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Education in Chile

Education in Chile is divided in preschool, primary school, secondary school, and technical or higher education (university).The levels of education in Chile are:

  • Pre-school: For children up to 5 years old.
  • Primary school: (Enseñanza básica) for children aged 6–14 years old, divided into 8 grades.
  • Secondary school: (Enseñanza media) for teenagers aged 15–18 years old, divided into 4 grades. Schools are divided by curriculum into:
    1. "Scientific-humanities". Geared to prepare students to enter university. From 11th grade (Tercero Medio), students can choose a subject in either science (math, physics, chemistry, biology), or humanities (literature, history, philosophy), for more advanced lessons.
    2. "Technical-professional". Designed to allow students to quickly enter the workforce after secondary education. Students are taught practical lessons in technical areas, such as electricity, mechanics, metal assembly, etc.
  • Higher education:
    • University (universidad): These are divided between "traditional" universities (public and private universities created (mostly) before the 1981 reform) and private institutions.
    • Professional Institute (Instituto Profesional, IP): Private institutions offering professional degrees, except for those given exclusively by universities. They were created in 1981.
    • Technical Schooling Center (Centro de Formación Técnica, CFT): Also created in 1981, they are private institutions offering technical degrees only.
Education in Chile
Ministry of Education
Minister
Undersecretary
Raúl Figueroa
Jorge Poblete
National education budget (2022)
BudgetUS$14.4 billion[1]
General details
Primary languagesSpanish
Literacy (2015)
Total96.9%1[2]
Enrollment (2014)
Total4.75 million
Attainment (2013)
Secondary diploma58.3%2
Post-secondary diploma16.5%2
1 Population 15 and over.
2 Population 19 and over.

Pre-school edit

Levels:[3]

  • Sala Cuna Menor: children between 85 days of age to one year of age
  • Sala Cuna Mayor: children between one and two years of age
  • Nivel Medio Menor: children between two and three years of age
  • Nivel Medio Mayor: children between three and four years of age
  • Primer Nivel Transición or Pre-Kinder: children between four and five years of age
  • Segundo Nivel de Transición or Kinder: children between five and six years of age

The law establishes free access to the last two levels of pre-school.[4] A constitutional reform in 2013 called for the law to extend free access to four levels, and make the last one mandatory and a prerequisite to enter primary school.[5]

The coverage for pre-school in 2009 was 37.42% (for children aged 0 to 5) and 44.96% (for persons of any age).[6]

Primary and secondary education edit

The law makes primary and secondary school mandatory for all Chileans.[4]

The Chilean state provides an extensive system of education vouchers that covers about 93% of primary and secondary students (the other 7% attend non-subsidized private schools). The system is based on a direct payment to the schools based on daily attendance.

Schools are either public (nearly all owned by the municipality of the commune in which the school is located) or private, which may receive government subsidies.

Private schools (subsidized or not) may be organized as either for or non-profit. In order to receive public funding, private schools must reserve 15% of seats in each class to students classified as "vulnerable" (based on family income and mother's level of education). Schools receive extra funding for each "vulnerable" student they enroll.[7]

Primary edit

The 1965 reform established primary education as the initial cycle of schooling. Before that, by 1920, Chilean legislation had established four years of minimum mandatory education. By 1929 the minimum had been increased to six years. Since 1965, the primary level has been obligatory, with a current duration of 8 years in total divided into 2 cycles and 8 grades:

  • 1st Cycle: 1st grade (age 6-7), 2nd grade (age 7-8), 3rd grade (age 8-9), 4th grade (age 9-10).
  • 2nd Cycle: 5th grade (age 10-11), 6th grade (age 11-12), 7th grade (age 12-13), 8th grade (age 13-14).

Secondary edit

Secondary education is divided between Scientific-Humanist (regular), Technical-Professional (vocational) and Artistic, all lasting four years. The first two years are the same for the three kinds of schooling, while the third and fourth years are differentiated according to the orientation of the school.

The schools offering Technical-Professional programs are denominated:

  • Industrial Schools: electricity, mechanics, electronics, informatics, among others.
  • Commercial Schools: management, accountancy, secretary and similar.
  • Technical Schools: fashion, culinary, nursery and the like.
  • Polyvalent Schools: offering careers of more than one of those listed above.

Most of the students choosing the vocational branch come from disadvantaged socioeconomic background. Private school with subscribing-fees gathers less than 1% of the students.[8]

Compulsory education only covered the eight years of primary school, but in 2003 a constitutional reform established in principle free and compulsory secondary education for all Chileans up to 21 years of age.[9] This ensured twelve years of compulsory schooling, which was an unprecedented milestone in Latin America at the time.[citation needed]

Coverage edit

The net enrollment ratio (covering students of school age) in 2009 was 93.19% in primary, and 70.70% in secondary, while the gross enrollment ratio (covering students of any age) was 106.24% in primary and 94.68% in secondary.

Type of school
dependency
Pupils
(2014)[10]
%
Delegated Administration 46,880 1.33
Private, non-subsidized 270,085 7.64
Private, subsidized 1,913,838 54.13
Municipal (public) 1,305,032 36.91
Total 3,535,835 100.00

Costs edit

 
Chilean students presenting a PowerPoint about America, in Escuela Barreales, 2008.
Voluntary tuition
Public schools and subsidized private schools may charge a fee for the selection process, an annual price of enrollment (which, as of 2011, cannot be higher than CLP$3,500, or about US$7) and a monthly tuition fee (financiamiento compartido or "shared funding", also known as copago or "copayment"), which is voluntary for the parent. Enrollment and tuition fees are forbidden in pre-primary and primary school in these institutions. A fee to the Parents Center (Centro de Padres) is voluntary and cannot be higher than 0.5 UTM (Unidad Tributaria Mensual or "Monthly Tax Unit") a year (payable in up to ten installments), which was CLP$19,143 (about US$40) in 2011.
Mandatory tuition
Public schools and subsidized private schools have the same selection and annual enrollment costs as in schools with voluntary tuition, but they are allowed to charge a mandatory monthly tuition, which cannot be higher than 4 USE (Unidad de Subvención Educacional or "Education Subsidy Unit"). This was equal to CLP$72,763 in 2011 (about US$150) in both primary and secondary school. A Parents Center fee is the same as in schools with voluntary tuition.
Non-subsidized private schools are free to set the price, which may include enrollment and tuition costs, as well as a fee for applying to the school (paid once) and one for being admitted to the school (also paid once, and can be quite high in some exclusive schools). There may be other payments, such as to the Parents Center or for school materials, which may be included as part of the tuition fee.

There is a third type of public school, the Delegated Administration schools, which are owned by the State but managed and financed by private corporations. These cannot charge a selection fee. The annual enrollment cost is voluntary and the same as in schools with voluntary tuition. They are allowed to charge for tuition, but it is up to the parent to decide how much to pay. The maximum cost is 1.5 UTM annually, which was CLP$57,430 (about US$119) in 2011. A Parents Center fee is voluntary.

There is a fourth type of public school, administered by the Ministry of Education and completely financed by the State. Currently, there is only one such school: Escuela Villa Las Estrellas in Antártica.[7][11]

Higher education edit

Admission edit

University edit

Students can choose between 16 public universities and 43 private [2]. Used to be 60 Universities, but Universidad del Mar went into bankruptcy and will be no longer providing education.[3]

All public universities and 23 private ones use a single admission system called PSU (Prueba de Selección Universitaria, "University Selection Test"), designed and evaluated by the University of Chile, and consisting of two mandatory exams, one in Mathematics and one in Language. There are also two additional specific exams, Sciences (including Chemistry, Physics and Biology fields) and History, which may be required by some undergraduate programs. The cumulative grade point average achieved during secondary school is also taken into account in the final admission score, as well as the student's relative position in his class and two previous promotions. Every university assigns different weightings to the results of the various exams for the various programs offered. Some universities may require additional (non-PSU) tests or personal interviews for admission to some programs.

There is a gap on the PSU test scores regarding secondary education among public schools and private schools. This is almost 130 points difference in favor of private schools.[4]

In 2014, a total of 247,291 people took both mandatory PSU tests (nearly 71 thousand were from previous promotions).[12]

The drop out rate is 30% from first year students.[5] The main factors are economic problems, vocational and psychological aspects.[13]

IPs and CFTs edit

Professional Institutes (PI) and Technical Schooling Centers (CFT) require a secondary education license only for admission.

Coverage edit

The net enrollment ratio (covering students between 18 and 24 years) in 2009 was 28.88%, while the gross enrollment ratio (covering students of any age) was 38.73%.

Classification Students
(2016)[14]
%
"Traditional" public universities 191,847 15.4
"Traditional" private universities 154,017 12.3
Non-"traditional" private universities 374,884 30.1
Professional Institutesa 384,667 30.8
Technical Schooling Centersa 141,720 11.4
Total 1,247,135 100.0

a All are privately owned.

Costs edit

Since 1999 till 2012 the budgets for public education have increased from 3,8% of the GDP till 4.5% of the GDP in public spending.[6] Evidence shows that Chile is spending almost 40% more of its GDP in higher education compare to the average OECD countries, from 2.4% of the GDP in Chile compare to the 1.7% of the GDP in the average OECD [7]

Note: This section is outdated. Starting in 2016, 30 public and private universities are now free of charge for students belonging to the poorest 50% of the population.[15]

All universities, institutes and technical schools in Chile charge enrollment and tuition costs.[16] There are, however, several government scholarship programs granted to students based on merit or need. Socioeconomically disadvantaged students from any type of officially recognized educational institution may seek loans through private banks with the State acting as guarantee ("Crédito con Aval del Estado", CAE). There are also loan programs offered by the government exclusively to socioeconomically disadvantaged students of "traditional" universities ("Fondo Solidario de Crédito Universitario", FSCU). These loans —private and public— have a fixed interest rate of 2% and must be paid back by the student after graduation. For CAE loans, the payment is equal to 10% of the former student's annual wage, and 5% for FSCU loans. The debt is written off after 15 years for CAE loans, and 12 for FSCU loans.[16][17][18] Most scholarships and loan programs offered by the government only cover a "reference" annual tuition cost calculated by the government for each program. The gap between the reference and the real tuition cost can be substantial at some private (and even public) educational institutions.[19] Students are required to maintain a certain level of academic achievement to keep the benefit, which may vary from institution to institution.

There are also government-funded programs giving students: a monthly stipend, a debit card to buy food, and a student card to pay for cheaper transportation. All programs (except transportation) are based on merit, need, indigenous background or geographical residence.[18]

In 2012 947,063 students were enrolled in tertiary education programs. Of these, 548,119 (58%) received either scholarships or loans by the government. Of the totality of programs awarded during 2012 (623,086; students may benefit from more than one program), scholarships represented 35% and loans 65% (14% FSCU and 51% CAE).[20]

School year edit

The school year is divided into semesters. The first semester runs from late February or early March to early July. Following a two-week winter break school resumes and lasts until late November or early December, followed by summer vacations.

The dates are set by the Ministry of Education in each Region. For example, in 2014 the start of classes is March 5 for regular students in the Santiago Metropolitan Region; a winter break runs from 14 to 25 July, with the second semester starting at 28 July; classes end at either 5, 12 or 19 December, depending on the program's length in weeks (38 to 40); students graduating from high school (fourth level of secondary education) end classes on 14 November, giving them time to prepare for the university admission test (PSU).[21]

Education reform edit

Chile as of 2014 is undergoing a significant reform to its publicly funded education system. Among the first proposals sent to Congress were the banning of mandatory co-payments, the removal of existing selection processes, and the conversion of for-profit schools into non-profit organizations.[22] Another proposal (announced, but yet to be sent to Congress) is to provide free tertiary education to students in the poorest 60% of the population; this would apply to students of "traditional" universities and of "accredited" and non-profit technical schooling centers and professional institutes.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 2022 budget law, p. 278. 2022 Chilean pesos per US dollar: 872.33. Source: Central Bank of Chile's Statistical Database.
  2. ^ S.A.P., El Mercurio (2 November 2016). "Casen revela que gasto de los hogares por educación es de entre $20 mil y $300 mil al mes - Emol.com". emol.com.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 October 2014.
  4. ^ a b "DFL-2 02-JUL-2010 MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIÓN - Ley Chile - Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional".
  5. ^ "LEY-20710 11-DIC-2013 MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIÓN - Ley Chile - Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional".
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 June 2017. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  7. ^ a b . Ministry of Education of Chile. Archived from the original on 28 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  8. ^ "UNESCO-UNEVOC World TVET Database".
  9. ^ "LEY-19876 22-MAY-2003 MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIÓN - Ley Chile - Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional".
  10. ^ "Data Mineduc - Ministerio de Educación" (in Spanish). Ministry of Education of Chile. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  11. ^ [1] December 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "Compendio estadístico proceso de admisión año académico 2015" (PDF) (in Spanish). Universidad de Chile/DEMRE. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  13. ^ Figueroa, Raúl (2 November 2016). "El 30% de los alumnos de educación superior deserta de su carrera el primer año". La tercera. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  14. ^ Ministry of Education of Chile. . mifuturo.cl. Archived from the original on 8 February 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  15. ^ ChileAtiende. "Chileatiende - Gratuidad en la educación superior 2018". www.chileatiende.gob.cl.
  16. ^ a b "Chile: Progress and its discontents". The Economist. 14 April 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 November 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  18. ^ a b (PDF). Ministerio de educación. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  19. ^ "Éstas son las universidades que cobran más del doble de los aranceles fijados por el Mineduc". Emol.
  20. ^ (PDF). Ministerio de educación. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 June 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  21. ^ (PDF). Santiago Metropolitan Region Ministry of Education Regional Secretariat (in Spanish). 13 December 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 July 2015. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 November 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  23. ^ http://www.afp.com/en/news/chile-students-police-clash-new-protest-over-reforms[permanent dead link]

Further reading edit

  • Passow, A. Harry et al. The National Case Study: An Empirical Comparative Study of Twenty-One Educational Systems. (1976) online

External links edit

  • OECD Education Policy Outlook: Chile
  • Ministry of Education
  • EducarChile
  • Information on education in Chile, OECD - Contains indicators and information about Chile and how it compares to other OECD and non-OECD countries
  • Diagram of Chilean education system, OECD - Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages. Also in country language
  • Vocational Education in Chile, UNESCO-UNEVOC - country profile with information on the policies, the financing, the qualification framework and challenge in the field of Vocational Education.

education, chile, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Education in Chile news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Education in Chile is divided in preschool primary school secondary school and technical or higher education university The levels of education in Chile are Pre school For children up to 5 years old Primary school Ensenanza basica for children aged 6 14 years old divided into 8 grades Secondary school Ensenanza media for teenagers aged 15 18 years old divided into 4 grades Schools are divided by curriculum into Scientific humanities Geared to prepare students to enter university From 11th grade Tercero Medio students can choose a subject in either science math physics chemistry biology or humanities literature history philosophy for more advanced lessons Technical professional Designed to allow students to quickly enter the workforce after secondary education Students are taught practical lessons in technical areas such as electricity mechanics metal assembly etc Higher education University universidad These are divided between traditional universities public and private universities created mostly before the 1981 reform and private institutions Professional Institute Instituto Profesional IP Private institutions offering professional degrees except for those given exclusively by universities They were created in 1981 Technical Schooling Center Centro de Formacion Tecnica CFT Also created in 1981 they are private institutions offering technical degrees only Education in ChileMinistry of EducationMinisterUndersecretaryRaul FigueroaJorge PobleteNational education budget 2022 BudgetUS 14 4 billion 1 General detailsPrimary languagesSpanishLiteracy 2015 Total96 9 1 2 Enrollment 2014 Total4 75 millionAttainment 2013 Secondary diploma58 3 2Post secondary diploma16 5 21 Population 15 and over 2 Population 19 and over Contents 1 Pre school 2 Primary and secondary education 2 1 Primary 2 2 Secondary 2 3 Coverage 2 4 Costs 3 Higher education 3 1 Admission 3 1 1 University 3 1 2 IPs and CFTs 3 2 Coverage 3 3 Costs 4 School year 5 Education reform 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPre school editLevels 3 Sala Cuna Menor children between 85 days of age to one year of age Sala Cuna Mayor children between one and two years of age Nivel Medio Menor children between two and three years of age Nivel Medio Mayor children between three and four years of age Primer Nivel Transicion or Pre Kinder children between four and five years of age Segundo Nivel de Transicion or Kinder children between five and six years of ageThe law establishes free access to the last two levels of pre school 4 A constitutional reform in 2013 called for the law to extend free access to four levels and make the last one mandatory and a prerequisite to enter primary school 5 The coverage for pre school in 2009 was 37 42 for children aged 0 to 5 and 44 96 for persons of any age 6 Primary and secondary education editThe law makes primary and secondary school mandatory for all Chileans 4 The Chilean state provides an extensive system of education vouchers that covers about 93 of primary and secondary students the other 7 attend non subsidized private schools The system is based on a direct payment to the schools based on daily attendance Schools are either public nearly all owned by the municipality of the commune in which the school is located or private which may receive government subsidies Private schools subsidized or not may be organized as either for or non profit In order to receive public funding private schools must reserve 15 of seats in each class to students classified as vulnerable based on family income and mother s level of education Schools receive extra funding for each vulnerable student they enroll 7 Primary edit The 1965 reform established primary education as the initial cycle of schooling Before that by 1920 Chilean legislation had established four years of minimum mandatory education By 1929 the minimum had been increased to six years Since 1965 the primary level has been obligatory with a current duration of 8 years in total divided into 2 cycles and 8 grades 1st Cycle 1st grade age 6 7 2nd grade age 7 8 3rd grade age 8 9 4th grade age 9 10 2nd Cycle 5th grade age 10 11 6th grade age 11 12 7th grade age 12 13 8th grade age 13 14 Secondary edit Secondary education is divided between Scientific Humanist regular Technical Professional vocational and Artistic all lasting four years The first two years are the same for the three kinds of schooling while the third and fourth years are differentiated according to the orientation of the school The schools offering Technical Professional programs are denominated Industrial Schools electricity mechanics electronics informatics among others Commercial Schools management accountancy secretary and similar Technical Schools fashion culinary nursery and the like Polyvalent Schools offering careers of more than one of those listed above Most of the students choosing the vocational branch come from disadvantaged socioeconomic background Private school with subscribing fees gathers less than 1 of the students 8 Compulsory education only covered the eight years of primary school but in 2003 a constitutional reform established in principle free and compulsory secondary education for all Chileans up to 21 years of age 9 This ensured twelve years of compulsory schooling which was an unprecedented milestone in Latin America at the time citation needed Coverage edit The net enrollment ratio covering students of school age in 2009 was 93 19 in primary and 70 70 in secondary while the gross enrollment ratio covering students of any age was 106 24 in primary and 94 68 in secondary Type of schooldependency Pupils 2014 10 Delegated Administration 46 880 1 33Private non subsidized 270 085 7 64Private subsidized 1 913 838 54 13Municipal public 1 305 032 36 91Total 3 535 835 100 00Costs edit nbsp Chilean students presenting a PowerPoint about America in Escuela Barreales 2008 Voluntary tuition Public schools and subsidized private schools may charge a fee for the selection process an annual price of enrollment which as of 2011 cannot be higher than CLP 3 500 or about US 7 and a monthly tuition fee financiamiento compartido or shared funding also known as copago or copayment which is voluntary for the parent Enrollment and tuition fees are forbidden in pre primary and primary school in these institutions A fee to the Parents Center Centro de Padres is voluntary and cannot be higher than 0 5 UTM Unidad Tributaria Mensual or Monthly Tax Unit a year payable in up to ten installments which was CLP 19 143 about US 40 in 2011 Mandatory tuition Public schools and subsidized private schools have the same selection and annual enrollment costs as in schools with voluntary tuition but they are allowed to charge a mandatory monthly tuition which cannot be higher than 4 USE Unidad de Subvencion Educacional or Education Subsidy Unit This was equal to CLP 72 763 in 2011 about US 150 in both primary and secondary school A Parents Center fee is the same as in schools with voluntary tuition Non subsidized private schools are free to set the price which may include enrollment and tuition costs as well as a fee for applying to the school paid once and one for being admitted to the school also paid once and can be quite high in some exclusive schools There may be other payments such as to the Parents Center or for school materials which may be included as part of the tuition fee There is a third type of public school the Delegated Administration schools which are owned by the State but managed and financed by private corporations These cannot charge a selection fee The annual enrollment cost is voluntary and the same as in schools with voluntary tuition They are allowed to charge for tuition but it is up to the parent to decide how much to pay The maximum cost is 1 5 UTM annually which was CLP 57 430 about US 119 in 2011 A Parents Center fee is voluntary There is a fourth type of public school administered by the Ministry of Education and completely financed by the State Currently there is only one such school Escuela Villa Las Estrellas in Antartica 7 11 Higher education editAdmission edit University edit Students can choose between 16 public universities and 43 private 2 Used to be 60 Universities but Universidad del Mar went into bankruptcy and will be no longer providing education 3 All public universities and 23 private ones use a single admission system called PSU Prueba de Seleccion Universitaria University Selection Test designed and evaluated by the University of Chile and consisting of two mandatory exams one in Mathematics and one in Language There are also two additional specific exams Sciences including Chemistry Physics and Biology fields and History which may be required by some undergraduate programs The cumulative grade point average achieved during secondary school is also taken into account in the final admission score as well as the student s relative position in his class and two previous promotions Every university assigns different weightings to the results of the various exams for the various programs offered Some universities may require additional non PSU tests or personal interviews for admission to some programs There is a gap on the PSU test scores regarding secondary education among public schools and private schools This is almost 130 points difference in favor of private schools 4 In 2014 a total of 247 291 people took both mandatory PSU tests nearly 71 thousand were from previous promotions 12 The drop out rate is 30 from first year students 5 The main factors are economic problems vocational and psychological aspects 13 IPs and CFTs edit Professional Institutes PI and Technical Schooling Centers CFT require a secondary education license only for admission Coverage edit The net enrollment ratio covering students between 18 and 24 years in 2009 was 28 88 while the gross enrollment ratio covering students of any age was 38 73 Classification Students 2016 14 Traditional public universities 191 847 15 4 Traditional private universities 154 017 12 3Non traditional private universities 374 884 30 1Professional Institutesa 384 667 30 8Technical Schooling Centersa 141 720 11 4Total 1 247 135 100 0a All are privately owned Costs edit Since 1999 till 2012 the budgets for public education have increased from 3 8 of the GDP till 4 5 of the GDP in public spending 6 Evidence shows that Chile is spending almost 40 more of its GDP in higher education compare to the average OECD countries from 2 4 of the GDP in Chile compare to the 1 7 of the GDP in the average OECD 7 Note This section is outdated Starting in 2016 30 public and private universities are now free of charge for students belonging to the poorest 50 of the population 15 All universities institutes and technical schools in Chile charge enrollment and tuition costs 16 There are however several government scholarship programs granted to students based on merit or need Socioeconomically disadvantaged students from any type of officially recognized educational institution may seek loans through private banks with the State acting as guarantee Credito con Aval del Estado CAE There are also loan programs offered by the government exclusively to socioeconomically disadvantaged students of traditional universities Fondo Solidario de Credito Universitario FSCU These loans private and public have a fixed interest rate of 2 and must be paid back by the student after graduation For CAE loans the payment is equal to 10 of the former student s annual wage and 5 for FSCU loans The debt is written off after 15 years for CAE loans and 12 for FSCU loans 16 17 18 Most scholarships and loan programs offered by the government only cover a reference annual tuition cost calculated by the government for each program The gap between the reference and the real tuition cost can be substantial at some private and even public educational institutions 19 Students are required to maintain a certain level of academic achievement to keep the benefit which may vary from institution to institution There are also government funded programs giving students a monthly stipend a debit card to buy food and a student card to pay for cheaper transportation All programs except transportation are based on merit need indigenous background or geographical residence 18 In 2012 947 063 students were enrolled in tertiary education programs Of these 548 119 58 received either scholarships or loans by the government Of the totality of programs awarded during 2012 623 086 students may benefit from more than one program scholarships represented 35 and loans 65 14 FSCU and 51 CAE 20 School year editThe school year is divided into semesters The first semester runs from late February or early March to early July Following a two week winter break school resumes and lasts until late November or early December followed by summer vacations The dates are set by the Ministry of Education in each Region For example in 2014 the start of classes is March 5 for regular students in the Santiago Metropolitan Region a winter break runs from 14 to 25 July with the second semester starting at 28 July classes end at either 5 12 or 19 December depending on the program s length in weeks 38 to 40 students graduating from high school fourth level of secondary education end classes on 14 November giving them time to prepare for the university admission test PSU 21 Education reform editChile as of 2014 update is undergoing a significant reform to its publicly funded education system Among the first proposals sent to Congress were the banning of mandatory co payments the removal of existing selection processes and the conversion of for profit schools into non profit organizations 22 Another proposal announced but yet to be sent to Congress is to provide free tertiary education to students in the poorest 60 of the population this would apply to students of traditional universities and of accredited and non profit technical schooling centers and professional institutes 23 See also edit2006 student protests in Chile 2011 student protests in Chile Chilean university reform Ministry of Education of Chile Ranked lists of Chilean regions By net enrollment ratio in education Ranked lists of Chilean regions By gross enrollment ratio in educationReferences edit 2022 budget law p 278 2022 Chilean pesos per US dollar 872 33 Source Central Bank of Chile s Statistical Database S A P El Mercurio 2 November 2016 Casen revela que gasto de los hogares por educacion es de entre 20 mil y 300 mil al mes Emol com emol com Preguntas Frecuentes Archived from the original on 21 October 2014 a b DFL 2 02 JUL 2010 MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIoN Ley Chile Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional LEY 20710 11 DIC 2013 MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIoN Ley Chile Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional R SP WebServer Consulta Interactiva de datos Casen Observatorio Social Ministerio de Desarrollo Social Gobierno de Chile Archived from the original on 19 June 2017 Retrieved 5 January 2016 a b Consultas Cobros Permitidos Ministry of Education of Chile Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Retrieved 27 October 2014 UNESCO UNEVOC World TVET Database LEY 19876 22 MAY 2003 MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIoN Ley Chile Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional Data Mineduc Ministerio de Educacion in Spanish Ministry of Education of Chile Retrieved 23 October 2014 1 Archived December 24 2008 at the Wayback Machine Compendio estadistico proceso de admision ano academico 2015 PDF in Spanish Universidad de Chile DEMRE Retrieved 28 April 2018 Figueroa Raul 2 November 2016 El 30 de los alumnos de educacion superior deserta de su carrera el primer ano La tercera Retrieved 3 October 2017 Ministry of Education of Chile BASES DE DATOS DE MATRICULADOS mifuturo cl Archived from the original on 8 February 2013 Retrieved 8 May 2013 ChileAtiende Chileatiende Gratuidad en la educacion superior 2018 www chileatiende gob cl a b Chile Progress and its discontents The Economist 14 April 2011 Retrieved 12 April 2012 Preguntas Frecuentes Rebaja Tasa de Interes al 2 Rebaja Cuota CAE Archived from the original on 20 November 2015 Retrieved 21 January 2015 a b Ministerio de Educacion PDF Ministerio de educacion Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 8 May 2013 Estas son las universidades que cobran mas del doble de los aranceles fijados por el Mineduc Emol Ministerio de Educacion PDF Ministerio de educacion Archived from the original PDF on 15 June 2013 Retrieved 8 May 2013 Resolucion Exenta Nº 04559 Fija calendario escolar 2014 para la Region Metropolitana de Santiago PDF Santiago Metropolitan Region Ministry of Education Regional Secretariat in Spanish 13 December 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 15 July 2015 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Bachelet sends first education bill to Congress students plan protest Archived from the original on 1 November 2014 Retrieved 1 November 2014 http www afp com en news chile students police clash new protest over reforms permanent dead link Further reading editPassow A Harry et al The National Case Study An Empirical Comparative Study of Twenty One Educational Systems 1976 onlineExternal links editOECD Education Policy Outlook Chile Ministry of Education EducarChile Chilean Universities and Higher School Information on education in Chile OECD Contains indicators and information about Chile and how it compares to other OECD and non OECD countries Diagram of Chilean education system OECD Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages Also in country language Vocational Education in Chile UNESCO UNEVOC country profile with information on the policies the financing the qualification framework and challenge in the field of Vocational Education Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Education in Chile amp oldid 1176472349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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