsaw is almost 500,000 (29.2% of the city population; 2002). The number of university students is over 255,000. The University of Warsaw ( Uniwersytet Warszawski , 55,000 students, 19 faculties) was established in 1816, when the partitions of Poland separated Warsaw from the oldest ...