Education in the Czech Republic

Education in the Czech Republic includes elementary school, secondary school, and post-secondary school. For students ages two to five, there are preschools that are generally not state-funded until the year before elementary school. After preschool, parents are not charged for tuition, but they must provide textbooks, stationery, and food for their children. A number of private schools exist across the country, but these schools are largely financially inaccessible for most children. There is an ongoing national discussion regarding the introduction of tuition fees for university education.

Elementary school is mandatory for children from ages six to fifteen. After that, some students leave formal education altogether, while other students attend a professional or vocational school. Enrollment in public schools is fairly high[1], though these figures do not document active student engagement. Attendance among Romani children is generally much lower than other Czech children due to their parents not sending them to school or not ability to speak in Czech language.[2]

Czech's education system is governed by the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports and had a budget of €4.6 billion in 2016.

Elementary School

Elementary school (Czech: základní škola) consists of nine grades grouped into two stages.

First Stage

The first stage covers the first five years of formal education. Classes are taught by a single teacher, although there is sometimes a separate foreign language or physical education teacher. The subjects taught are Czech and include one foreign language (usually English), mathematics, computer science, history, geography, science, art, music, physical education, and handcrafts. There is usually a first stage school in every village; in small villages, several grades may be taught in one class.

Second Stage

The next four years of elementary school form the second stage, the last compulsory stage in education. Subjects taught at this stage include Czech, literature, two foreign languages, mathematics, computer science, history, geography, civics, physics, biology, chemistry, music, art, physical education, and handcrafts. Some of these subjects are only mandatory in grades eight and nine.

Students are either taught in the same elementary school as their first stage, at an eight-year academy (Czech: osmileté gymnázium)), or at a six-year academy (Czech: šestileté gymnázium). Continuing at an elementary school is the most popular option today, and six-year academies are quite rare. Some eight-year academies have a specific physical education emphasis, and some six-year academies have their later years almost entirely taught in a foreign language. Grade levels in the second stage are usually called by Latin numbers; year six is prima (the first in Latin), year seven is sekunda, and so on.

Secondary School

Since the 2016/2017 school year, secondary schools that distribute a matura degree upon graduation are required to set an entrance test in mathematics and the Czech language. This test is run by CERMAT, the government agency that also administers the matura. Individual schools can also institute their own separate tests.

Vocational School

Vocational certificates are given after a two- or three-year course and a final exam, though there are different types of qualifications depending on the profession. There are also two-year vocational courses that do not offer a certificate. Some vocational schools offer an academic matura qualification in addition to the vocational certificate allowing progression to university. These schools last four years like any other school offering the matura, and the student must pass both sets of exams to graduate.

Professional school and Lyceum

A professional school lasts four years and awards a matura qualification. There is a large variety of industrial and technical skills covered including technical chemistry, electrical engineering, agriculture, internet technology, or business. A lyceum is a professional high school that teaches a more general curriculum; academic subjects like history and geography are taught more thoroughly than in an ordinary professional school. Types of lyceum include technical, pedagogical, medical, scientific, and military (operated in cooperation with the Ministry of Defense).

Gymnasium

Gymnasium is either a continuation of an eight- and six-year academy or part of a four-year grammar school for elementary school graduates. Four-year grammar schools are either generally oriented or focus on physical education. The generally oriented gymnasium schools can decide on a specialization. The subjects are the same as in elementary schools but are obligatory only in grade ten and eleven (mathematics also in grade twelve, Czech and two foreign languages until grade thirteen). Schools can make these subjects obligatory in the two last years of school, or the students can have more elective subjects than the legally required minimum. Gymnasium graduates have no qualification; the aim of this type of school is a preparation for university studies.

Maturita Exam

Maturita is the name of the universal leaving qualification of four-year secondary schools and is a requirement for university studies and higher professional schools. It is made up of a number of subjects. Every student must take Czech language and world literature, consisting of a reading and grammar exam, a writing exam, and a literature oral exam. The second subject must be either mathematics or a foreign language (English, German, French, Spanish or Russian, including writing, reading, speaking and listening, to B1 level of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages). The exams for these mandatory subjects are standardized and set by CERMAT. The other two or three exams taken by the student at this time are dictated by the school.

Special and Practical Schools

Special schools for developmentally disabled children unable to participate in mainstream elementary education were once common in the Czech Republic. The subjects taught were very limited, meaning that leavers were logistically unable to continue on to all types of secondary education. A student required a reference from an educational psychologist and the agreement of parents to enroll in a special school. However, many children of Romani heritage were made to study at these schools despite lack of disability; due to institutional and social discrimination, Romani students often failed to meet academic standards and were segregated from mainstream public schools[2]. This system was criticized by European Court of Human Rights in 2007.[3] Special schools were replaced by elementary and practical schools, though the problem of the overrepresentation of Romani pupils continues. There are elementary practical schools usually taught in the same institution. These teach the equivalent of the first and second stages and one- to two-year secondary courses after the age of fifteen. The education is mainly practical to teach students to be self-sufficient. Meanwhile, "integrated education" of under-performing or mentally handicapped children in ordinary schools with the support of a special teacher is becoming more common.

Tertiary education

On April 7, 1348, Charles IV founded the first university in Central Europe. The second university in present-day Czech Republic was established in 1576 (see Palacký University, Olomouc) in an effort to counter weigh the influence of Protestants, who controlled the Prague University and who constituted about 90% of country's population. After the Czechoslovak state was established, a number of other universities were founded, such as Masaryk University-- the second largest university in the Czech Republic.

Higher professional schools

Higher professional schools (vyšší odborná škola, VOŠ) offer professional tertiary education and are usually connected with professional high schools. Before their graduation, students must take final exams (absolutorium) and write a final thesis. Graduates are entitled to use the honorific "DiS" (diplomovaný specialista, specialist with diploma) after their name.

Universities

People with MA degree in the most populated Czech cities

Higher education in the Czech Republic consists of public and private universities, as well as state-run police and military training academies. Czech-language study at public universities is unlimited and free for first-time attendants; however after the age of 26, the attendant will not receive student status from social services and the individual's health insurance will not be state-funded. Czech public universities also host international students, who have the choice of free instruction in Czech or paid instruction in English.

For private universities, annual tuition is between 2,000 and 3,000 euro and for BSBA and MBA (not accredited by Ministry of Education) study programs cost between 3,000 and 10,000 euro. The perceived quality of education at public universities is higher than private institutions, as private universities have undergone many scandals in recent years.

For an example of a Czech public university governance, see Governance of Palacký University.

University education takes from 2 to 6 years, depending on the degree of studies:

  • Bachelor's degree programs - lasts usually 3 years, title Bc. (bakalář) or BcA. (bakalář umění) (only artistic fields of study), Maturita level is required. Students must pass final exam (státní zkouška, state exam - despite its name, this exam is not organized by state, but by universities themselves; at some universities required only if the student did not have good notes during his studies) and present their thesis.
  • Master's degree programs - Bachelor's degree required, except of law, pharmacy and 1st stage teaching (5 years programs, maturita required) and medicine (6 years programs, maturita required). They are finished by final exam (státní zkouška, for medicine státní rigorózní zkouška) and thesis presentation. Awarded titles:
    • Mgr. (magistr)
    • MgA. (magistr umění) - for artistic fields of study
    • Ing. (inženýr) - for technical and economical fields of study
    • Ing. arch. (inženýr architekt) - architecture
    • MUDr. (medicinae universalis doctor) - medicine
    • MVDr. (medicinae veterinariae doctor) - veterinal medicine
    • MDDr. (medicinae dentium doctor) - dentist
  • Doctor study programs, Ph.D. title

These titles are granted after a special exam (rigorózní zkouška), which contains a thesis presentation. A master's degree is required to write this exam. This a non-comprehensive list titles given to those with doctorate degrees:

  • PhDr. - philosophiae doctor, for philosophy, literature, languages, pedagogic and similar subjects
  • JUDr. - iuris utriusque doctor, for law, formerly used also for security studies
  • RNDr. - rerum naturalium doctor, for natural sciences
  • ThDr./ThLic. - theologiae doctor / theologiae licentiatus, for theology
  • PharmDr. - pharmaciae doctor, for pharmacy

Formerly, also other titles were used:

  • PhMr. - pharmaciae magister, for pharmacy, replaced by Mgr. title
  • PaedDr. - pedagogiae doctor, for pedagogy, replaced by PhDr. title
  • RTDr. - rerum technicarum doctor, for technical science, it was not replaced by any title
  • RCDr. - rerum commercialum doctor, for economy, it was not replaced by any title
  • RSDr. - rerum socialium doctor, for absolvents of Communistic Party of Czechoslovakia Political University in Prague and Klement Gottwald Military Academy in Bratislava in years 1966-1989
  • MSDr. - medicinae stomatologicae doctor, for dentistry in years 1951-1953, replaced by MUDr. in 1980 and subsequently replaced by MDDr. in 2004
  • CSc. - candidatus scientiarum, "lower scientific degree", for absolvents of postgraduální studia (postgradual studies) in years 1953-1998, replaced by Ph.D.
  • Dr. - doctor, written after the name and separated by a comma, for absolvents of postgraduální studia (postgradual studies) in years 1990-1998, replaced by Ph.D.
  • Th.D. - theologiae doctor, for absolvents of doctoral studies of theology in years 1998-2016, replaced by Ph.D.
  • DrSc. - doctor scientiarum, "higher scientific degree", for academics and researchers in years 1953-2001, a reception based on a dissertation thesis, partially replaced by DSc.

Calendar

The school year starts on the first weekday of September and ends on the last weekday of June. It is divided into two semesters with exams at the end of each. Usually, the first semester runs from 1st September to January 30th, and the second from February 1st to June 30th, separated by a one-day break and the summer holidays. The actual dates, along with holidays and breaks, are announced by each school individually and may vary slightly.

Holidays

  • autumn holidays - two working days around Independent Czechoslovak State Day (28/10), which is a public holiday
  • Christmas (winter) holidays - about 9 – 12 days (usually 22/12 - 2/1, ends with first Sunday after new year)
  • mid-term break - one-day holiday (1/2)
  • spring holidays - one-week holiday with the date varying according to the district (usually from the beginning of February until the end of March)
  • Easter holidays - three-day holiday (called Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Monday)
  • summer holidays - sixty-two-day+ holiday (1/7 - 31/8 plus days from last Friday in June to first Monday in September, which starts a new school year)

There is also Children's Day on 1 June, which is not considered a holiday, but children are usually taken on (school) trips (one day or more) and other cultural activities.

See also

References

  1. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (2014), Education at a Glance 2014: Czech Republic (PDF)
  2. 1 2 Amnesty International (2015), Must try harder: Ethnic discrimination of Romani children in Czech schools (PDF)
  3. "CASE OF D.H. AND OTHERS v. THE CZECH REPUBLIC". European Court of Human Rights. 2007-11-13. Retrieved 2016-07-11.
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