Friday 7 August 2015

Education System in Egypt

Education in Egypt
Egypt has the largest overall education systems in the Middle East and North Africa and it is growing by leaps and bounds since the early 1990s. In recent years the Government of Egypt has been given greater priority in improving the educational system. With the help of the World Bank and other multilateral organizations aimed at increasing access in early childhood care education and to the inclusion of  ICT at all levels of study. Personal management in education must also be developed and teachers should be hired based on merit with the salaries attached to performance.
Educational system
The public education system in Egypt is composed of three levels:
ü  Basic Level education for years 4-14: kindergarten for two years followed by primary   school for six years and primary school for three years.
ü  Stage secondary school is for 3 years for ages 15 to 17
ü  Levels of higher education.
                                      
Egyptian boys reading
Education is compulsory for 9 academic year aged 6 to 14. In addition, all levels of study is free of charge in any Government who runs the schools. According to the World Bank, there is a huge difference in educational attainment the rich and the poor, also known as "the gap of wealth of society ".
Egypt launched national strategic plan for the reform of pre-university education for comprehensive, continuous approach and collective bargaining. The main elements are access and participation, teachers, pedagogical, curriculum and learning evaluation, textbooks and learning materials, and management and governance.
Promotional exams will be held at all levels except grade 3, 6 and 9 in the basic education level and grades 11 and 12 at the secondary school level, applying Standard National exam or territory.
The Ministry Of Education be responsible for making decisions regarding our education system with the support of three National Centres Centre, curriculum development, National Center for education research and the National Center for education evaluation and examination.
There are also formal teacher qualifications tracks for basic and secondary education levels. Teachers must complete four years of pre-university course at the Service of the University to enter the Teaching profession. The Working Group has been established to make recommendations that are more formal. The proposal includes ideas to start with recurrent expenditure.
Throughout 2008, the design is carried out, three selected pilot administration and monitoring and the development of the agreed process.
During the year 2009 financing is decentralized throughout the road to schools, and schools began to receive funding. Other sectors in Egypt plan to decentralize decision making and expense in a phased approach.
History of study in Egypt
Modern Education was introduced under the auspices of the Muhammad Ali Pasha Of The Ottoman Empire in the early 1800s. He started dual education system at that time: one serving for people who attend traditional Islamic schools (Kuttab) and another called Madrasas for elite civil servants.
                                                   
                                                        
Mansoura University, Egypt
Demographics
Total literacy rate in Egypt is 77 percent, 80.3% for men and 63.5% for women. There is special attention given by the Government and NGOS in order to reduce gender inequality in education and achieve universal primary education.
Egypt's education system is highly centralised and divided into three stages:
·         Basic Education (Arabic: التعليم الأساسى, transliteration: al-aleem al-ʿ Ta Asassī )
ü  The main stage
ü  The stage setup
·         Secondary education (Arabic: التعليم الثانوى, transliteration: al-aleem al-ʿ Ta Thanawī )
·         Post-secondary Studies (Arabic: التعليم الجامعى, transliteration: al-aleem al-Ta ʿ Gamme ʿ )
Phase two low and low have been combined together under the label basic education. His studies after this stage depends on the ability of the student.
Government schools
There are two types of Government schools , Arab schools and the national curriculum for Language testing in Government Arabic . The English government curriculum major taught and French, German, Spanish or Italian added as a second language in secondary education. Good thing for the Egyptians it is free.
Experimental Language Schools most of the Government curriculum, taught in English. Social studies are taught in Arabic. Students are allowed entry into the first grade at the age of seven, a year older than Arab schools.

Private schools
 Private schools give more attention to students ' personal needs facilities. They are also expected to be better than other schools because of the facilities available, but their fees are higher between these schools use French or German as the primary language of teaching. Many private schools have been built by missionaries and is now affiliated with churches and provide quality education. Many private schools offer additional education programs, along with the national curriculum

Basic education
The basic education consists of pre-primary, primary and preparatory levels of education. In Egypt, the Ministry of Education coordinates the preschool education. In 1999-2000 the total enrollment rate of pre-primary students was 16 percent and that increased to 24 percent in 2009. Irrespective of private or state run, all preschool institutions come under Ministry of Education. It is the Ministry’s duty to select and distribute textbooks. According to the Ministry’s guidelines, the maximum size of a preschool should not exceed more than 45 students. Ministry of Education is also getting support from the international agencies, such as the World Bank to enhance the early childhood education system by increasing access to schools, improving quality of education and building capacity of teachers. The second tier of basic compulsory education is the preparatory stage or lower secondary which is three years long. Completion of this tier grants students the Basic Education Completion Certificate.

Secondary education
Secondary education consists of three tracks that is general, vocational/technical and the dual-system vocational education known as Mubarak-Kohl schools. The general secondary stage includes 3 years of education, whereas the secondary vocational track could be for 3–5 years. To enter the secondary level, the students must pass a national exam which is given at end of the secondary stage. At this level, students have formative and summative assessments during the first year and the average of the end of year national standardized exams for year two and three qualifies the students to take the Certificate of General Secondary Education-Thanawiya Amma, which is one of the requirements for admission into the universities. Secondary education consists of three different types: general, technical or vocational.

Al-Azhar system
Another system that runs in parallel with the public educational system is known as the Al-Azhar system. It consists of six years of primary stage, a three-year preparatory stage and finally three years of secondary stage. The Ministry of education reduced the number of secondary school years from four to three years in 1998, so as to align the Al Azhar system with the general secondary education system. In this system as well, there are separate schools for girls and boys. Al Azhar education system is supervised by the Supreme Council of the Al-Azhar Institution. The Azhar Institution itself is nominally independent from the Ministry of Education, but is ultimately under supervision by the Egyption Prime Minister .Al Azhar schools are named "Institutes" and include primary, preparatory, and secondary phases. All schools in all stages teach religious subjects and non-religious subjects, to a certain degree- not as intensively as the state schools. The bulk of the curriculum, however, consists of religious subjects as described below. All the students are Muslims, males and females are separated in the prep and secondary stages. Al-Azhar schools are all over the country, especially in rural areas. The graduates of Al-Azhar secondary schools are eligible to continue their studies at the Al-Azhar University. As of 2007 and 2008, there are 8272 Al-Azhar schools in Egypt. In the early 2000s, Al-Azhar schools accounted for less than 4% of the total enrollment.The graduates of this system are then automatically accepted into Al-Azhar University. In 2007, the Pre-University enrollment in Al- Azhar institutes is about 1,906,290 students.

Higher education system
Egypt has a very extensive higher education system. About 30% of all Egyptians in the relevant age group go to university. However, only half of them graduate. The Minister of Higher Education supervises the tertiary level of education. In the current education system, there are 17 public universities, 51 public non-university institutions, 16 private universities and 89 private higher institutions. Out of the 51 non –university institutions, 47 are two-year middle technical institutes (MTIs) and four are 4–5 years higher technical institutes. The actual number of students entering higher education grew by 17 percent per year between 1992/93 and 1997/98. The higher education cohort is projected to continue to increase by close to 6 percent (60,000 students) per annum through 2009. This means that significant efficiencies will need to be introduced into the system just to maintain quality at its current inadequate level. The performance and quality of higher education is currently severely compromised by overly centralized order to improve the already outdated system, rigid curriculum and teaching practices.The Government's Higher Education Reform Strategy Egyptian higher education reform strategy included 25 projects addressing all the reform domains, is implemented over three phases until 2017, and corresponds to the government's five-year plans as follows:
ü  First phase from 2002 to 2007
ü  Second phase from 2007 to 2012
ü  Third phase from 2012 to 2017
Priority has been given to 12 projects in the first phase of implementation (2002–2007) and were integrated into the following six projects: HEEP Six Priority Projects (2002–2007)
ü  Higher Education Enhancement Project Fund (HEEPF),
ü  Information and Communications Technology Project (ICTP),
ü  Egyptian Technical Colleges Project (ETCP),
ü  Faculty of Education Project (FOEP),
ü  Faculty Leaders Development Project (FLDP),
ü  Quality Assurance and Accreditation Project (QAAP).
There are both private and public institutions of higher education in Egypt. Public higher education is free in Egypt, and Egyptian students only pay registration fees. Private education is much more expensive.
International education
As of January 2015, the International Schools Consultancy (ISC) listed Egypt as having 184 international schools. ISC defines an 'international school' in the following terms "ISC includes an international school if the school delivers a curriculum to any combination of pre-school, primary or secondary students, wholly or partly in English outside an English-speaking country, or if a school in a country where English is one of the official languages, offers an English-medium curriculum other than the country’s national curriculum and is international in its orientation." This definition is used by publications including The Economist.
Challenges
Although significant progress has been made to increase human capital base through improved education system, still the quality of education experience is low and unequally distributed. Due to lack of good quality education at the basic and secondary levels, there has been a mushrooming market for private tutoring. Now to take private tuition has become more of an obligation than a remedial activity. According to the Egypt Human Development Report (2005), 58 percent of surveyed families stated that their children take private tutoring. The CAPMAS (2004) survey showed that households spend on average around 61 percent of total education expenditure on private tutoring. In addition, per household expenditure of the richest quintile on private tutoring is more than seven times that of the poorest.
Egypt also has a shortage of skilled and semi-skilled workforce but there has been an abundance of low-skilled laborers.
Even if there are any high-skilled workers available, their quality of training is quite poor. This is mostly a problem in small-medium companies and large public industries that work in “protected” domestic markets. The average gross production per worker is lower than other North African countries: Morocco and Tunisia. Youth unemployment is also very high, primarily due to lack of education system in providing necessary training under TVET programs.
Most importantly, Egyptian education faces a main challenge because of the quality of teachers that teach in public schools.
An ethnography study conducted by Sarah Hartmann in 2008 concluded that most teachers in Egypt resort to teaching for lack of better options and because the nature of the job does not conflict with their more important gender role as mothers. The low salaries offered by the public schooling system in Egypt attracts low-skilled employees. A study conducted in 1989 documenting the bureaucracy of the Egyptian Ministry of Education concluded that teachers' annual salary in Egypt is, on average, $360. Following the low quality of teachers in Egypt, they lack basic psychological background that would allow them to deal with students.The teacher was sent to court but the parents and students protested for questioning him expressing that this is what they believe to be the best way to deal with their youngsters.A study conducted by UNESCO on educational equity in world’s 16 most populous countries placed Egypt in the middle range in terms of equity of primary and secondary enrollments across governorates in Egypt.

Holidays
Academic weekly holidays are on Fridays and sometimes, in addition to, either Saturdays or Sundays.In addition to some of the state official holidays, religious or secular, there are two main vacations:
ü  Summer vacation starts from the beginning or the middle of June till the middle of September.

ü  Winter vacation starts from the middle of January till the beginning of February