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Education in Mexico

Education in Mexico has a long history. Indigenous peoples created institutions such as the telpochcalli and the calmecac. The Royal and Pontifical University of Mexico, the second oldest university in the Americas, was founded by royal decree in 1551. Education in Mexico was, until the early twentieth century, largely confined to males from urban and wealthy segments and under the auspices of the Catholic Church.

Education in Mexico
Secretariat of Public Education
Secretary of Education
Deputy Secretary
Delfina Gómez Álvarez
National education budget (2019)
BudgetMXN$807,305,000,000
USD$40B[1]
General details
Primary languagesSpanish as the standard. However, there are courses available in English. Other minority languages are available in their local communities.
System typeFederal
Current systemSeptember 25, 1921
Literacy (2012)
Total95.1%[2]
Male96.2%
Female94.2%
Enrollment
Total36.5 million
Primary18.5 million
Secondary11.5 million
Post secondary4.1 million
Attainment
Secondary diploman/a
Post-secondary diploman/a
Sources: [2] and the 2020 Census (INEGI)

The Mexican state has been directly involved in education since the nineteenth century, promoting secular education. Control of education was a source of an ongoing conflict between the Mexican state and the Catholic Church, which since the colonial era had exclusive charge of education.[3][4][5][6] The mid-nineteenth-century Liberal Reform separated church and state, which had a direct impact on education. President Benito Juárez sought the expansion of public schools. During the long tenure of President Porfirio Díaz, the expansion of education became a priority under a cabinet-level post held by Justo Sierra; Sierra also served President Francisco I. Madero in the early years of the Mexican Revolution.

The 1917 Constitution strengthened the Mexican state's power in education. During the presidency of Álvaro Obregón in the early 1920s, his Minister of Public Education José Vasconcelos implemented a massive expansion of access to public, secular education and expanded access to secular schooling in rural areas. This work was built on and expanded in the administration of Plutarco Elías Calles by Moisés Sáenz. In the 1930s, the Mexican government under Lázaro Cárdenas mandated socialist education in Mexico and there was considerable push back from the Catholic Church. Socialist education was repealed during the 1940s, with the administration of Manuel Ávila Camacho. A number of private universities have opened since the mid-twentieth century. The Mexican Teachers' Union (SNTE), founded in the late 1940s, has had significant political power. The Mexican federal government has undertaken measures to reform education, which have been opposed by the SNTE.

Education in Mexico is currently regulated by the Secretariat of Public Education (Spanish: Secretaría de Educación Pública) (SEP). Education standards are set by this Ministry at all levels except in "autonomous" universities chartered by the government (e.g., Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México). Accreditation of private schools is accomplished by mandatory approval and registration with this institution. Religious instruction is prohibited in public schools; however, religious associations are free to maintain private schools, which receive no public funds.

In the same fashion as other education systems, education has identifiable stages: primary school, junior high school (or secondary school), high school, higher education, and postgraduate education.

Structure of the basic education system edit

 
Outside of the Secretariat of Public Education (SEP) Headquarters building located in Mexico City

In Mexico, basic education is normally divided in three steps: primary school (primaria), comprising grades 1–6; junior high school (secundaria), comprising grades 7–9; and high school (preparatoria), comprising grades 10–12.

Depending on definitions, primary education comprises primaria and secundaria, which are compulsory by law, while secondary education only includes preparatoria, which has recently been made compulsory.

Primary school edit

The terms "Primary School" or "Elementary School" usually corresponds to primaria, comprising grades 1–6, when the students are 6 to 12 years old. It starts the basic compulsory education system. These are the first years of schooling.

Depending on the school, bilingual education may be offered from the beginning, where half the day instruction is in Spanish, and the rest is in another language.

Junior high school edit

The terms "Junior High School" or "Middle School" usually correspond to secundaria, comprising grades 7–9 when the student's age is 12 to 15 years old. It is part of the basic compulsory education system, following primary school and coming before "high school" (preparatoria).

At this level, more specialized subjects may be taught such as Physics, Chemistry, and World History. There is also the técnica which provides vocational training, and the telesecundaria which provides distance learning.[7]

Despite the similarities of the words "Secondary school" and secundaria, in Mexico the former is usually translated to preparatoria, while in other countries, such as Puerto Rico, or within the Spanish-speaking populations of the United States, the term secundaria refers to university.

High school edit

 
Students of a high school campus of the National College of Professional Technical Education, Conalep Ing. Bernardo Quintana Arrioja located in the State of Mexico

The terms "High School"[8] usually corresponds to preparatoria or bachillerato, and follow "secundaria" comprising grades 10–12, when the student's age is 15 to 18 years old. Students may choose between two main kinds of high school programs: The SEP incorporated, and a University Incorporated one, depending on the state. Other minority of programs are available only for private schools, such as the International Baccalaureate which carries a completely different system. Nevertheless, in order to be taught, it must include a national subject at least. In addition, there are programs such as tecnología and comercio that prepare students for a particular vocational career.[7]

Preparatoria traditionally consists of three years of education, divided into six semesters, with the first semesters having a common curriculum, and the latter ones allowing some degree of specialization, either in physical sciences (physics, chemistry, biology, etc.) or social sciences (commerce, philosophy, law, etc.). The term preparatoria is most commonly used for institutions that offer a three-year education program that "prepares" the student with general knowledge to continue studying at a university. In contrast, the term bachillerato is most often used for institutions that provide vocational training, in two or three years, so the graduate can get a job as a skilled worker, for example, an assistant accountant, a bilingual secretary or a technician.[9] An example of an institution that provides this kind of skills in Mexico is the National College of Professional Technical Education (Conalep).[10]

Educational integration edit

 
The Biblioteca Palafoxiana founded in 1646, was the first public library in colonial Mexico,[11] and is sometimes considered the first in the Americas.[12] In 2005, it was listed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Register[13]

In 1993, educational integration was formally implemented nationwide through the reform article 41 of the General Education Law. This law mandates the integration of students with special needs into regular classrooms.[14] Although formally, the term 'educational integration' is used, 'inclusive education' is often used to describe the educational system.[15] Implementation of educational integration has taken many years and still continues to face obstacles. Under the current model, students with severe disabilities that would not benefit from inclusion, study the same curriculum as regular classrooms in separate schools called Centros de Atencion Multiple [Multiple Attention Center], or CAM. Otherwise, special needs students are placed in regular classrooms and are supported by the Unidades de Servicio y Apoyo a la Educación Regular or the Unit of Support Services for Regular Education, (USAER). This group is made up of special education teachers, speech therapists, psychologists and other professionals to help special needs students in the classroom and minimize barriers to their learning.[15]

Challenges to educational integration edit

 
Diego Rivera murals in the offices of the Secretaría de Educación Pública (SEP) located in Mexico City

The combination of USAER professionals and regular teaching working in the same classroom has caused some issues for educational integration. Specifically, there is confusion about the roles of USAER professionals who work in regular classrooms. A study of USAER members found that regardless of urban or rural contexts, professionals had four common concerns. First, USAER professionals felt that they lacked preparation for working in the classroom. The second issue was feeling like their role had changed due to more demands being placed on them. The last two concerns were the lack of communication and collaboration between teachers and USAER professionals. Although the two work in the same classroom, they often work independently. However, this creates problems when adjusting the curriculum for special needs students.[15]

Accessibility is another challenge for educational integration. Schools are required to have accessible buildings and classrooms, provide technical support and appropriate materials for special needs students,[16] but a case study found that the school was not equipped for students with sensory disabilities. The school lacked accessible furniture, handicapped restrooms or proper modification for students with sensory disabilities.[16]

Finally, training for new teachers doesn't provide them enough experience with special needs students, making the shift to educational integration difficult. A study of 286 pre-service teachers found that a third of didn't have any experience working with special needs students. Additionally, 44% of the teachers reported having no formal training in working with this population.[17] A qualitative study on pre-service teachers assessed their attitude towards special needs students and their self-efficacy found that overall most teachers have positive perceptions of inclusive education. However, teachers with more hours of training, more teaching experience, and better knowledge of policies had higher levels of confidence in working with students with disabilities.[18]

Quality of education in Mexico edit

 
High school campus of the National College of Professional Technical Education, Conalep Ing. Bernardo Quintana Arrioja in the State of Mexico, named after civil Mexican engineer, Bernardo Quintana Arrioja

In recent years, the progression through Mexican education has come under much criticism. While over 90% of children in Mexico attend primary school, only 62% attend secondary school. Only 45% finish secondary school. After secondary school, only a quarter pass on to higher education.[19] A commonly cited reason for this is the lack of infrastructure throughout the rural schools. Moreover, the government has been criticized for investing too little in students, relative to budget.[citation needed] In its 2012 report on education, the OECD placed Mexico at below average in mathematics, science, and reading.[20]

A program of education reform was enacted in February 2013 which provided for a shift in control of the education system from the teachers union SNTE and its political leader, Elba Esther Gordillo, to the central and state governments. Education in Mexico had been controlled by the teachers union and its leaders for many years.[21] Shortly thereafter Gordillo was arrested on racketeering charges.[22] As of 2016 the government continued to struggle with the union and its offshoot, CNTE.[23]

Higher education edit

There are both public and private institutions of higher education. Higher education usually follows the US education model with an at least 4-year bachelor's degree undergraduate level (Licenciatura), and two degrees at the postgraduate level, a 2-year Master's degree (Maestría), and a 3-year Doctoral degree (Doctorado), followed by the higher doctorate of Doctor of Sciences (Doctor en Ciencias). This structure of education very closely conforms to the Bologna Process started in Europe in 1999, allowing Mexican students to study abroad and pursue a master's degree after Licenciatura, or a Doctoral degree after Maestría. Unlike other OECD countries, the majority of Mexico's public universities do not accredit part-time enrollment programs.[24][25]

Undergraduate studies edit

 
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, the main campus of this public university in Mexico City

Undergraduate studies normally last at least 4 years, divided into semesters or quarters, depending on the college or university, and lead to a bachelor's degree (Licenciatura). According to OECD reports, 23% of Mexicans aged 23–35 have a college degree.

Although in theory every graduate of a Licenciatura is a Licenciate (Licenciado, abbreviated Lic.) of his or her profession, it is common to use different titles for common professions such as Engineering and Architecture.

  • Engineer, Ingeniero, abbreviated Ing.
    • Electrical Engineer, Ingeniero Eléctrico
    • Electronics Engineer, Ingeniero Electrónico
    • Mechanical Engineer, Ingeniero Mecánico
    • Computer Systems Engineer, Ingeniero en Sistemas Computacionales, abbreviated I.S.C.
  • Architect, Arquitecto, abbreviated Arq.
  • Licenciate, any degree, especially those from social sciences, Licenciado, abbreviated Lic.

Postgraduate studies edit

 
The Rectorate (left) and the CETEC towers at the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education Monterrey Campus

New regulations since 2005 divide postgraduate studies at Mexican universities and research centers in two main categories:[26]

  • Targeted at professional development
    • Especialización. A 1-year course after a bachelor's degree (Licenciatura), which awards a Specialization Diploma (Diploma de Especialización).
    • Maestría. A 2-year degree after a bachelor's degree (Licenciatura), which awards the title of Master (Maestro).

Targeted at scientific research

  • Maestría en Ciencias. A 2-year degree after a bachelor's degree (Licenciatura), which awards the title of Master of Science (Maestro en Ciencias).
  • Doctorado. A 3-year degree after a master's degree (either Maestría or Maestría en Ciencias), or a 4-year degree directly after the bachelor's degree (Licenciatura) for high-achieving students. The Doctor of Sciences degree (Doctor en Ciencias) is equivalent to the higher doctorate awarded in countries such as Denmark, Ireland, the UK, and the former USSR countries.

Intercultural Universities edit

Intercultural Universities in Mexico were established in 2004 in response to the lack of enrollment of the indigenous population in the country. While an estimated 10% of the population of Mexico is indigenous, it is the least represented in higher education. According to estimates, only between 1% and 3% of higher education enrollment in Mexico is indigenous. In response to this inequality, the General Coordination for Intercultural and Bilingual Education at the Ministry of Education established Intercultural Universities with the active participation of indigenous organizations and academic institutions in each region.[27]

International education edit

 
Universidad Iberoamericana

As of January 2015, the International Schools Consultancy (ISC)[28] listed Mexico as having 151 international schools.[29] 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."[29] This definition is used by publications including The Economist.[30]

Educational years edit

School years edit

The table below describes the most common patterns for schooling in the state sector:

 
Instituto Politécnico Nacional entrance.
 
Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana
 
Metro Area of Monterrey: "Alere flammam veritatis" Monument (Feed the flame of truth), in the main campus of the Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, UANL
 
Universidad de las Américas Puebla
 
El Colegio de México (The college of Mexico)
Minimum age Year Months Schools
1 or 2 N/A N/A Nursery Maternal
2 or 3 1° de preescolar N/A Preschool Kinder / Jardín de Niños / Educación preescolar
3 or 4 2° de preescolar N/A
4 or 5 3° de preescolar N/A
5 or 6 1° de primaria N/A Primary school / Elementary school Primaria / Educación básica
6 or 7 2° de primaria N/A
7 or 8 3° de primaria N/A
8 or 9 4° de primaria N/A
9 or 10 5° de primaria N/A
10 or 11 6° de primaria N/A
11 or 12 1° de secundaria N/A Secondary school / Middle school / Junior High School Secundaria / Educación básica
12 or 13 2° de secundaria N/A
13 or 14 3° de secundaria N/A
14 or 15 4°/1° de preparatoria 1st and 2nd semesters High school Preparatoria / Bachillerato / Educación media superior
15 or 16 5°/2° de preparatoria 3rd and 4th semesters
16 or 17 6°/3° de preparatoria 5th and 6th semesters
17 or 18 N/A 1st and 2nd semesters / 1st, 2nd and 3rd quarters Associate degree at two-year institutions and if four-year then a Bachelor's degree / Licentiate Carrera Técnica and Licenciatura / Educación superior
18 or 19 N/A 3rd and 4th semesters / 4th, 5th and 6th quarters
19 or 20 N/A 5th and 6th semesters / 7th, 8th and 9th quarters
20 or 21 N/A 7th and 8th semesters / 10th quarter
21 or 22 N/A 9th and 10th semester (in most of the cases)
N/A N/A ... Master's degree Maestría
N/A N/A ... Doctorate Doctorado

History of education edit

 
Codex Mendoza, Folio 61 recto
(top) Formal education of 15-year-old Aztec boys trained for the military or the priesthood.
(bottom) A 15-year-old girl gets married

In central Mexico, the history of education stretches back to the Prehispanic era, with the education of Nahuas in schools for elites and commoners. A formal system of writing was created in various parts of central and southern Mexico, with trained experts in its practice. After the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, friars embarked on a widespread program of evangelization of Christianity. In the colonial era, schooling of elite men of European descent was established under the auspices of the Catholic Church. Liberals' attempts to separate church and state in post-independence Mexico included removal of the Catholic Church from education. Education remains an important aspect of Mexican institutional and cultural life, and conflicts continue about how it should be conducted. The history of education in Mexico gives insight into the larger history of the nation.

Education in Mesoamerica Before the Spanish edit

In central Mexico in the cultural area known as Mesoamerica, the Aztecs set up schools called calmecac for the training of warriors and schools for the training of priests, called cuicacalli. An early post-conquest manuscript prepared by native scribes for the viceroy of Mexico, Codex Mendoza shows these two types of schools. Aztec religion was highly complex and priests held a higher status, so that the creation of schools to train them in ritual and other aspects of religion was important. Overseeing an expansionist empire, Aztec rulers needed trained warriors, so that the creation of formal schools for their training was as important.

Colonial-era education, 1521–1821 edit

Education of the indigenous in Central Mexico edit

 
Public library of the Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo UMSNH. The oldest institution of higher education in the Americas

The Spanish Crown made a significant commitment to education in colonial New Spain. The first efforts of schooling in Mexico were friars' evangelization of indigenous populations. "Educating the native population was a crucial justification of the colonizing enterprise, and that criollo (Spanish American) culture was encouraged as a vehicle for integrating" the indigenous.[31] Fray Pedro de Gante established schools for indigenous in the immediate post-conquest years and produced pictorial texts to teach Catholic doctrine. All the mendicant orders in Mexico, the Franciscans, Dominicans, and Augustinians, built churches in large indigenous communities as places of worship and to teach the catechism, so that large outdoor atriums functioned as classrooms.[32] Elite indigenous lads were tapped for training as catechists and helpers to the priests, whose small numbers could in no way minister to large numbers of ordinary indigenous.

In 1536, the Franciscans and the Spanish crown established a school to train an indigenous Catholic priesthood, the Colegio de Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco, which was deemed a failure in its goal of training priests, but did create a small cohort of indigenous men who were literate in their native language of Nahuatl, as well as Spanish and Latin. The Franciscans also founded the school of San José de los Naturales in Mexico City, which taught trades and crafts to boys. The Colegio de San Gregorio was also founded for the education of indigenous elites, the most famous of whom was Chimalpahin, (also known as Don Domingo Francisco de San Antón Muñón Chimalpahin Quauhtlehuanitzin).

Religious orders, particularly the Franciscans, taught indigenous scribes in central Mexico to be literate in their own languages, allowing the creation of documents at the local level for colonial officials and communities to enable crown administration as well as production of last will and testaments, petitions to the crown, bills of sale, censuses and other types of legal record to be produced at the local level.[33] The large number of indigenous language documents found in the archives in Mexico and elsewhere have enabled scholars of the New Philology to analyze life of Mexico's colonial-era indigenous from indigenous perspectives. However, despite the large volume of documentation in indigenous languages, there is no evidence of that even elite indigenous women were literate.[34]

Education of elite Creole men edit

 
Portrait of Francisco Cervantes de Salazar by José de Bustos, Museo Soumaya

The Royal and Pontifical University of Mexico was founded in September 1551 at the request by Mexico's first viceroy, Don Antonio de Mendoza to the Spanish crown. The university was located in the central core (traza) of History of Mexico City. By comparison, Harvard College, the oldest in the United States, was founded in 1636 and the oldest Canadian University, Université Laval dates from 1663. Its first rector, Francisco Cervantes de Salazar, wrote an account of the university. The institution initially trained in priests, lawyers, and starting in 1579, medical doctors.[35] These were the traditional disciplines of the medieval and early modern eras. The Royal and Pontifical University was the sole institution that could confer academic degrees. With the title of royal and pontifical university, its degrees were titled the same as European degrees.[36] The Jesuits arrived in Mexico in 1571 and rapidly founded schools and colegios, and sought to confer degrees; however, the Council of the Indies, the royal entity overseeing the Spanish overseas empire, decided against them.[36]

The university retained its premier position. One of its best-known graduates was Don Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora, a Mexican savant of the seventeenth century, who was a friend of Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, a cloistered nun and intellectual, famous in her lifetime as the "Tenth Muse." Sor Juana was barred from attending the university due to her gender.

In general, educational institutions were urban-based, with the capital Mexico City having the largest concentration. However, there were seminaries to train priests in provincial cities, such as the Colegio de San Nicolás, founded by Bishop Vasco de Quiroga in the city now called Morelia. Insurgent leader Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla served as rector there until he was relieved of his position. One of his students was insurgent leader Father José María Morelos. Educated priests were prominent in the movement toward independence from Spain.

Education of girls and mixed-race children edit

 
Interior del Colegio de Infantes de la Catedral de México (Interior of the Infant College of the Cathedral of Mexico), José Jiménez, 1857, Museo Nacional de Arte

Most of the Mexican population was illiterate and entirely unschooled, and there was no priority for the education of girls.[37] A few girls in cities attended schools run by cloistered nuns. Some entered convent schools at around age eight, "to remain cloistered for the rest of their lives."[38] There were some schools connected to orphanages or confraternities. Private tutors educated girls from wealthy families, but only enough so that they could oversee a household. There were few opportunities for mixed-race boys or girls. "Education was, in short, highly selective as befits a stratified society, and the possibilities of self-realization were a lottery of birth rather than talent."[39]

National period – 1821–present edit

During the colonial era, education was under the control of the Catholic Church. Liberalism emerged as an ideology in the post-independence period, with a major tenet being public secular education. Conflict in the realm of education has been an ongoing issue in Mexican history since the Catholic Church sought to retain its role in this sphere, while liberals have sought to undermine the Church's role. Since the 1940s, Catholic universities have re-emerged. Unionized school teachers have become a powerful force in the late twentieth and early twenty-first-century Mexican politics.[citation needed]

Post-Independence Era, 1821–1850 edit

When Antonio López de Santa Anna put his Liberal vice president Valentín Gómez Farías in charge of running the government, the vice president created in 1833 a public education system. This preceded the establishment of a Ministry of Public Education.[40] This reform was short-lived, but with the Liberal Reform in the mid-nineteenth century, a normal school for teacher training was established.[41] The Liberals push for public education awaited the end of the War of the Reform and the ousting of the French Empire in Mexico (1862–67). The restored Republic of President Benito Juárez reaffirmed the Liberals principle of separation of church and state, which in the educational sphere meant supplanting the Catholic Church by the Mexican state. Primary education in Mexico was henceforth to be secular, free of fees and tuition, and obligatory.[42]

Reform era, 1850–1876 edit

 
Seal of the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria, founded in 1868

A key figure in higher education in Mexico was Gabino Barreda, who chaired Juárez's commission on education in 1867.[43] Barreda was a follower of French intellectual Auguste Comte who established positivism the dominant philosophical school in the late nineteenth century.[44] The Juárez government created a system of secondary education, and a key institution was the National Preparatory School (Escuela Nacional Preparatoria), founded in 1868 in Mexico City, which Barreda directed.[43] Education at the Preparatoria was uniform for all students and "designed to fill what José Díaz Covarrubias identified as the traditional void between primary and professional training."[45]

Porfiriato, 1876–1910 edit

 
Seal of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México established in 1551 and reopened in 1910

During the Porfiriato (1876–1910), the era of Porfirio Díaz's presidency, secular, public education was a priority for the government, since it was seen as a vehicle for changes in behavior that would benefit the government's commitment to progress. The number of schools expanded and the federal government expanded centralized control. Municipal governments had to yield control to state governments, and the federal bureaucracy for public schooling was established under the Ministry of Education, a cabinet-level position. More money was spent on public schools in this era, increasing faster than other public expenditures. Public schooling was part of Mexico's project of modernization, to create an educated workforce. Those overseeing schools sought to instill the virtues of punctuality, thrift, valuable work habits, abstinence from alcohol and tobacco use, and gambling, along with creating a literate population. Although these were a lofty aim, implementation was hampered by teachers who were poorly trained.[46] Illiteracy was widespread, with the 1910 census indicating only 33% of men and 27% of women were literate. Few students went on to secondary or post-secondary education. "Porfirian schools were more important in their production of middle-class talent for the post-revolutionary educational and cultural efforts than they were in transforming popular behavior and illiteracy."[47] However, the government's commitment to education under Justo Sierra was an important step. He established the secular, state-controlled Universidad Nacional de México; The Pontifical University of Mexico under religious authority was suppressed in 1865.

Women entered the teaching profession, which was considered a proper one for women who worked outside the home. Although the schools were aimed at creating an educated populace envisioned by Porfirian elites, quite a number of school teachers were active in opposing the Díaz regime and participated in the Mexican Revolution,[48] including Pascual Orozco and Plutarco Elías Calles. Women school teachers were important in the nascent women's rights movement, such as Rita Cetina Gutiérrez[49] and Dolores Jiménez y Muro.

1920–1940 edit

Following the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920), the government made a major commitment to public education under its control. Centralization of education was via the federal Ministry of Education (Secretaria de Educación Pública or SEP). José Vasconcelos became its head in 1921 and proceeded to enact a wide range of educational programs, including indigenous education. The so-called "Indian problem," the lack of incorporation of Mexico's indigenous population into the nation as citizens, was an issue that the SEP tackled. Indigenous children were not to be taught in separate schools in their own languages but taught in Spanish along with non-indigenous, mestizo students. An early program was the formation of "Missionaries of Indigenous Culture and Public Education," which had the aim of imparting a secular worldview emphasizing "community development, modernization, and incorporation into the mestizo mainstream."[50]

 
The University of Guadalajara's former rectory, now home to the university's Museum of Art. The university entity underwent a number of reorganizations, but the modern university as it exists today was established in 1925. Some universities in Mexico, such as the University of Guadalajara, have signed agreements with the U.S. to receive and train American students in Medicine[51]

The federal government took over schools run by Mexican states and enrollments for rural primary schools increased significantly. Public schools became a means for the government to directly influence the countryside ideologically through education of the next generations. Public school teachers saw themselves "as part of a mystical crusade for the nation, modernity, and social justice," but SEP personnel often held campesinos and rural culture in contempt. In the 1930s, during the early presidency of Lázaro Cárdenas (1934–40) there was a push for "socialist education" at all levels. The policy made public schools sources of anti-religious ideology fueling resistance by Catholics.[52]

The government expanded normal schools for teacher training after the Mexican Revolution of 1910.[53] As the federal government consolidated power through the formation of the National Revolutionary Party (PNR) in 1928 and its new iteration in 1936, the Mexican Revolutionary Party (PRM), teachers played an important role in the creation of national worker and national peasant organizations. Public education "contributed to the consolidation of an authoritarian single-party regime."[54]

When the Mexican government implemented its policy of socialist education, it directly targeted religious-affiliated, private schooling. Students in these schools were barred from receiving valid educational certification, which effectively prevented many from entering professions. The aim of socialist education was to create a "useful and efficient worker capable of assuming leadership of the national economy, employing methods of modern science with a profound consciousness of collective responsibility ... an indispensable precondition for the coming of a state in the hands of the working classes."[55] The conflict was violent at the National University in Mexico City, which in 1929 had become autonomous from government control, but there was also conflict at regional universities as well, mainly student strikes. Cárdenas backed away from socialist education. Catholic student groups' mobilization against socialist education had lasting consequences, with leaders in the Catholic Student Union playing an important role in the founding of the conservative, pro-Catholic National Action Party in 1939.[56]

Education, post-1940 edit

When President Cárdenas chose Manuel Avila Camacho as his successor, he chose a moderate, particularly on church-state issues where education was contentious. In office, Avila Camacho ended socialist education. Initially, the Ministry of Education continued various policies from the Cárdenas era, but with Avila Camacho's appointment of Jaime Torres Bodet as head of the SEP, government policy sought to raise educational standards and invest in teacher training. Torres Bodet founded the National Institute of Teacher Training. He sought to create a curriculum that was nationalist and democratic. "Education was to be secular, free of religious doctrine, and based on scientific truths."[57]

 
The Colegio Nacional (National College) Building, Mexican honorary academy. Created by presidential decree in 1943

During the period ca. 1940–1960, Mexico experienced sustained economic growth, the so-called Mexican Miracle, which saw increased urbanization and industrialization. The idea that education was a determinant of economic development took hold and the government of President Adolfo López Mateos, who appointed Torres Bodet Minister of Education. Torres Bodet made a comprehensive assessment of Mexican education, which led to the Eleven-Year Plan for Education, attempting to make a commitment that forced the next president to continue implementation. The assessment of Mexican primary-level schools showed that 50% of Mexican children, or 3 million, had access to primary education. Of those, fewer than 25% finished fourth grade. Only about 1,000 of those primary school students would succeed in pursuing a profession. A basic finding was that only 50% of Mexicans could read or write. López Mateos sought reforms to remedy the situation, including training 27,000 more teachers and building more schools. He also created a program to provide free textbooks to students and made their use obligatory in schools.[58]

In 1949, Mexican teachers formed a national union that was affiliated with the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and came to be a powerful bloc within it. The Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (SNTE), (National Union of Education Workers) was formed as a section within the umbrella organization of the Confederation of Mexican Workers (CTM), the labor sector of the dominant party. In the late 1930s, teachers had begun to form unions that were eventually brought into the SNTE.

In 1968, when Mexico hosted the Olympic Games in the capital, there were widespread demonstrations against spending so much on such an event, when there were higher national priorities. University students participated in a major way in these demonstrations, with the government reacting violently in the Tlatelolco massacre of October 1968. In June 1971, there was further student activism in Mexico City that resulted in more violent government repression, known as the Corpus Christi massacre. Recognizing that failures in the educational system was a cause of the 1968 student activism, the government of Gustavo Díaz Ordaz (1964–1970) attempted to implement educational reform as part of a wider social reform. The government sought to reach Mexicans who had not had access to education previously and the use of radio and television were seen as ways to do this. Adult education became a focus of the expansion. With the presidency of Luis Echeverría (1970–1976), the expansion included the use of telenovelas (soap operas) to shape public understandings, and Mexico became a pioneer in the use of this medium for policy matters. Better health care in earlier years had resulted in a population boom as infant mortality declined and fertility increased. With Catholic Church opposition to birth control, the secular format of telenovela were a means to bring a message of the benefits of family planning to women.[59]

 
Seal of the National College of Professional Technical Education, founded in 1978

The government sought to strengthen higher education particularly in the sciences and technology, establishing the National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT) in 1970. It funds fellowships for graduate students to study abroad to increase their specialized knowledge. Despite sustained government efforts over several presidential administrations, Mexican education had not significantly affected low education levels and high levels of illiteracy in the country, especially in rural areas. In 1978, engineer and Mexican politic José Antonio Padilla Segura, founded the National College of Professional Technical Education (Conalep), with its main objective being oriented to the training of technical professionals, graduates of secondary school.[60][61]

President José López Portillo (1976–1982) created a National Literacy Program (Pronalf) in 1980 and then established an independent institute for adult education (Instituto Nacional de Educación para Adultos INEA).[62] With the collapse of the Mexican economy during the oil crisis of 1982, educational reform awaited economic recovery. In 1992, Carlos Salinas de Gortari, who became president in the disputed 1988 elections, instituted changes in the organization of Mexico's educational system. Adopting neoliberal economic policies to promote development, Salinas saw education as a key factor.[63] In an accord with the SNTE, education was decentralized from its control by the Ministry of Public Education (SEP) and came under the control of the Mexican state government. Curriculum reform was also undertaken by the SEP, which included the creation of new textbooks. Protests resulted in the government's withdrawing the textbooks.[64] A third component of the accord was the creation of a system of merit pay for teachers.[65]

 
Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (SNTE) seal

The SNTE grew to be the largest labor union in Latin America, and its head, Elba Esther Gordillo considered the most powerful woman in Mexican politics.[66] The lack of democracy within the teachers' union has been as a source of conflict.[67] Also a source of conflict is union opposition to reforms that undercut union power over teaching positions. In 2012, some teachers from rural areas, specifically, from Michoacan and Guerrero states, opposed federal regulations that prevented them from automatic lifetime tenure, the ability to sell or will their jobs, and the teaching of either English or computer skills.[53][68] Gordillo, head of the SNTE since 1989, was arrested in 2013 as she got off her private airplane in Toluca airport, and charged with corruption.[66]

School attendance has increased over the years. In 1950, Mexico had only three million students enrolled in education. In 2011, there were 32 million enrolled students.[69] The 1960 national census illustrates the historically poor performance of the Mexican educational system. As to all Mexicans over the age of five, the census found 43.7% had not completed one year of school, 50.7% had completed six years or less of school, and only 5.6% had continued their education beyond six years of school.[70] In 2015, 96.2% of six to fourteen year-olds attended school, up from 91.3% in 2000.[71] The state with the highest attendance rate was Hidalgo (97.8%) and the state with the lowest was Chiapas (93%).[71] In the same year, 63% of three to five year-olds attended preschool or kindergarten, up from 52.3% in 2010.[71] Also in 2015, 44% of 15 to 24 year-olds attended secondary or tertiary school, an increase from 32.8% in 2000.[71]

In 2004, the literacy rate was at 97%[72] for youth under the age of 14 and 91% for people over 15,[73] placing Mexico at the 24th place in the world rank according to UNESCO.[74] In 2018, Mexico's literacy rate was 94.86%, up from 82.99% in 1980, with the literacy rates of males and females being relatively equal.[75]

In February 2019, the SEP commemorated the establishment of the program for free textbooks with a publication noting the inclusion of art by Mexicans in successive textbook editions.[76]

The National Autonomous University of Mexico ranks 103th in the QS World University Rankings, making it the highest ranked university in Mexico, after it comes the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education as the highest ranked private school in Mexico and 158th worldwide in 2019.[77] Private business schools also stand out in international rankings. IPADE and EGADE, the business schools of Universidad Panamericana and of Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education respectively, were ranked in the top 10 in a survey conducted by The Wall Street Journal among recruiters outside the United States.[78]

See also edit

References edit

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About edit

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0 (license statement/permission). Text taken from Rethinking Education: Towards a global common good?​, 47, UNESCO. UNESCO.

Sources edit

  • Tamez Guerra, Reyes (2004). (PDF). Mexico City: Dirección General de Planeación, Programación y Presupuesto Secretaría de Educación Pública. ISBN 968-5778-12-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-01-10.
  • Department of State (2004). International Religious Freedom Report 2004. Mexico. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.
  • US Department of Education (2003)

Further reading edit

History, Colonial era edit

  • Aizpuru, Pilar Gonzalbo, "Education: Colonial" in Encyclopedia or Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 434–438.
  • Becerra López, José Luis. La organización de los estudios en la Nueva España. Mexico City: Cultura, 1963.
  • Gómez Canedo, Lino. La educación de los marginados durante la època colonial. Mexico City: Porrúa 1982.
  • Gonzalbo Aizpuru, Pilar. "Education: Colonial" in Encyclopedia or Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 434–438.
  • Kobayashi, José María. La educación como conquista. Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1990.
  • Larroyo, Francisco. Historia comparada de la educacíon in México. Mexico City: Porrúa 1962.
  • Luque Alcaide, Elisa. La educación en Nueva España en el siglo XVIII. Seville: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas 1970.
  • Plaza y Jaén, Bernardo de la. Crónica de la Real y Pontificia Universidad de México escrita en el siglo XVIII. 2 vols. Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 1931.
  • Ramìrez, Tàmmas. Creo en los impactos de la revolución mexicana hacia nuestro sistema escolar-Chilpancingo: Guerrero, 1972.
  • Rodríguez, Martha Eugenia. "Escuela Nacional de Medicina" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 458–461.
  • Tanck de Estrada, Dorothy. La educación ilustrada (1786–1836). Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1977.
  • Vázquez, Josefina Zoraida., et al. Ensayos sobre la historia de la educación en México. Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1981.

History, Post-independence period edit

  • Bazant, Milada. Historia de la educación en el Porfiriato. Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1993.
  • Benjamin, Thomas. La Revolución: Mexico's Great Revolution in Memory, Myth, and History. Austin: University of Texas Press 2000.
  • Britton, John A. Educación y radicalismo en México. 2 vols. Mexico City: SEP-Setentas 1976.
  • Chowning, Margaret. "Culture Wars in the Trenches? Public Schools and Catholic Education in Mexico, 1867–1897". Hispanic American Historical Review 97:4 (Nov. 2017), pp. 613–650.
  • Cook, Maria. Organizing Dissent: Unions, the State, and the Democratic Teachers' Movement in Mexico. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press 1996.
  • Escobar Ohmstede, Antonio. "Education: 1821–1989" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 438–441.
  • Espinosa, David. Jesuit Student Groups, the Universidad Iberoamericana, and Political Resistance in Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2014.
  • "Flunking the test: Failing schools pose a big challenge to President Enrique Peña Nieto's vision for modernising Mexico." The Economist, March 7, 2015, pp. 35–36.
  • Foweraker, Joe. Popular Mobilization in Mexico: The Teachers' Movement, 1977–87. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1992.
  • Gilbert, Dennis. "Rewriting History: Salinas, Zedillo and the 1992 Textbook Controversy". Mexican Studies/Esudios Mexicanos 13(2)Summer 1997.
  • Grindle, Merilee S. Despite the Odds: The Contentious Politics of Education Reform. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press 2004.
  • Hecock, R. Douglas. "Democratization, education reform, and the Mexican Teachers' Union." Latin American Research Review 49.1 (2014): 62–82.
  • INEE (Instituto Nacional para la Evaluación de la Educación). La calidad de la educación básica en México, 2004. Mexico City: INEE 2004
  • Knight, Alan, "Popular Culture and the Revolutionary State in Mexico, 1910–1940," Hispanic American Historical Review 74:3(1994).
  • Lopez-Acevedo, Gladys. "Professional Development and Incentives for Teacher Performance in Schools in Mexico." World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 3236. Washington, DC: World Bank 2004.
  • Lorey, David E. "Education and the challenges of Mexican development." Challenge 38.2 (1995): 51–55.
  • Mabry, Donald J. The Mexican University and the State: Student Conflicts, 1910–1971. College Station, Texas: Texas A & M University Press 1982.
  • McGinn, Noel, and Susan Street. "Has Mexican Education Generated Human or Political Capital?." Comparative Education 20.3 (1984): 323–338.
  • Meneses Morales, Ernesto, et al. Tendencias educativas oficiales en México, 1911–1934. Mexico City: Centro de Estudios Educativos, Universidad Iberoamericana 1986.
  • Meneses Morales, Ernesto, et al. Tendencias educativas oficiales en México,1934–1964. Mexico City: Centro de Estudios Educativos, Universidad Iberoamericana 1988.
  • Meneses Morales, Ernesto. La Universidad Iberoamericana en el Contexto de la Educación Superior Contemporanea. Mexico City: UIA 1979.
  • O'Malley, Irene V. The Myth of the Mexican Revolution: Hero Cults and the Institutionalization of the Mexican State. New York: Greeenwood Press 1986.
  • Ornelas, Carlos. "The Politics of Privatisation, Decentralisation and Education Reform in Mexico." International Review of Education 50 (3–4), 2004: 397–418
  • Raby, David L. Educación y revolución social en Mèxico. Mexico City: SEP-Setentas 1976.
  • Rincón-Gallardo, Santiago. "Large scale pedagogical transformation as widespread cultural change in Mexican public schools." Journal of Educational Change 17.4 (2016): 411–436.
  • Rodríguez, Martha Eugenia. "Escuela Nacional de Medicina" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 458–461.
  • Ruiz, Ramón Eduardo. Mexico: The Challenge of Poverty and Illiteracy. San Marino CA: Huntington Library 1963.
  • Secretaría de Educación Pública. Primer Congreso Nacional de Instrucción, 1889–1928. Mexico City: SEP 1975.
  • Street, Susan. "El SNTE y la política educativa, 1970–1990." Revista Mexicana de Sociología 54 (2)1992: 45–72.
  • Tatto, María Teresa. "Improving teacher education in rural Mexico: The challenges and tensions of constructivist reform." Teaching and teacher education 15.1 (1999): 15–35.
  • Torres Septién, Valentina. "Education: 1940–1996" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 445–449.
  • Vaughan, Mary Kay. The State, Education and Social Class in Mexico, 1880–1928. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press 1982.
  • Vaughan, Mary Kay. "Primary Education and Literacy in Nineteenth-Century Mexico: Research Trends, 1968–1988". Latin American Research Review 24(3)(1990).
  • Vaughan, Mary Kay. The State, Education, and Social Class in Mexico, 1880–1928. DeKalb IL: Northern Illinois University Press 1982.
  • Vaughan, Mary Kay. Cultural Politics in Revolution: Peasants, Teachers, and Schools in Mexico, 1930–1940. Tucson: University of Arizona Press 1997.
  • Vaughan, Mary Kay. "Education: 1889–1940" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, pp. 441–445.
  • Vázquez, Josefina Zoraida. Nacionalismo y educación en México. Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1970.
  • Villa Lever, Lorenza. Los libros de texto gratuitos: La disputa por la educación en México. Guadalajara: Universidad de Guadalajara 1988.
  • World Bank, "Program Document for a Proposed Loan in the Amount of US$300,751,879.70 to the United Mexican States for a Second Upper Secondary Education Development Policy Loan", International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, February 8, 2012

External links edit

  • OECD Education Policy Outlook: Mexico
  • SEP homepage (in Spanish)
  • Information on education in Mexico, OECD – Contains indicators and information about Mexico and how it compares to other OECD and non-OECD countries
  • Diagram of Mexican education system, OECD – Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages. Also in Spanish

education, mexico, long, history, indigenous, peoples, created, institutions, such, telpochcalli, calmecac, royal, pontifical, university, mexico, second, oldest, university, americas, founded, royal, decree, 1551, until, early, twentieth, century, largely, co. Education in Mexico has a long history Indigenous peoples created institutions such as the telpochcalli and the calmecac The Royal and Pontifical University of Mexico the second oldest university in the Americas was founded by royal decree in 1551 Education in Mexico was until the early twentieth century largely confined to males from urban and wealthy segments and under the auspices of the Catholic Church Education in MexicoSecretariat of Public EducationSecretary of EducationDeputy SecretaryDelfina Gomez AlvarezNational education budget 2019 BudgetMXN 807 305 000 000USD 40B 1 General detailsPrimary languagesSpanish as the standard However there are courses available in English Other minority languages are available in their local communities System typeFederalCurrent systemSeptember 25 1921Literacy 2012 Total95 1 2 Male96 2 Female94 2 EnrollmentTotal36 5 millionPrimary18 5 millionSecondary11 5 millionPost secondary4 1 millionAttainmentSecondary diploman aPost secondary diploman aSources 2 and the 2020 Census INEGI The Mexican state has been directly involved in education since the nineteenth century promoting secular education Control of education was a source of an ongoing conflict between the Mexican state and the Catholic Church which since the colonial era had exclusive charge of education 3 4 5 6 The mid nineteenth century Liberal Reform separated church and state which had a direct impact on education President Benito Juarez sought the expansion of public schools During the long tenure of President Porfirio Diaz the expansion of education became a priority under a cabinet level post held by Justo Sierra Sierra also served President Francisco I Madero in the early years of the Mexican Revolution The 1917 Constitution strengthened the Mexican state s power in education During the presidency of Alvaro Obregon in the early 1920s his Minister of Public Education Jose Vasconcelos implemented a massive expansion of access to public secular education and expanded access to secular schooling in rural areas This work was built on and expanded in the administration of Plutarco Elias Calles by Moises Saenz In the 1930s the Mexican government under Lazaro Cardenas mandated socialist education in Mexico and there was considerable push back from the Catholic Church Socialist education was repealed during the 1940s with the administration of Manuel Avila Camacho A number of private universities have opened since the mid twentieth century The Mexican Teachers Union SNTE founded in the late 1940s has had significant political power The Mexican federal government has undertaken measures to reform education which have been opposed by the SNTE Education in Mexico is currently regulated by the Secretariat of Public Education Spanish Secretaria de Educacion Publica SEP Education standards are set by this Ministry at all levels except in autonomous universities chartered by the government e g Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Accreditation of private schools is accomplished by mandatory approval and registration with this institution Religious instruction is prohibited in public schools however religious associations are free to maintain private schools which receive no public funds In the same fashion as other education systems education has identifiable stages primary school junior high school or secondary school high school higher education and postgraduate education Contents 1 Structure of the basic education system 1 1 Primary school 1 2 Junior high school 1 3 High school 2 Educational integration 2 1 Challenges to educational integration 3 Quality of education in Mexico 4 Higher education 4 1 Undergraduate studies 4 2 Postgraduate studies 4 3 Intercultural Universities 5 International education 6 Educational years 6 1 School years 7 History of education 7 1 Education in Mesoamerica Before the Spanish 7 2 Colonial era education 1521 1821 7 2 1 Education of the indigenous in Central Mexico 7 2 2 Education of elite Creole men 7 2 3 Education of girls and mixed race children 7 3 National period 1821 present 7 4 Post Independence Era 1821 1850 7 5 Reform era 1850 1876 7 6 Porfiriato 1876 1910 7 7 1920 1940 7 8 Education post 1940 8 See also 9 References 10 About 11 Sources 12 Further reading 12 1 History Colonial era 12 2 History Post independence period 13 External linksStructure of the basic education system edit nbsp Outside of the Secretariat of Public Education SEP Headquarters building located in Mexico City In Mexico basic education is normally divided in three steps primary school primaria comprising grades 1 6 junior high school secundaria comprising grades 7 9 and high school preparatoria comprising grades 10 12 Depending on definitions primary education comprises primaria and secundaria which are compulsory by law while secondary education only includes preparatoria which has recently been made compulsory Primary school edit See also Primary education The terms Primary School or Elementary School usually corresponds to primaria comprising grades 1 6 when the students are 6 to 12 years old It starts the basic compulsory education system These are the first years of schooling Depending on the school bilingual education may be offered from the beginning where half the day instruction is in Spanish and the rest is in another language Junior high school edit See also Secondary education The terms Junior High School or Middle School usually correspond to secundaria comprising grades 7 9 when the student s age is 12 to 15 years old It is part of the basic compulsory education system following primary school and coming before high school preparatoria At this level more specialized subjects may be taught such as Physics Chemistry and World History There is also the tecnica which provides vocational training and the telesecundaria which provides distance learning 7 Despite the similarities of the words Secondary school and secundaria in Mexico the former is usually translated to preparatoria while in other countries such as Puerto Rico or within the Spanish speaking populations of the United States the term secundaria refers to university High school edit nbsp Students of a high school campus of the National College of Professional Technical Education Conalep Ing Bernardo Quintana Arrioja located in the State of Mexico The terms High School 8 usually corresponds to preparatoria or bachillerato and follow secundaria comprising grades 10 12 when the student s age is 15 to 18 years old Students may choose between two main kinds of high school programs The SEP incorporated and a University Incorporated one depending on the state Other minority of programs are available only for private schools such as the International Baccalaureate which carries a completely different system Nevertheless in order to be taught it must include a national subject at least In addition there are programs such as tecnologia and comercio that prepare students for a particular vocational career 7 Preparatoria traditionally consists of three years of education divided into six semesters with the first semesters having a common curriculum and the latter ones allowing some degree of specialization either in physical sciences physics chemistry biology etc or social sciences commerce philosophy law etc The term preparatoria is most commonly used for institutions that offer a three year education program that prepares the student with general knowledge to continue studying at a university In contrast the term bachillerato is most often used for institutions that provide vocational training in two or three years so the graduate can get a job as a skilled worker for example an assistant accountant a bilingual secretary or a technician 9 An example of an institution that provides this kind of skills in Mexico is the National College of Professional Technical Education Conalep 10 Educational integration edit nbsp The Biblioteca Palafoxiana founded in 1646 was the first public library in colonial Mexico 11 and is sometimes considered the first in the Americas 12 In 2005 it was listed on UNESCO s Memory of the World Register 13 In 1993 educational integration was formally implemented nationwide through the reform article 41 of the General Education Law This law mandates the integration of students with special needs into regular classrooms 14 Although formally the term educational integration is used inclusive education is often used to describe the educational system 15 Implementation of educational integration has taken many years and still continues to face obstacles Under the current model students with severe disabilities that would not benefit from inclusion study the same curriculum as regular classrooms in separate schools called Centros de Atencion Multiple Multiple Attention Center or CAM Otherwise special needs students are placed in regular classrooms and are supported by the Unidades de Servicio y Apoyo a la Educacion Regular or the Unit of Support Services for Regular Education USAER This group is made up of special education teachers speech therapists psychologists and other professionals to help special needs students in the classroom and minimize barriers to their learning 15 Challenges to educational integration edit nbsp Diego Rivera murals in the offices of the Secretaria de Educacion Publica SEP located in Mexico City The combination of USAER professionals and regular teaching working in the same classroom has caused some issues for educational integration Specifically there is confusion about the roles of USAER professionals who work in regular classrooms A study of USAER members found that regardless of urban or rural contexts professionals had four common concerns First USAER professionals felt that they lacked preparation for working in the classroom The second issue was feeling like their role had changed due to more demands being placed on them The last two concerns were the lack of communication and collaboration between teachers and USAER professionals Although the two work in the same classroom they often work independently However this creates problems when adjusting the curriculum for special needs students 15 Accessibility is another challenge for educational integration Schools are required to have accessible buildings and classrooms provide technical support and appropriate materials for special needs students 16 but a case study found that the school was not equipped for students with sensory disabilities The school lacked accessible furniture handicapped restrooms or proper modification for students with sensory disabilities 16 Finally training for new teachers doesn t provide them enough experience with special needs students making the shift to educational integration difficult A study of 286 pre service teachers found that a third of didn t have any experience working with special needs students Additionally 44 of the teachers reported having no formal training in working with this population 17 A qualitative study on pre service teachers assessed their attitude towards special needs students and their self efficacy found that overall most teachers have positive perceptions of inclusive education However teachers with more hours of training more teaching experience and better knowledge of policies had higher levels of confidence in working with students with disabilities 18 Quality of education in Mexico edit nbsp High school campus of the National College of Professional Technical Education Conalep Ing Bernardo Quintana Arrioja in the State of Mexico named after civil Mexican engineer Bernardo Quintana Arrioja In recent years the progression through Mexican education has come under much criticism While over 90 of children in Mexico attend primary school only 62 attend secondary school Only 45 finish secondary school After secondary school only a quarter pass on to higher education 19 A commonly cited reason for this is the lack of infrastructure throughout the rural schools Moreover the government has been criticized for investing too little in students relative to budget citation needed In its 2012 report on education the OECD placed Mexico at below average in mathematics science and reading 20 A program of education reform was enacted in February 2013 which provided for a shift in control of the education system from the teachers union SNTE and its political leader Elba Esther Gordillo to the central and state governments Education in Mexico had been controlled by the teachers union and its leaders for many years 21 Shortly thereafter Gordillo was arrested on racketeering charges 22 As of 2016 update the government continued to struggle with the union and its offshoot CNTE 23 Higher education editSee also List of universities in Mexico There are both public and private institutions of higher education Higher education usually follows the US education model with an at least 4 year bachelor s degree undergraduate level Licenciatura and two degrees at the postgraduate level a 2 year Master s degree Maestria and a 3 year Doctoral degree Doctorado followed by the higher doctorate of Doctor of Sciences Doctor en Ciencias This structure of education very closely conforms to the Bologna Process started in Europe in 1999 allowing Mexican students to study abroad and pursue a master s degree after Licenciatura or a Doctoral degree after Maestria Unlike other OECD countries the majority of Mexico s public universities do not accredit part time enrollment programs 24 25 Undergraduate studies edit nbsp Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico the main campus of this public university in Mexico City Undergraduate studies normally last at least 4 years divided into semesters or quarters depending on the college or university and lead to a bachelor s degree Licenciatura According to OECD reports 23 of Mexicans aged 23 35 have a college degree Although in theory every graduate of a Licenciatura is a Licenciate Licenciado abbreviated Lic of his or her profession it is common to use different titles for common professions such as Engineering and Architecture Engineer Ingeniero abbreviated Ing Electrical Engineer Ingeniero Electrico Electronics Engineer Ingeniero Electronico Mechanical Engineer Ingeniero Mecanico Computer Systems Engineer Ingeniero en Sistemas Computacionales abbreviated I S C Architect Arquitecto abbreviated Arq Licenciate any degree especially those from social sciences Licenciado abbreviated Lic Postgraduate studies edit nbsp The Rectorate left and the CETEC towers at the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education Monterrey Campus New regulations since 2005 divide postgraduate studies at Mexican universities and research centers in two main categories 26 Targeted at professional development Especializacion A 1 year course after a bachelor s degree Licenciatura which awards a Specialization Diploma Diploma de Especializacion Maestria A 2 year degree after a bachelor s degree Licenciatura which awards the title of Master Maestro Targeted at scientific research Maestria en Ciencias A 2 year degree after a bachelor s degree Licenciatura which awards the title of Master of Science Maestro en Ciencias Doctorado A 3 year degree after a master s degree either Maestria or Maestria en Ciencias or a 4 year degree directly after the bachelor s degree Licenciatura for high achieving students The Doctor of Sciences degree Doctor en Ciencias is equivalent to the higher doctorate awarded in countries such as Denmark Ireland the UK and the former USSR countries Intercultural Universities edit Intercultural Universities in Mexico were established in 2004 in response to the lack of enrollment of the indigenous population in the country While an estimated 10 of the population of Mexico is indigenous it is the least represented in higher education According to estimates only between 1 and 3 of higher education enrollment in Mexico is indigenous In response to this inequality the General Coordination for Intercultural and Bilingual Education at the Ministry of Education established Intercultural Universities with the active participation of indigenous organizations and academic institutions in each region 27 International education edit nbsp Universidad Iberoamericana As of January 2015 update the International Schools Consultancy ISC 28 listed Mexico as having 151 international schools 29 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 29 This definition is used by publications including The Economist 30 Educational years editSchool years edit The table below describes the most common patterns for schooling in the state sector nbsp Instituto Politecnico Nacional entrance nbsp Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana nbsp Metro Area of Monterrey Alere flammam veritatis Monument Feed the flame of truth in the main campus of the Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon UANL nbsp Universidad de las Americas Puebla nbsp El Colegio de Mexico The college of Mexico Minimum age Year Months Schools 1 or 2 N A N A Nursery Maternal 2 or 3 1 de preescolar N A Preschool Kinder Jardin de Ninos Educacion preescolar 3 or 4 2 de preescolar N A 4 or 5 3 de preescolar N A 5 or 6 1 de primaria N A Primary school Elementary school Primaria Educacion basica 6 or 7 2 de primaria N A 7 or 8 3 de primaria N A 8 or 9 4 de primaria N A 9 or 10 5 de primaria N A 10 or 11 6 de primaria N A 11 or 12 1 de secundaria N A Secondary school Middle school Junior High School Secundaria Educacion basica 12 or 13 2 de secundaria N A 13 or 14 3 de secundaria N A 14 or 15 4 1 de preparatoria 1st and 2nd semesters High school Preparatoria Bachillerato Educacion media superior 15 or 16 5 2 de preparatoria 3rd and 4th semesters 16 or 17 6 3 de preparatoria 5th and 6th semesters 17 or 18 N A 1st and 2nd semesters 1st 2nd and 3rd quarters Associate degree at two year institutions and if four year then a Bachelor s degree Licentiate Carrera Tecnica and Licenciatura Educacion superior 18 or 19 N A 3rd and 4th semesters 4th 5th and 6th quarters 19 or 20 N A 5th and 6th semesters 7th 8th and 9th quarters 20 or 21 N A 7th and 8th semesters 10th quarter 21 or 22 N A 9th and 10th semester in most of the cases N A N A Master s degree Maestria N A N A Doctorate DoctoradoHistory of education edit nbsp Codex Mendoza Folio 61 recto top Formal education of 15 year old Aztec boys trained for the military or the priesthood bottom A 15 year old girl gets married In central Mexico the history of education stretches back to the Prehispanic era with the education of Nahuas in schools for elites and commoners A formal system of writing was created in various parts of central and southern Mexico with trained experts in its practice After the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire friars embarked on a widespread program of evangelization of Christianity In the colonial era schooling of elite men of European descent was established under the auspices of the Catholic Church Liberals attempts to separate church and state in post independence Mexico included removal of the Catholic Church from education Education remains an important aspect of Mexican institutional and cultural life and conflicts continue about how it should be conducted The history of education in Mexico gives insight into the larger history of the nation Education in Mesoamerica Before the Spanish edit In central Mexico in the cultural area known as Mesoamerica the Aztecs set up schools called calmecac for the training of warriors and schools for the training of priests called cuicacalli An early post conquest manuscript prepared by native scribes for the viceroy of Mexico Codex Mendoza shows these two types of schools Aztec religion was highly complex and priests held a higher status so that the creation of schools to train them in ritual and other aspects of religion was important Overseeing an expansionist empire Aztec rulers needed trained warriors so that the creation of formal schools for their training was as important Colonial era education 1521 1821 edit See also Academy of San Carlos Education of the indigenous in Central Mexico edit nbsp Public library of the Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo UMSNH The oldest institution of higher education in the Americas The Spanish Crown made a significant commitment to education in colonial New Spain The first efforts of schooling in Mexico were friars evangelization of indigenous populations Educating the native population was a crucial justification of the colonizing enterprise and that criollo Spanish American culture was encouraged as a vehicle for integrating the indigenous 31 Fray Pedro de Gante established schools for indigenous in the immediate post conquest years and produced pictorial texts to teach Catholic doctrine All the mendicant orders in Mexico the Franciscans Dominicans and Augustinians built churches in large indigenous communities as places of worship and to teach the catechism so that large outdoor atriums functioned as classrooms 32 Elite indigenous lads were tapped for training as catechists and helpers to the priests whose small numbers could in no way minister to large numbers of ordinary indigenous In 1536 the Franciscans and the Spanish crown established a school to train an indigenous Catholic priesthood the Colegio de Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco which was deemed a failure in its goal of training priests but did create a small cohort of indigenous men who were literate in their native language of Nahuatl as well as Spanish and Latin The Franciscans also founded the school of San Jose de los Naturales in Mexico City which taught trades and crafts to boys The Colegio de San Gregorio was also founded for the education of indigenous elites the most famous of whom was Chimalpahin also known as Don Domingo Francisco de San Anton Munon Chimalpahin Quauhtlehuanitzin Religious orders particularly the Franciscans taught indigenous scribes in central Mexico to be literate in their own languages allowing the creation of documents at the local level for colonial officials and communities to enable crown administration as well as production of last will and testaments petitions to the crown bills of sale censuses and other types of legal record to be produced at the local level 33 The large number of indigenous language documents found in the archives in Mexico and elsewhere have enabled scholars of the New Philology to analyze life of Mexico s colonial era indigenous from indigenous perspectives However despite the large volume of documentation in indigenous languages there is no evidence of that even elite indigenous women were literate 34 Education of elite Creole men edit nbsp Portrait of Francisco Cervantes de Salazar by Jose de Bustos Museo Soumaya The Royal and Pontifical University of Mexico was founded in September 1551 at the request by Mexico s first viceroy Don Antonio de Mendoza to the Spanish crown The university was located in the central core traza of History of Mexico City By comparison Harvard College the oldest in the United States was founded in 1636 and the oldest Canadian University Universite Laval dates from 1663 Its first rector Francisco Cervantes de Salazar wrote an account of the university The institution initially trained in priests lawyers and starting in 1579 medical doctors 35 These were the traditional disciplines of the medieval and early modern eras The Royal and Pontifical University was the sole institution that could confer academic degrees With the title of royal and pontifical university its degrees were titled the same as European degrees 36 The Jesuits arrived in Mexico in 1571 and rapidly founded schools and colegios and sought to confer degrees however the Council of the Indies the royal entity overseeing the Spanish overseas empire decided against them 36 The university retained its premier position One of its best known graduates was Don Carlos de Siguenza y Gongora a Mexican savant of the seventeenth century who was a friend of Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz a cloistered nun and intellectual famous in her lifetime as the Tenth Muse Sor Juana was barred from attending the university due to her gender In general educational institutions were urban based with the capital Mexico City having the largest concentration However there were seminaries to train priests in provincial cities such as the Colegio de San Nicolas founded by Bishop Vasco de Quiroga in the city now called Morelia Insurgent leader Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla served as rector there until he was relieved of his position One of his students was insurgent leader Father Jose Maria Morelos Educated priests were prominent in the movement toward independence from Spain Education of girls and mixed race children edit nbsp Interior del Colegio de Infantes de la Catedral de Mexico Interior of the Infant College of the Cathedral of Mexico Jose Jimenez 1857 Museo Nacional de Arte Most of the Mexican population was illiterate and entirely unschooled and there was no priority for the education of girls 37 A few girls in cities attended schools run by cloistered nuns Some entered convent schools at around age eight to remain cloistered for the rest of their lives 38 There were some schools connected to orphanages or confraternities Private tutors educated girls from wealthy families but only enough so that they could oversee a household There were few opportunities for mixed race boys or girls Education was in short highly selective as befits a stratified society and the possibilities of self realization were a lottery of birth rather than talent 39 National period 1821 present edit During the colonial era education was under the control of the Catholic Church Liberalism emerged as an ideology in the post independence period with a major tenet being public secular education Conflict in the realm of education has been an ongoing issue in Mexican history since the Catholic Church sought to retain its role in this sphere while liberals have sought to undermine the Church s role Since the 1940s Catholic universities have re emerged Unionized school teachers have become a powerful force in the late twentieth and early twenty first century Mexican politics citation needed Post Independence Era 1821 1850 edit When Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna put his Liberal vice president Valentin Gomez Farias in charge of running the government the vice president created in 1833 a public education system This preceded the establishment of a Ministry of Public Education 40 This reform was short lived but with the Liberal Reform in the mid nineteenth century a normal school for teacher training was established 41 The Liberals push for public education awaited the end of the War of the Reform and the ousting of the French Empire in Mexico 1862 67 The restored Republic of President Benito Juarez reaffirmed the Liberals principle of separation of church and state which in the educational sphere meant supplanting the Catholic Church by the Mexican state Primary education in Mexico was henceforth to be secular free of fees and tuition and obligatory 42 Reform era 1850 1876 edit nbsp Seal of the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria founded in 1868 A key figure in higher education in Mexico was Gabino Barreda who chaired Juarez s commission on education in 1867 43 Barreda was a follower of French intellectual Auguste Comte who established positivism the dominant philosophical school in the late nineteenth century 44 The Juarez government created a system of secondary education and a key institution was the National Preparatory School Escuela Nacional Preparatoria founded in 1868 in Mexico City which Barreda directed 43 Education at the Preparatoria was uniform for all students and designed to fill what Jose Diaz Covarrubias identified as the traditional void between primary and professional training 45 Porfiriato 1876 1910 edit nbsp Seal of the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico established in 1551 and reopened in 1910 During the Porfiriato 1876 1910 the era of Porfirio Diaz s presidency secular public education was a priority for the government since it was seen as a vehicle for changes in behavior that would benefit the government s commitment to progress The number of schools expanded and the federal government expanded centralized control Municipal governments had to yield control to state governments and the federal bureaucracy for public schooling was established under the Ministry of Education a cabinet level position More money was spent on public schools in this era increasing faster than other public expenditures Public schooling was part of Mexico s project of modernization to create an educated workforce Those overseeing schools sought to instill the virtues of punctuality thrift valuable work habits abstinence from alcohol and tobacco use and gambling along with creating a literate population Although these were a lofty aim implementation was hampered by teachers who were poorly trained 46 Illiteracy was widespread with the 1910 census indicating only 33 of men and 27 of women were literate Few students went on to secondary or post secondary education Porfirian schools were more important in their production of middle class talent for the post revolutionary educational and cultural efforts than they were in transforming popular behavior and illiteracy 47 However the government s commitment to education under Justo Sierra was an important step He established the secular state controlled Universidad Nacional de Mexico The Pontifical University of Mexico under religious authority was suppressed in 1865 Women entered the teaching profession which was considered a proper one for women who worked outside the home Although the schools were aimed at creating an educated populace envisioned by Porfirian elites quite a number of school teachers were active in opposing the Diaz regime and participated in the Mexican Revolution 48 including Pascual Orozco and Plutarco Elias Calles Women school teachers were important in the nascent women s rights movement such as Rita Cetina Gutierrez 49 and Dolores Jimenez y Muro 1920 1940 edit Following the Mexican Revolution 1910 1920 the government made a major commitment to public education under its control Centralization of education was via the federal Ministry of Education Secretaria de Educacion Publica or SEP Jose Vasconcelos became its head in 1921 and proceeded to enact a wide range of educational programs including indigenous education The so called Indian problem the lack of incorporation of Mexico s indigenous population into the nation as citizens was an issue that the SEP tackled Indigenous children were not to be taught in separate schools in their own languages but taught in Spanish along with non indigenous mestizo students An early program was the formation of Missionaries of Indigenous Culture and Public Education which had the aim of imparting a secular worldview emphasizing community development modernization and incorporation into the mestizo mainstream 50 nbsp The University of Guadalajara s former rectory now home to the university s Museum of Art The university entity underwent a number of reorganizations but the modern university as it exists today was established in 1925 Some universities in Mexico such as the University of Guadalajara have signed agreements with the U S to receive and train American students in Medicine 51 The federal government took over schools run by Mexican states and enrollments for rural primary schools increased significantly Public schools became a means for the government to directly influence the countryside ideologically through education of the next generations Public school teachers saw themselves as part of a mystical crusade for the nation modernity and social justice but SEP personnel often held campesinos and rural culture in contempt In the 1930s during the early presidency of Lazaro Cardenas 1934 40 there was a push for socialist education at all levels The policy made public schools sources of anti religious ideology fueling resistance by Catholics 52 The government expanded normal schools for teacher training after the Mexican Revolution of 1910 53 As the federal government consolidated power through the formation of the National Revolutionary Party PNR in 1928 and its new iteration in 1936 the Mexican Revolutionary Party PRM teachers played an important role in the creation of national worker and national peasant organizations Public education contributed to the consolidation of an authoritarian single party regime 54 When the Mexican government implemented its policy of socialist education it directly targeted religious affiliated private schooling Students in these schools were barred from receiving valid educational certification which effectively prevented many from entering professions The aim of socialist education was to create a useful and efficient worker capable of assuming leadership of the national economy employing methods of modern science with a profound consciousness of collective responsibility an indispensable precondition for the coming of a state in the hands of the working classes 55 The conflict was violent at the National University in Mexico City which in 1929 had become autonomous from government control but there was also conflict at regional universities as well mainly student strikes Cardenas backed away from socialist education Catholic student groups mobilization against socialist education had lasting consequences with leaders in the Catholic Student Union playing an important role in the founding of the conservative pro Catholic National Action Party in 1939 56 Education post 1940 edit When President Cardenas chose Manuel Avila Camacho as his successor he chose a moderate particularly on church state issues where education was contentious In office Avila Camacho ended socialist education Initially the Ministry of Education continued various policies from the Cardenas era but with Avila Camacho s appointment of Jaime Torres Bodet as head of the SEP government policy sought to raise educational standards and invest in teacher training Torres Bodet founded the National Institute of Teacher Training He sought to create a curriculum that was nationalist and democratic Education was to be secular free of religious doctrine and based on scientific truths 57 nbsp The Colegio Nacional National College Building Mexican honorary academy Created by presidential decree in 1943 During the period ca 1940 1960 Mexico experienced sustained economic growth the so called Mexican Miracle which saw increased urbanization and industrialization The idea that education was a determinant of economic development took hold and the government of President Adolfo Lopez Mateos who appointed Torres Bodet Minister of Education Torres Bodet made a comprehensive assessment of Mexican education which led to the Eleven Year Plan for Education attempting to make a commitment that forced the next president to continue implementation The assessment of Mexican primary level schools showed that 50 of Mexican children or 3 million had access to primary education Of those fewer than 25 finished fourth grade Only about 1 000 of those primary school students would succeed in pursuing a profession A basic finding was that only 50 of Mexicans could read or write Lopez Mateos sought reforms to remedy the situation including training 27 000 more teachers and building more schools He also created a program to provide free textbooks to students and made their use obligatory in schools 58 In 1949 Mexican teachers formed a national union that was affiliated with the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI and came to be a powerful bloc within it The Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educacion SNTE National Union of Education Workers was formed as a section within the umbrella organization of the Confederation of Mexican Workers CTM the labor sector of the dominant party In the late 1930s teachers had begun to form unions that were eventually brought into the SNTE In 1968 when Mexico hosted the Olympic Games in the capital there were widespread demonstrations against spending so much on such an event when there were higher national priorities University students participated in a major way in these demonstrations with the government reacting violently in the Tlatelolco massacre of October 1968 In June 1971 there was further student activism in Mexico City that resulted in more violent government repression known as the Corpus Christi massacre Recognizing that failures in the educational system was a cause of the 1968 student activism the government of Gustavo Diaz Ordaz 1964 1970 attempted to implement educational reform as part of a wider social reform The government sought to reach Mexicans who had not had access to education previously and the use of radio and television were seen as ways to do this Adult education became a focus of the expansion With the presidency of Luis Echeverria 1970 1976 the expansion included the use of telenovelas soap operas to shape public understandings and Mexico became a pioneer in the use of this medium for policy matters Better health care in earlier years had resulted in a population boom as infant mortality declined and fertility increased With Catholic Church opposition to birth control the secular format of telenovela were a means to bring a message of the benefits of family planning to women 59 nbsp Seal of the National College of Professional Technical Education founded in 1978 The government sought to strengthen higher education particularly in the sciences and technology establishing the National Council of Science and Technology CONACYT in 1970 It funds fellowships for graduate students to study abroad to increase their specialized knowledge Despite sustained government efforts over several presidential administrations Mexican education had not significantly affected low education levels and high levels of illiteracy in the country especially in rural areas In 1978 engineer and Mexican politic Jose Antonio Padilla Segura founded the National College of Professional Technical Education Conalep with its main objective being oriented to the training of technical professionals graduates of secondary school 60 61 President Jose Lopez Portillo 1976 1982 created a National Literacy Program Pronalf in 1980 and then established an independent institute for adult education Instituto Nacional de Educacion para Adultos INEA 62 With the collapse of the Mexican economy during the oil crisis of 1982 educational reform awaited economic recovery In 1992 Carlos Salinas de Gortari who became president in the disputed 1988 elections instituted changes in the organization of Mexico s educational system Adopting neoliberal economic policies to promote development Salinas saw education as a key factor 63 In an accord with the SNTE education was decentralized from its control by the Ministry of Public Education SEP and came under the control of the Mexican state government Curriculum reform was also undertaken by the SEP which included the creation of new textbooks Protests resulted in the government s withdrawing the textbooks 64 A third component of the accord was the creation of a system of merit pay for teachers 65 nbsp Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educacion SNTE seal The SNTE grew to be the largest labor union in Latin America and its head Elba Esther Gordillo considered the most powerful woman in Mexican politics 66 The lack of democracy within the teachers union has been as a source of conflict 67 Also a source of conflict is union opposition to reforms that undercut union power over teaching positions In 2012 some teachers from rural areas specifically from Michoacan and Guerrero states opposed federal regulations that prevented them from automatic lifetime tenure the ability to sell or will their jobs and the teaching of either English or computer skills 53 68 Gordillo head of the SNTE since 1989 was arrested in 2013 as she got off her private airplane in Toluca airport and charged with corruption 66 School attendance has increased over the years In 1950 Mexico had only three million students enrolled in education In 2011 there were 32 million enrolled students 69 The 1960 national census illustrates the historically poor performance of the Mexican educational system As to all Mexicans over the age of five the census found 43 7 had not completed one year of school 50 7 had completed six years or less of school and only 5 6 had continued their education beyond six years of school 70 In 2015 96 2 of six to fourteen year olds attended school up from 91 3 in 2000 71 The state with the highest attendance rate was Hidalgo 97 8 and the state with the lowest was Chiapas 93 71 In the same year 63 of three to five year olds attended preschool or kindergarten up from 52 3 in 2010 71 Also in 2015 44 of 15 to 24 year olds attended secondary or tertiary school an increase from 32 8 in 2000 71 In 2004 the literacy rate was at 97 72 for youth under the age of 14 and 91 for people over 15 73 placing Mexico at the 24th place in the world rank according to UNESCO 74 In 2018 Mexico s literacy rate was 94 86 up from 82 99 in 1980 with the literacy rates of males and females being relatively equal 75 In February 2019 the SEP commemorated the establishment of the program for free textbooks with a publication noting the inclusion of art by Mexicans in successive textbook editions 76 The National Autonomous University of Mexico ranks 103th in the QS World University Rankings making it the highest ranked university in Mexico after it comes the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education as the highest ranked private school in Mexico and 158th worldwide in 2019 77 Private business schools also stand out in international rankings IPADE and EGADE the business schools of Universidad Panamericana and of Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education respectively were ranked in the top 10 in a survey conducted by The Wall Street Journal among recruiters outside the United States 78 See also edit nbsp Mexico portal nbsp Education portal Luis Villoro Leopoldo Zea Aguilar List of Mexican states by literacy rate Mexican teachers union SNTE TelesecundariaReferences edit Gasto educativo en el PPEF 2020 Impacto de la Reforma Educativa de 2019 Educational expenditure in the PPEF 2020 Impact of the 2019 Educational Reform Centro de Investigacion Economica y Presupuestaria in Spanish Retrieved 2021 06 25 North America Mexico The World Factbook U S Central Intelligence Agency 15 May 2022 Pilar Gonzalbo Aizpuru Education Colonial in Encyclopedia or Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 434 438 Antonio Escobar Ohmstede Education 1821 1989 in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 438 441 Mary Kay Vaughan Education 1889 1940 in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 441 445 Valentina Torres Septien Education 1940 1996 in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 445 449 a b Kuznetsov Yevgeny N Dahlman Carl J 2008 Mexico s Transition to a Knowledge Based Economy Challenges and Opportunities World Bank Publications p 63 doi 10 1596 978 0 8213 6921 0 ISBN 978 0 8213 6921 0 United States Catalogo de Oferta Educativa Nacional PDF ofinac conalep edu mx in Spanish Retrieved 2021 02 26 Mision y Vision CONALEP Gobierno de Mexico Conalep in Spanish Retrieved 2021 02 26 Brescia Michael M July 2004 Liturgical Expressions of Episcopal Power Juan de Palafox y Mendoza and Tridentine Reform in Colonial Mexico The Catholic Historical Review 90 3 497 518 doi 10 1353 cat 2004 0116 JSTOR 25026636 S2CID 159841691 Sherman William H 2010 Palafoxiana Biblioteca In Suarez Michael F Woudhuysen H R eds The Oxford Companion to the Book Oxford University Press Biblioteca Palafoxiana PDF UNESCO Retrieved 27 April 2012 Diario Oficial de la Federacion 1993 Ley General de Educacion retrieved August 10 2018 from http www sep gob mx work models sep1 Resource b490561c 5c33 4254 ad1caad33765928a 07104 pdf a b c Fletcher T Dejud C Klingler C amp Lopez Marisca I 2003 The changing paradigm of special education in Mexico Voices from the field Bilingual Research Journal 27 3 409 430 a b Flores Barrera V J amp Garcia Cedillo I 2016 Apoyos que reciben estudiantes de secundaria con discapacidad en escuelas regulares Corresponden a lo que dicen las leyes Revista Educacion 40 2 1 20 Forlin C Garcia Cedillo I Romero Contreras S Fletcher T amp Rodriguez Hernandez H J 2010 Inclusion in Mexico ensuring supportive attitudes by newly graduated teachers International Journal of Inclusive Education 14 7 723 739 Romero Contreras S Garcia Cedillo I Forli C amp Lomeli Hernandez K A 2013 Preparing teachers for inclusion in Mexico How effective is this process Journal of Education for Teaching 39 5 509 522 Factbox Facts about Mexico s education system Reuters 2011 04 13 Retrieved 2023 07 19 Low Performing Students Why They Fall Behind and How to Help Them Succeed Country note Mexico Retrieved June 16 2016 from http www oecd org mexico PISA 2012 low performers Mexico ENG pdf Mexico s Pena Nieto enacts major education reform BBC 26 February 2013 Retrieved June 16 2016 The law foresees a centralised process for hiring evaluating promoting and retaining teachers Mexico union head Gordillo charged with organised crime BBC 28 February 2013 Retrieved June 16 2016 Juan Montes June 12 2016 Mexico Detains Leader of Dissident Teachers Group in Oaxaca State Ruben Nunez arrested on charges of using illegally obtained funds Attorney General s Office says The Wall Street Journal Retrieved June 16 2016 Kuznetsov amp Dahlman 2008 p 72 Kuznetsov amp Dahlman 2008 p 81 Tamez Guerra Reyes Rubio Oca Julio Fuentes Lemus Bulmaro Valdes Garza Mario May 2005 Disposiciones para la Operacion de Estudios de Posgrado en el Sistema Nacional de Educacion Superior Tecnologica in Spanish Mexico Direccion General de Educacion Superior Tecnologica Rethinking Education Towards a global common good PDF UNESCO 2015 p 47 ISBN 978 92 3 100088 1 Home International School Consultancy www iscresearch com a b International School Consultancy Group gt Information gt ISC News Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2016 07 07 The new local The Economist 17 December 2014 Pilar Gonzalbo Aizpuru Education Colonial in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 p 435 Aizpuru Education Colonial p 435 Karttunen Frances Nahuatl Literacy in The Inca and Aztec States New York Academic Press Lockhart James The Nahuas After the Conquest Stanford Stanford University Press 1992 Martha Eugenia Rodriguez Escuela Nacional de Medicina in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 p 458 a b Aizpuru Education Colonial p 436 Lino Gomez Canedo La educacion de los marginados durante la epoca colonial cap III Casas de recogimiento y de educacion para ninas indias Mexico Porrua 1982 Aizpuru Education Colonial p 437 Aizpuru Education Colonial p 438 Victoria Andrade de Herrara Education in Mexico Historical and Contemporary Educational Systems in Children of La Frontera Binational Efforts to Serve Mexican Migrant and Immigrant Students Educational Resources Information Center ERIC 1996 p 26 Andrade de Herrara Education in Mexico p 27 Andrade de Herrara Education in Mexico p 27 a b Charles A Hale The Transformation of Liberalism in Late Nineteenth Century Mexico Princeton Princeton University Press 1989 p 140 Albert Delmez The Positivist Philosophy in Mexican Education 1867 1873 The Americas vol 6 no 1 Hale The Transformation of Liberalism p 144 Vaughan Mary Kay The State Education and Social Class in Mexico 1880 1928 DeKalb IL Northern Illinois University Press 1982 pp 74 77 Mary Kay Vaughan Nationalizing the Countryside Schools and Communities in the 1930s in The Eagle and the Virgin Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico 1920 1940 Vaughan Mary Kay and Stephen E Lewis eds Durham Duke University Press 2006 p 158 Vaughan State Education and Social Class in Mexico p 76 77 Miller Francesca Feminism and Feminist Organizations in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 2 p 550 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 Lewis Stephen E The Nation Education and the Indian Problem in Mexico 1920 1940 in The Eagle and the Virgin Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico 1920 1940 Mary Kay Vaughan and Stephen E Lewis eds Durham Duke University Press 2006 p 180 Health Care in Mexico Expatforum com Retrieved May 30 2010 Vaughan Nationalizing the Countryside pp 158 59 a b Agren David December 10 2012 Normalistas fight changes in Mexico education system Florida Today Melbourne Florida pp 4A Vaughan Nationalizing the Countryside p 159 Alberto Bremauntz La educacion socialista en Mexico Mexico City Imprenta Rivadeneyra 1943 p 166 Espinosa David Jesuit Student Groups the Universidad Iberoamericana and Political Resistance in Mexico Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2014 Valentina Torres Septien Education 1940 1996 in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 p 446 Torres Septien Education 1940 1996 pp 446 47 Gabriela Soto Laveaga Let s become fewer Soap operas contraception and nationalizing the Mexican family in an overpopulated world Sexuality Research and Social Policy September 2007 vol 4 no 3 Conalep Historia Conalep History conalepibqa in Spanish Retrieved 2021 02 26 Fallece el ingeniero Jose Antonio Padilla Segura Engineer Jose Antonio Padilla Segura dies El Universal in Spanish 2012 03 02 Retrieved 2021 02 26 Torres Septien Education 1940 1996 pp 448 48 Lorey David E Education and the challenges of Mexican development Challenge 38 2 1995 51 55 Dennis Gilbert Rewriting History Salinas Zedillo and the 1992 Textbook Controversy Mexican Studies Estudios Mexicanos Vol 13 No 2 Summer 1997 pp 271 297 doi 10 2307 1052017 Hecock R Douglas Democratization education reform and the Mexican Teachers Union Latin American Research Review 49 1 2014 62 82 a b Mexico union head Gordillo charged with organised crime BBC News 28 February 2013 Retrieved 1 March 2019 Cook Maria Organizing Dissent Unions the State and the Democratic Teachers Movement in Mexico University Park Pennsylvania State University Press 1996 Grindle Merilee S Despite the Odds The Contentious Politics of Education Reform Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 2004 Rama A 2011 April 13 Factbox Facts about Mexico s education system Retrieved November 17 2014 from 1 dead link mexico education factbox idUSTRE73C4UY20110413 Francisco Alba The Population of Mexico Trends Issues and Policies New Brunswick Transaction Books 1982 52 a b c d Principales resultados de la Encuesta Intercensal 2015 Estados Unidos Mexicanos PDF INEGI pp 28 32 Archived from the original PDF on 10 December 2015 Retrieved 9 December 2015 INEGI literacy report 14 2005 Inegi gob mx Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved August 8 2011 INEGI literacy report 15 2005 Inegi gob mx Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved August 8 2011 Mexico Youth Literacy Rate Global Virtual University Archived from the original on July 19 2010 Retrieved October 2 2007 Mexico Literacy Rate 1980 2021 Cultura Secretaria de El arte en los libros de texto gratuitos gob mx in Spanish Retrieved 2023 07 19 Nombran al Tec de Monterrey como la mejor universidad privada de Mexico Telediario CDMX in Spanish 2019 06 19 Retrieved 2019 08 10 Recruiter s scoreboard Highlights PDF The Wall Street Journal Harris Interactive survey of corporate recruiters on business schools Retrieved October 4 2007 About edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA IGO 3 0 license statement permission Text taken from Rethinking Education Towards a global common good 47 UNESCO UNESCO Sources editTamez Guerra Reyes 2004 Sistema Educativo de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos Principales cifras ciclo escolar 2003 2004 PDF Mexico City Direccion General de Planeacion Programacion y Presupuesto Secretaria de Educacion Publica ISBN 968 5778 12 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 01 10 Department of State 2004 International Religious Freedom Report 2004 Mexico Washington D C Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor US Department of Education 2003 Education around the World Mexico Further reading editHistory Colonial era edit Aizpuru Pilar Gonzalbo Education Colonial in Encyclopedia or Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 434 438 Becerra Lopez Jose Luis La organizacion de los estudios en la Nueva Espana Mexico City Cultura 1963 Gomez Canedo Lino La educacion de los marginados durante la epoca colonial Mexico City Porrua 1982 Gonzalbo Aizpuru Pilar Education Colonial in Encyclopedia or Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 434 438 Kobayashi Jose Maria La educacion como conquista Mexico City El Colegio de Mexico 1990 Larroyo Francisco Historia comparada de la educacion in Mexico Mexico City Porrua 1962 Luque Alcaide Elisa La educacion en Nueva Espana en el siglo XVIII Seville Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas 1970 Plaza y Jaen Bernardo de la Cronica de la Real y Pontificia Universidad de Mexico escrita en el siglo XVIII 2 vols Mexico City Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico 1931 Ramirez Tammas Creo en los impactos de la revolucion mexicana hacia nuestro sistema escolar Chilpancingo Guerrero 1972 Rodriguez Martha Eugenia Escuela Nacional de Medicina in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 458 461 Tanck de Estrada Dorothy La educacion ilustrada 1786 1836 Mexico City El Colegio de Mexico 1977 Vazquez Josefina Zoraida et al Ensayos sobre la historia de la educacion en Mexico Mexico City El Colegio de Mexico 1981 History Post independence period edit Bazant Milada Historia de la educacion en el Porfiriato Mexico City El Colegio de Mexico 1993 Benjamin Thomas La Revolucion Mexico s Great Revolution in Memory Myth and History Austin University of Texas Press 2000 Britton John A Educacion y radicalismo en Mexico 2 vols Mexico City SEP Setentas 1976 Chowning Margaret Culture Wars in the Trenches Public Schools and Catholic Education in Mexico 1867 1897 Hispanic American Historical Review 97 4 Nov 2017 pp 613 650 Cook Maria Organizing Dissent Unions the State and the Democratic Teachers Movement in Mexico University Park Pennsylvania State University Press 1996 Escobar Ohmstede Antonio Education 1821 1989 in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 438 441 Espinosa David Jesuit Student Groups the Universidad Iberoamericana and Political Resistance in Mexico Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2014 Flunking the test Failing schools pose a big challenge to President Enrique Pena Nieto s vision for modernising Mexico The Economist March 7 2015 pp 35 36 Foweraker Joe Popular Mobilization in Mexico The Teachers Movement 1977 87 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1992 Gilbert Dennis Rewriting History Salinas Zedillo and the 1992 Textbook Controversy Mexican Studies Esudios Mexicanos 13 2 Summer 1997 Grindle Merilee S Despite the Odds The Contentious Politics of Education Reform Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 2004 Hecock R Douglas Democratization education reform and the Mexican Teachers Union Latin American Research Review 49 1 2014 62 82 INEE Instituto Nacional para la Evaluacion de la Educacion La calidad de la educacion basica en Mexico 2004 Mexico City INEE 2004 Knight Alan Popular Culture and the Revolutionary State in Mexico 1910 1940 Hispanic American Historical Review 74 3 1994 Lopez Acevedo Gladys Professional Development and Incentives for Teacher Performance in Schools in Mexico World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 3236 Washington DC World Bank 2004 Lorey David E Education and the challenges of Mexican development Challenge 38 2 1995 51 55 Mabry Donald J The Mexican University and the State Student Conflicts 1910 1971 College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press 1982 McGinn Noel and Susan Street Has Mexican Education Generated Human or Political Capital Comparative Education 20 3 1984 323 338 Meneses Morales Ernesto et al Tendencias educativas oficiales en Mexico 1911 1934 Mexico City Centro de Estudios Educativos Universidad Iberoamericana 1986 Meneses Morales Ernesto et al Tendencias educativas oficiales en Mexico 1934 1964 Mexico City Centro de Estudios Educativos Universidad Iberoamericana 1988 Meneses Morales Ernesto La Universidad Iberoamericana en el Contexto de la Educacion Superior Contemporanea Mexico City UIA 1979 O Malley Irene V The Myth of the Mexican Revolution Hero Cults and the Institutionalization of the Mexican State New York Greeenwood Press 1986 Ornelas Carlos The Politics of Privatisation Decentralisation and Education Reform in Mexico International Review of Education 50 3 4 2004 397 418 Raby David L Educacion y revolucion social en Mexico Mexico City SEP Setentas 1976 Rincon Gallardo Santiago Large scale pedagogical transformation as widespread cultural change in Mexican public schools Journal of Educational Change 17 4 2016 411 436 Rodriguez Martha Eugenia Escuela Nacional de Medicina in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 458 461 Ruiz Ramon Eduardo Mexico The Challenge of Poverty and Illiteracy San Marino CA Huntington Library 1963 Secretaria de Educacion Publica Primer Congreso Nacional de Instruccion 1889 1928 Mexico City SEP 1975 Street Susan El SNTE y la politica educativa 1970 1990 Revista Mexicana de Sociologia 54 2 1992 45 72 Tatto Maria Teresa Improving teacher education in rural Mexico The challenges and tensions of constructivist reform Teaching and teacher education 15 1 1999 15 35 Torres Septien Valentina Education 1940 1996 in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 445 449 Vaughan Mary Kay The State Education and Social Class in Mexico 1880 1928 DeKalb Northern Illinois University Press 1982 Vaughan Mary Kay Primary Education and Literacy in Nineteenth Century Mexico Research Trends 1968 1988 Latin American Research Review 24 3 1990 Vaughan Mary Kay The State Education and Social Class in Mexico 1880 1928 DeKalb IL Northern Illinois University Press 1982 Vaughan Mary Kay Cultural Politics in Revolution Peasants Teachers and Schools in Mexico 1930 1940 Tucson University of Arizona Press 1997 Vaughan Mary Kay Education 1889 1940 in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 pp 441 445 Vazquez Josefina Zoraida Nacionalismo y educacion en Mexico Mexico City El Colegio de Mexico 1970 Villa Lever Lorenza Los libros de texto gratuitos La disputa por la educacion en Mexico Guadalajara Universidad de Guadalajara 1988 World Bank Program Document for a Proposed Loan in the Amount of US 300 751 879 70 to the United Mexican States for a Second Upper Secondary Education Development Policy Loan International Bank for Reconstruction and Development February 8 2012External links editOECD Education Policy Outlook Mexico SEP homepage in Spanish Information on education in Mexico OECD Contains indicators and information about Mexico and how it compares to other OECD and non OECD countries Diagram of Mexican education system OECD Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages Also in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Education in Mexico amp oldid 1217000658, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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