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Education in Turkey

Education in Turkey is governed by a national system which was established in accordance with the Atatürk's Reforms. It is a state-supervised system designed to produce a skillful professional class for the social and economic institutes of the nation.[2]

A scene from a female-majority class at the Psychology Department of Uludağ University in Bursa, Turkey. In Turkey, 47.5% of staff at the top five universities are female, a higher proportion than for their equivalents in the United States (35.9%), Denmark (31%) and Japan (12.7%).[1]

Compulsory education lasts 12 years. Primary and secondary education is financed by the state and free of charge in public schools, between the ages of 6 and 19. Turkey has over 200 universities as of 2022.[3] ÖSYS, after which high school graduates are assigned to university according to their performance.[4]

Turkey has 97% of primary school enrollment among all eligible children as of 2019. This number has significantly dropped with the Syrian refugee crisis. Many Syrian children left school during the crisis.[5]

In 2002, the total expenditure on education in Turkey amounted to $13.4 billion, including the state budget allocated through the National Ministry of Education and private and international funds.[6] The share of national wealth invested in educational institutions is higher in Turkey than average among OECD countries.[7] Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey is the main national body of R&D in Turkey.

The Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI)[8] finds that when taking into consideration Turkey's income level, the nation is achieving 61.7% of what should be possible based on its resources (income) for primary education and 86.1% for secondary education.[9]

History edit

 
Beyazıt State Library was founded in 1884.
 
Beyazıt State Library was founded in 1884.
 
Istanbul University is the oldest university in Turkey.
 
Mithatpaşa Primary School (1920s) for girls during the Ottoman Empire.
 
Phanar Greek Orthodox College is a Greek minority school, founded in the Ottoman Empire in 1454.

After the foundation of the Turkish Republic the organization of the Ministry of Education gradually developed and was reorganized with the Law no 2287 issued in 1933. The Ministry changed its names several times. It fell under the Ministry of Culture (1935–1941) and was named Ministry of National Education, Youth, and Sports (1983–1989). Since then it has been called the Ministry of National Education.[10] Before the Republic, education institutions were far from having a national character. Schools were organized in three separate channels which were vertical institutions independent of each other. The first and the most common in this organization were the district schools and madrasas based on the teaching of the Quran the Arabian language and memorizing, the second were the Reform schools and high schools supporting innovation and the third were the colleges and minority schools with foreign language education.[10][failed verification]

The Law of Integration of Education, no 430 was issued on 3 March 1924. With this law, the three separate channels were combined, the first one was closed, the second was developed and the third one was taken under the inspection and monitoring of the Ministry of Education. One of its aims was to apply secularism in the area of education.[10] By the law for the Education Organization no 789 issued on 22 March 1926 the Ministry of National Education was given responsibility for defining the degrees and equalities of the public and private schools already opened or to be opened by a ministry other than the Ministry of National Education. This Law brought new arrangements such as "no school can be opened in Turkey without the permission and agreement of the Ministry of National Education" or "curricula shall be prepared by the Ministry of National Education". The vocational-technical education institutions formerly directed by local governments were put under the responsibility of the Ministry of Education.[10]

In 1923–24, there were in Turkey, slightly more than 7,000 secondary school students, almost 3,000 high school students, some 2,000 technical school students and officially 18,000 medrese students of whom 6,000 are claimed to be actual students and the rest who registered to be excluded from military service.[11] The population of Turkey was at that moment some 13–14 million.

 
Literacy rates before the language reform in Turkey (1927). The literacy rates rose to 48.4% among males and 20.7% among females by 1950. In modern-day Turkey, this rate is 98.3%.[12]

On 1 November 1928, Law no 1353 introducing a new Latin-based alphabet was accepted. In 1931, the Turkish Association of History, and in 1932, the Turkish Language Association were established to protect[neutrality is disputed] Turkish from influences of foreign languages, improve it as science suggests and prevent misuse of the Turkish language.[10] The Republican Turkish authorities initially had twelve education districts headed by people appointed by the ministry, but later gave more power to local authorities, with education directors appointed by provincial authorities.[13]

  • there were 5,100 schools in 1923, this figure increased to 58,800 in 2001
  • there were 361,500 students in 1923, this number increased to 16 million in 2001
  • in 1923 12,200 teachers were employed, this number increased to 578,800 in 2001.
  • in 1924 there were 479 medrese (Islamic schools); on average each one of them had approximately 1 or 1.5 hoca (teacher). All medrese were closed down that year by the law of Tevhid-i Tedrisat.[11]

In 1938 mobile courses for women were organized in order to support the further education of the rural female population. Youths who finished primary school as well women to the age of 45 were admitted to take part in these courses. A course lastet for 8 months and then the teachers travelled on to a next village.[14] Between 1940 and 1974 almost 305,000 women took part in 13,429 courses. About 240,000 graduated from the courses with success.[15]

 
Kuleli Military High School in Istanbul near Bosphorus.

Until 1997 children in Turkey were obliged to take five years of education. The 1997 reforms introduced compulsory education for eight years.[16] New legislation introduced in March 2012 prolonged compulsory education to 12 years (İlköğretim ve Eğitim Kanunu ile Bazı Kanunlarda Değişiklik Yapılmasına Dair Kanun).[17]

In July 2017, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government presented a new curriculum for schools, inter alia removing evolution theory and adding the concept of jihad as part of Islamic law in books.[18]

Pre-primary education edit

Pre-primary education includes the optional education of children between 36 and 72 months who are under the age of compulsory primary education. Pre-primary education institutions, independent nurseries, are opened as nursery classes and practical classes within formal and non-formal education institutions with suitable physical capacity.[10] Services related to pre-primary education are given by nurseries, kindergartens, practical classes opened first and foremost by the Ministry of National Education and by day-centers, nursery schools, day care houses, child care houses and child care institutions opened by various ministries and institutions for care or education purposes based on the provisions of ten laws, two statutes and ten regulations. In the academic year 2001–2002, 256,400 children were being educated and 14,500 teachers were employed in 10,500 pre-primary education institutions.[19]

Primary education edit

 
Namık Kemal Lisesi in İzmir.

Primary school (Turkish: İlköğretim Okulu) lasts 8 years. Primary education covers the education and teaching directed to children between 6–14, is compulsory for all citizens, boys or girls, and is given free of charge in public schools. Primary education institutions are schools that provide eight years of uninterrupted education, at the end of which graduates receive a primary education diploma.[10] The first four years of primary school is sometimes referred to as "First School, 1st Level" (Turkish: İlkokul 1. Kademe) but both are correct.

There are four core subjects at first, second and third grades which are Turkish, mathematics, Hayat Bilgisi (literally meaning "life knowledge"), and foreign language. At fourth grade, Hayat Bilgisi is replaced by science and social studies. The foreign language taught at schools changes from school to school. The most common one is English, while some schools teach German, French or Spanish instead of English. Some private schools teach two foreign languages at the same time.

Earlier the term "middle school" (Turkish: ortaokul) was used for the three years education to follow the then compulsory five years at "First School" (Turkish: ilkokul). Now the second four years of primary education are sometimes referred to as "First School, 2nd Level" (Turkish: İlkokul 2. Kademe) but both are correct. Primary schools may be public or private. Public schools are free but private schools' admission fees change from school to school. Foreign languages taught at private schools are usually at a higher level than at public schools since most private schools prefer hiring native speakers as teachers.

There are five core subjects at sixth and seventh grades: Turkish, mathematics, science, social studies, and foreign language. At eighth grade, social studies is replaced by "Turkish History of Revolution and Kemalism" (Turkish: T.C. İnkılap Tarihi ve Atatürkçülük).

In the academic year 2001–2002, 10.3 million students were being educated and 375,500 teachers were employed in 34,900 schools.[19]

Secondary education edit

 
Robert College in Istanbul
 
Beşiktaş Anatolian High School in Istanbul

Secondary education includes all of the general, vocational and technical education institutions that provide at least three years of education after primary school. The system for being accepted to a high school changes almost every year. Sometimes private schools have different exams, sometimes there are 3 exams for 3 years, sometimes there's only one exam but it is calculated differently, sometimes they only look at your school grades. Secondary education aims to give students a good level of common knowledge, and to prepare them for higher education, for a vocation, for life and for business in line with their interests, skills and abilities. In the academic year 2001–2002 2.3 million students were being educated and 134,800 teachers were employed in 6,000 education institutions.[19]

General secondary education covers the education of children between 15 and 17 for at least three years after primary education. General secondary education includes high schools, foreign language teaching high schools, Anatolian High Schools, high schools of science, Anatolia teacher training high schools, and Anatolia fine arts high schools.[19]

Vocational and technical secondary education involves the institutions that both raise students as manpower in business and other professional areas, prepare them for higher education and meet the objectives of general secondary education. Vocational and technical secondary education includes technical education schools for boys, technical education schools for girls, trade and tourism schools, religious education schools, multi-program high schools, special education schools, private education schools and health education schools.[19]

Secondary education is often referred as high school education, since the schools are called lyceum (tr: lise).

In public high schools and vocational high schools, students attend six classes each day, which last for approximately 40 minutes each. In Anatolian high schools and private high schools, the daily programme is typically longer, up to eight classes each day, also including a lunch period. All 9th graders are taught the same classes nationwide, with minor differences in certain cases. These classes are: Turkish language, Turkish literature, mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, geometry, world history, geography, religion & ethics, physical education, a foreign language (in most cases English), a second foreign language (most commonly German but could be French, Italian, Japanese, Arabic, Russian, or Chinese).

When students enter the 11th grade, they typically choose one of four tracks: Turkish language–mathematics, science, social sciences, and foreign languages. In vocational high schools, no tracks are offered, while in science high schools only the science tracks are offered. Different schools may have different policies; some, but not many, schools offer electives instead of academic tracks, giving students a wider range of options. For the 10th, 11th and 12th grade, the compulsory courses are: Turkish language, Turkish literature and republican history. In addition to that, students may be taught the following classes, depending on the track they choose and/or the high school they attend: mathematics, geometry, statistics, physics, biology, chemistry, geography, philosophy, psychology, sociology, economy, logic, arts and music, traffic and health, computer, physical education, first and second foreign language.

 
Istanbul High School (Istanbul Erkek Lisesi in Turkish) was founded in 1886.

The students used to be given a diploma for the academic track they had chosen, which gave them an advantage if they wanted to pursue their higher education in the corresponding fields, as the University Entrance Exam scores were weighted according to the student's track. (e.g. A science student would have an advantage over a Turkish-Mathematics student when applying for Medicine). As of the 2010–2011 educational year, all high school students are given the standard high school diploma.[20]

At the end of high school, following the 12th grade, students take a high school finishing examination and they are required to pass this in order to take the University Entrance Exam and continue their studies at a university. There are four score types for different academic fields, including but not limited to:

  • Turkish language–mathematics: international relations, law, education, psychology, economy, business management, and similar.
  • Science: engineering, computer science, medicine, and other science-related professions.
  • Social sciences: history, geography, and education.
  • Foreign languages: language/linguistics and language teaching.

International education edit

 
Lecture Hall at the Ayazağa campus of Istanbul Technical University.

The International Baccalaureate has been available in Turkey since 1994 when the first school was authorized by the IB[21] and 53 schools now offer one or more of the IB programmes.

Vocational education edit

 
Haydarpaşa campus of Marmara University, originally the Imperial College of Medicine (Mekteb-i Tıbbiye-i Şahane), Istanbul.

Vocational and technical secondary education involves the institutions that both raise students as manpower in business and other professional areas, prepare them for higher education and meet the objectives of general secondary education.[19] Vocational and technical secondary education includes technical education schools for boys, technical education schools for girls, trade and tourism schools, religious education schools, multi-program high schools, special education schools, private education schools and health education schools. In the academic year 2001–2002, 821,900 students were being educated and 66,100 teachers were employed in 3,400 vocational and technical secondary education schools.[19]

According to Article 37 of Vocational Education Law no 3308, the Ministry of National Education is organizing vocational courses in order to prepare the people who have left the formal education system and do not possess the qualifications required for employment for any vacant positions in the business sector. Based on apprenticeship training programs, the Ministry of National Education pays the insurance premiums against occupational accidents, sicknesses during the vocational period and other sicknesses of participants attending courses in relation to their occupation. These participants may take experienced apprenticeship exams after the education they have received and the work they have performed are evaluated according to the Regulations for Evaluating the Certificates and Diplomas in Apprenticeship and Vocational Training.[22]

People who work in the 109 branches mentioned in Law no 3308, have finished primary education and are below the age of 14 may receive training as candidate apprentices or apprentices. Law no 4702 gives apprenticeship training opportunity to those over 19. The period of apprentice training changes between 2–4 years depending on the nature of vocations.[22]

Adolescents who have not attended the formal education system or left the system at any stage may take the experienced apprenticeship exam after 1 year of adaptation training, provided they had reached the age of 16 at the date when the said profession was included in the coverage of law. Those at the age of 18 may directly take the experienced apprenticeship exam, if a certificate is provided to prove that he/she is working in the related profession.[22]

Those who graduate from vocational and technical secondary education institutions or from vocational and technical schools and institutions may take proficiency exam in their own professions. Graduates of technical high school or of 4-year programs in vocational and technical schools and institutions are given a certificate to start businesses with the privileges and responsibilities of a proficiency certificate. In 2001, 248,400 apprentices were being educated and 5,100 teachers were employed in 345 vocational training centers.[22]

International students edit

In recent years, Turkey has become a popular destination for international students. The main reasons are the affordable tuition fees compared to destinations of similar reputation such as Eastern Europe and easier accessibility for international students. Applicants can take the YÖS exam, Turkish university entrance exam for foreign students, or apply with international university admissions such as SAT or high school diploma.

The new system: 4+4+4 edit

 
Presidential Library is the largest library in Ankara, with a collection of over four million books.

In March 2012 the Grand National Assembly passed new legislation on primary and secondary education usually termed as "4+4+4" (4 years primary education, first level, 4 years primary education, second level and 4 years secondary education). Children will begin their primary education in the first month of September following their sixth birthdays and will come to a close during the school year in which students turn 14 years old.[23]

The primary education stages, which includes the first two stages of four years' education each, will entail four years of mandatory elementary education, followed by an additional mandatory four years of middle school education, in which students will be able to choose whether they want to study at a general education middle school or a religious vocational middle school, which are referred to as Imam Hatip schools. The new legislation includes the reopening of Imam Hatip middle schools. Primary education establishments will be set up separately as independent elementary schools and middle schools.[23]

Universities edit

 
Main entrance gate of Istanbul University.
 
The former Robert College building on South Campus of Boğaziçi University, Istanbul
 
SantralIstanbul is an amphitheater, concert halls and a public library complex in Istanbul Bilgi University Campus, Istanbul
 
Students of Middle East Technical University, Ankara
 
Middle East Technical University campus.
 
Istanbul Technical University building.

Higher education includes all levels of institutions giving education past the secondary school level for a period of at least 17 years.[22]

Higher education institutions include:

  • Universities
  • Faculties
  • Institutes
  • Higher education schools
  • Vocational higher education schools
  • Conservatories
  • Application and research centers

In the 1930s, at the suggestion of Albert Einstein, the Atatürk government hired over a thousand established academics, including world renowned émigré professors escaping the Nazi takeover in Germany. Most were in medicine, mathematics, and natural science, plus a few in the faculties of law and the arts. Germany's exiled professors served as directors in eight of twelve Istanbul's basic science Institutes, as well as six directors of Istanbul's seventeen clinics at the Faculty of Medicine.[24][25]

In the academic year 2001–2002 there were 76 universities, 53 of which belonged to the state and 23 to foundations. In these institutions 66,700 personnel were working, 63,000 in state universities and 3,700 in others.[22]

After the national university entrance examination organized by the national examining body students, if they succeed, continue with their studies at a university. Foreign students take the Yös exam or provide equivalent credentials approved by the Higher Education Council (YÖK).[26][27]

Universities provide either two or four years of education for undergraduate studies, while graduate programs last a minimum of two years. Some universities also ask for an additional year of English preparatory study to be completed before the start of studies, unless an exemption examination is passed.

There are around 820 higher education institutions including universities with a total student enrollment of over 1 million. Tertiary education is the responsibility of the Higher Education Council, and funding is provided by the state for public institutions that make up the bulk of the tertiary education system. There are 167 universities in Turkey, which are classified as either public or foundational (private) and 373,353 students were graduated from these universities in 2006.[citation needed] Public universities typically charge very low fees while private foundation universities are highly expensive with fees that can reach $30,000 per annum. Since 1998, universities have been given greater autonomy and were encouraged to raise funds through partnerships with industry.

The quality of education at the Turkish universities varies greatly, some providing education and facilities on par with internationally renowned schools (the technical universities are often compared with universities in the United States, and are regularly visited by the US Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology and their engineering programs deemed substantially equivalent to comparable programs in the US.

Turkish universities actively participate in the SocratesErasmus program of the European Commission, aiming to increase student and academician mobility within the European Union, the European Economic Area countries, and other EU candidate states. An increasing number of Turkish university students complete a part of their studies abroad at other participating countries' universities, and Turkish universities receive students of the same status from abroad. With the passage of law 2547, the rectors of all the public universities are appointed jointly by the faculty, Higher Education Council and the President of Turkey.[28] The former president, Abdullah Gül, suggested that the system might be changed to eliminate the Higher Education Council and political influence.[29][30]

Research edit

The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TÜBİTAK) coordinates basic and applied research and development, acting on proposed policies by the Turkish Academy of Sciences (TÜBA). There are more than 60 research institutes and organizations. Turkey's R&D strengths include agriculture, forestry, health, biotechnology, nuclear technologies, minerals, materials, IT, and defence.

Private schools edit

In the Turkish education system, private schools may be grouped into four.

  • Private Turkish schools: In these schools, which are opened by real or corporate bodies of Turkish nationality, public education programs at pre-primary, primary and secondary education levels are given.
  • Private schools for minorities: These have been established in the Ottoman Empire period by Greek, Armenian and Jewish minorities and were placed under guarantee by the terms of the Lausanne Treaty. These schools are attended by students at pre-primary, primary and secondary education levels who belong to these minority classes and are of the Turkish nationality.
  • Private foreign schools: These are schools established during the Ottoman Empire by French, German, Italian, Austrian and American people who continue their activities under the terms of the Lausanne Treaty. Today these schools are attended by Turkish children.
  • Private international education institutions: They have been opened and are active as per the provisions in the amended article 5 of the Law no. 625.[31]

There are many dershane in cities. They will transform into academic high schools in 2015, as the new law requires.[32][33]

Religious education edit

 
Robert College was founded in 1863 in Istanbul by Cyrus Haimlin and Christopher Robert. The school began its education program in the theology building of the American Missioners Commission. Today, the school is a secular leading-private school.
 
Ince Minaret Medrese is a 13th-century medrese (Islamic school) located in Konya, now housing the Museum of Stone and Wood Art.
 
Çifte Minareli Medrese is an architectural monument of the late Seljuk period in Erzurum. Built as a theological school a few years before 1265.
 
Şemsi Pasha Mosque and medrese (Islamic school) was built by Ottoman imperial architect Mimar Sinan in 1580, the most important architect of Ottoman Empire.

De-establishment edit

In 1927, all courses concerning religion were excluded from the curriculum of primary, secondary, and high schools on the basis that non-Muslims also live in Turkey. Between 1927 and 1949, religious instruction was not permitted in schools. In 1949, the Ministry of Education allowed a course on religion in 4th and 5th grades of primary school.

Re-establishment edit

In 1956, as a result of multi-party democracy, a new government was established. Being more sympathetic towards the religious sentiments of society, this new government introduced a religion course into secondary schools. This time, if the parents wanted to exempt their children from the course, they had to apply to the school with a written request. After nearly ten years, in 1967, the religion course was introduced to the 1st and 2nd grades of high school. Students, however, were enrolled for the course with the written request of their parents. In 1975, the course was extended to the third (last) grade of the high schools. And, finally, following the military coup in 1980, the religion course became schools was also constitutionally secured. The exact title of the course was, "The Culture of Religion and Knowledge of Ethics."

In 1985, the Institute for Creation Research, a United States creationist group, helped advise Turkey's education minister Vehbi Dinçerler on how to introduce creationism in high schools. Turkish academics have stated that the resulting ignorance of evolution led to Turkey coming last in a survey that measured knowledge of evolution in 34 industrialised nations.[34]

Currently, religious education courses begin at the 4th grade (age10) of primary school and continues throughout secondary and high schools. From the 4th to the 8th grade, classes consist of two hours per week. At the high school level, there is one hour of class per week Thus, a student who has graduated from high school receives 8 continuous years of religion courses. There are no fixed books for the course. Rather, each school decides which book to follow—provided that the book for each level is approved by the Ministry of Education. Nearly half of the content of these courses concerns religion and Islam (whom majority are Muslims) with remaining topics ranging from secularism to humanism and from ethical values to etiquette. The major world religions such as Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism and Buddhism are included in the content of the course.

Foreign languages edit

 
Galatasaray University and Galatasaray High School teaching in French.

The most common foreign language is English, which in public schools is taught from 2nd grade (age 8) onwards through to the end of high school.[citation needed]In high school a second foreign language is introduced. However the number of lessons given in public schools is minimal compared to private schools, which begin teaching English in kindergarten, have two or three times as many English lessons in the timetable, and in many cases employ native speakers of English as teachers.

In 2011 the Ministry of Education, under pressure from the Prime Minister to improve the learning of English in Turkey, announced that the approach to language would be thoroughly revised, part of which would include a plan to hire 40,000 foreigners as language assistants in public schools.[35] As a result of the poor standards achieved by the public system many students take an intensive English language "prep year" when entering university. These are offered by both state and private universities throughout Turkey.

In 2012, the Ministry of Education included Kurdish (based on both Kurmanji and Zazaki dialects)[36] to the academic programme of the basic schools as optional classes from the fifth year on.[36]

Later, the Ministry of Education also included Abkhaz, Adyghe, Standard Georgian, and Laz languages in 2013, and Albanian as well as Bosnian languages in February 2017.[37]

In 2015, the Ministry of Education announced that as of the 2016–17 academic year, Arabic courses (as a second language) will be offered to students in elementary school starting in second grade. The Arabic courses will be offered as an elective language course like German, French and English. According to a prepared curriculum, second and third graders will start learning Arabic by listening-comprehension and speaking, while introduction to writing will join these skills in fourth grade and after fifth grade students will start learning the language in all its four basic skills.[38][39]

Indoctrination edit

 
A Turkish flag, a portrait of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the lyrics of the Turkish national anthem, and Atatürk's speech of advice to Turkish youth hanging on a classroom wall.

Turkish education system requires students to be educated on the basis of Turkish nationalism in Atatürk's thought (Atatürk milliyetçiliği) and aims to create individuals who are committed to laique, democratic values of Turkey.[40]: 148 [41]: 77 During Atatürk's presidency, schools to Turkefy the Kurds such as the Elazig Girls' Institute were set up.[42] In the late 1990s, the National Security Council, which at the time was dominated by a secular military, demanded the administration of the Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan to carry out regulations aiming to curb rising Islamic fundamentalism.[43]: 147 

Every weekday early in the morning student oath was to be sung by students until it was abolished in 2013.[44] In every classroom, a portrait of Atatürk, lyrics of the National Anthem and text of Atatürk's Address to Turkish Youth are hung high up at the wall. In history lessons, nationalistic values are promoted[45] and denialism of Armenian genocide is taught.[46]: 787 [47][48]

Criticism edit

 
Ministry of Education in Ankara

Education edit

Constant alterations of education system in Turkey has caused controversy. In 2005 preparatory classes for foreign languages were abolished with only a few high school being exempt from. The examination system for entrance to high schools and universities has been constantly changed since the early 2000s. 17 thousand students getting full scores in first session of TEOG ("transition [exam] from basic education to secondary education") has also caused controversy. Counselor of Ministry of National Education Yusuf Tekin answered this concern by stating students who get full scores in both sessions must be treated as people actually taking the first place which 665 such students exist.[49] Reduction of topics about Atatürk, downgrading in positive sciences teaching and promotion of religious content has drawn reactions.[40]: 147–153 

School meals edit

In late 2010, a group of students brought food to school from home and shared their meal with each other in order to boycott the school canteen due to the rising prices which resulted in 3 students being taken into police custody.[50] In early 2012, another school canteen was boycotted in a similar manner which resulted in one student being expelled from the school due to him "giving information to the press and distributing leaflets without obtaining permission from the school principality".[51] In 2018, school canteens were criticised for selling banned products such as chocolate-covered wafer, cakes, and plastic toys which were designated to be unhealthy for children.[52]

Textbooks edit

Although the government distributes free textbooks, there is a high demand for private textbooks due to the low quality of state-approved textbooks. The purchase of private textbooks is not obligatory, nevertheless, families feel compelled to buy them so that their children receive a better education. As of 2019, the total cost of private textbooks for a student can be about 500.[53] The usage of private textbooks in schools is officially prohibited.[54][55]

Bias in curricula edit

Turkish schools, regardless of whether they are public or private, are required to teach history based on the textbooks approved by the Ministry of Education.[56][57] The state uses its monopoly to increase support for the official position of Armenian genocide denial,[57][58] demonizing Armenians and presenting them as enemies.[59][60] For decades, these textbooks omitted any mention of Armenians as part of Ottoman history.[61][62] Since the 1980s, textbooks discuss the "events of 1915", but deflect the blame from the Ottoman government to other actors, especially imperialist powers who allegedly manipulated the Armenians to achieve their nefarious goals of undermining the empire, and the Armenians themselves, for allegedly committing treason and presenting a threat to the empire. Some textbooks admit that deportations occur and Armenians died, but present this action as necessary and justified. Most recently, textbooks have accused Armenians of perpetrating genocide against Turkish Muslims.[62][63][64] In 2003, students in each grade level were instructed to write essays refuting the genocide.[65]

Teachers are instructed to tell seventh-year students:

State to your students that the Russians also made some Armenians revolt on this front and murder many of our civilian citizens. Explain that the Ottoman State took certain measures following these developments, and in May 1915 implemented the ‘Tehcir Kanunu’ [Displacement Law] regarding the migration and settlement of Armenians in the battleground. Explain that care was taken to ensure that the land in which the Armenians who had to migrate were to settle was fertile, that police stations were established for their security and that measures were taken to ensure they could practice their previous jobs and professions.[59]

Mediums of education edit

In addition to education in Turkish, the Treaty of Lausanne has guarantees of allowing education in other languages. Hebrew was the instructional language of Judaism, and so the Treaty of Lausanne protected instruction in Hebrew, but not in Judaeo-Spanish, a language passed along in families but never used in school instruction. As the Treaty of Lausanne went into effect and was intended to protect languages of instruction for ethnic minorities, French was not included, and so schools for Jewish children teaching in French converted into being Turkish medium schools. The quantity and quality of French instruction declined in those schools for Jewish children, and so many Jewish students began attending other language-medium private schools.[66]

Education for religious minorities edit

The Treaty of Lausanne had guarantees for education of religious minorities. After the establishment of the Republic of Turkey, the government made it illegal for schools to have classes which teach religion. By 1928 many schools for Jewish children had monetary collapses, and/or had ended operations.[66] Eventually, remaining Jewish schools had curricula that resembled that of mainstream Turkish schools.[67]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Grove, Jack (2 May 2013). "Global Gender Index, 2013". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 2 June 2017.
  2. ^ Özelli, M. Tunç (January 1974). "The Evolution of the Formal Educational System and Its Relation to Economic Growth Policies in the First Turkish Republic". International Journal of Middle East Studies. London: Cambridge University Press. 5 (1): 77–92. doi:10.1017/s0020743800032803. ISSN 0020-7438. JSTOR 162345. S2CID 154739517.
  3. ^ "Destination Guides Study in Turkey". www.topuniversities.com/. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  4. ^ Guide For Foreign Students Who Wants To Education In Turkey 15 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Turkey: Primary school enrollment". www.theglobaleconomy.com. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  6. ^ 2002 Report by Turkish Statistical Institute, Prime Ministry of the Republic of Turkey.
  7. ^ "Education at a Glance 2021". www.oecd-ilibrary.org. OECD Indicators. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  8. ^ "Human Rights Measurement Initiative". Human Rights Measurement Initiative. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  9. ^ "Turkey". Rights Tracker.org. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g . National Education at the Beginning of 2002. Ministry of National Education. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012.
  11. ^ a b Feriha Özkan, Atatürk’ün Laiklik Anlayışının Eğitim Sistemimizdeki Yansımaları (1919–1938), Dumlupınar Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Yüksek Lisans Tezi, Kütahya, 2006
  12. ^ Taeuber, Irene B. (April 1958). "Population and Modernization in Turkey". Population Index. Office of Population Research. 24 (2): 110. doi:10.2307/2731516. JSTOR 2731516. OCLC 41483131.
  13. ^ Shaw, Stanford J. and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey (Volume II). Cambridge University Press, 27 May 1977. ISBN 0521291666, 9780521291668. p. 386.
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  21. ^ "TURKEY". Retrieved 16 December 2017.
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  23. ^ a b See an article in English Sabah of 31 March 2012 Modern Turkey’s new liberal education system; accessed on 4 November 2012
  24. ^ Arnold Reisman, "German Jewish Intellectuals' Diaspora in Turkey: 1933–55." The Historian 69.3 (2007): 450-478.
  25. ^ Arnold Reisman, "Jewish Refugees from Nazism, Albert Einstein, and the Modernization of Higher Education in Turkey (1933–1945)." Aleph, no. 7, (2007), pp. 253–81, online.
  26. ^ "Anasayfa - Devletin Kısayolu". turkiye.gov.tr. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  27. ^ "Uluslararası Öğrenci Giriş Sınavı". Ondokuz Mayıs Üniversitesi. Retrieved 20 May 2017. In order to study at Turkish Universities, candidates should take the International Student Exam (YÖS) or take one of the internationally valid exams and have the exam results and baccalaureate specified in the international student application and admission directive of the desired university.
  28. ^ Dogan, Yonca Poyraz (8 September 2008). "Prof. Soysal: Most Turkish universities are still autocratic". Today's Zaman. Retrieved 7 September 2008. Before law No. 2547, rectors were appointed only by the president. Then upon the initiative of some of the universities, including Boğaziçi University, the system was changed. Now there is a middle ground: Both voting by the faculty and YÖK are involved in the process. As a result, YÖK and the president are involved in appointing rectors.[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ "Rektörleri cumhurbaşkanı seçmemeli". Politika. Radikal (in Turkish). 27 August 2008. Retrieved 28 August 2008. Üniversiteler yeniden yapılanırken rektörlerin seçimi veya tayini ile ilgili yeni bir usul olması lazım. Bunlarda siyasi yarış gibi seçim olmaması lazım. Önemli olan bir üniversitenin rekabetinin büyümesinin gelişmesinin öne alınması lazım. Ben yeni bir sistemin getirilmesini, cumhurbaşkanının hiç bu işe karışmamasını arzu ediyorum. Bu konuda hem hükümete hem meclise çağrıda bulunmak isterim.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  31. ^ The Ministry of Education in 2002 Types of School; accessed on 3 November 2012
  32. ^ "10 soruda Dershane Yasası". 14 March 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
  33. ^ "Dershanelerin dönüşümü için tarihler belli oldu". Retrieved 16 December 2017.
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  36. ^ a b "Kürtçe İlk Kez Müfredata Girdi" [Kurdish Is on the Academic Programme for the First Time]. Hürriyet Eğitim. Milliyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Milliyet. 12 September 2012.
  37. ^ "Boşnakça ve Arnavutça Müfredata Girdi" [Bosnian and Albanian Languages Are on the Academic Programme]. Hürriyet Eğitim. Hurriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Hürriyet. 23 February 2017.
  38. ^ Al-Monitor: Turks divided over plans to introduce Arabic-language teaching, 2 November 2015, Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  39. ^ Hürriyet Daily News: Arabic to be offered as second language in Turkish elementary schools, 23 October 2015, Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  40. ^ a b Karaosmanoğlu, Ünal. "Bakan Değiştikçe Eğitim Sistemi Değişti". Sorunlar Sorular Sorumlular. Ankara: Galeati Yayıncılık. ISBN 978-605-81208-2-2.
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  44. ^ "Andımızın kaldırılması kimin talebiydi?". from the original on 19 October 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
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  46. ^ Erbal, Ayda (2015). "The Armenian Genocide, AKA the Elephant in the Room". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 47 (4): 783–790. doi:10.1017/S0020743815000987. ISSN 0020-7438. JSTOR 43998041. S2CID 162834123.
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  48. ^ Dixon, Jennifer M. (2010b). "Education and National Narratives: Changing Representations of the Armenian Genocide in History Textbooks in Turkey". The International Journal for Education Law and Policy. 2010 Special Issue: 103–126.
  49. ^ "MEB Müsteşarı'ndan TEOG'daki 17 bin birinciyle ilgili açıklama". www.haberturk.com (in Turkish). Retrieved 27 December 2020.
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  56. ^ Ekmekçioğlu, Lerna (2016). Recovering Armenia: The Limits of Belonging in Post-Genocide Turkey. Stanford University Press. p. xii. ISBN 978-0-8047-9706-1. OCLC 936219299.
  57. ^ a b Göçek, Fatma Müge (2015). Denial of Violence: Ottoman Past, Turkish Present and Collective Violence Against the Armenians, 1789–2009. Oxford University Press. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-0-19-933420-9. OCLC 870211367.
  58. ^ Dixon 2010b, p. 105.
  59. ^ a b Aybak, Tunç (2016). "Geopolitics of Denial: Turkish State's 'Armenian Problem'" (PDF). Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies. 18 (2): 125–144. doi:10.1080/19448953.2016.1141582. S2CID 147690827. This officially distributed educational material reconstructs the history in line with the denial policies of the government portraying the Armenians as backstabbers and betrayers, who are portrayed as a threat to the sovereignty and identity of modern Turkey. The demonization of the Armenians in Turkish education is a prevailing occurrence that is underwritten by the government to reinforce the denial discourse.
  60. ^ Galip, Özlem Belçim (2020). New Social Movements and the Armenian Question in Turkey: Civil Society vs. the State. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 186. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-59400-8. eISSN 2523-7993. ISBN 978-3-030-59400-8. ISSN 2523-7985. Additionally, for instance, the racism and language of hatred in officially approved school textbooks is very intense. These books still show Armenians as the enemies, so it would be necessary for these books to be amended...
  61. ^ Cheterian, Vicken (2015). Open Wounds: Armenians, Turks and a Century of Genocide. Hurst. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-84904-458-5. The ruling Turkish elite subsequently chose to erase any trace of the Armenians from Turkish history. In the period between 1945 and the 1980s, school textbooks in Turkey made no mention of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire or the deportation of 1915. The Armenians had simply ceased to exist.
  62. ^ a b Gürpınar, Doğan (2016). "The manufacturing of denial: the making of the Turkish 'official thesis' on the Armenian genocide between 1974 and 1990". Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies. 18 (3): 217–240 [234]. doi:10.1080/19448953.2016.1176397. S2CID 148518678. The Armenians were conspicuous by their absence in the school curriculum for decades. Their historical existence in Anatolia was deliberately dismissed... This deliberate omission ceased abruptly in the mid-1980s when a new sub-chapter was introduced tellingly entitled 'Armenian problem'... This sub-chapter depicted the 'Armenian problem' as an exploit and machination of Great Powers (i.e. Britain and Russia) who exploited Armenians as instruments to destabilize the Ottoman Empire and impose their mischievous plots."
    Dixon 2010b, p. 104. "In the 1950s, 60s and 70s, Turkish high school students did not learn anything about Armenians' existence in the Ottoman Empire or about their deportation during World War I (WWI). Starting in the 1980s, however, high school history textbooks taught Turkish students that Armenians rose up and violently attacked the Ottoman government and innocent fellow citizens prior to and during WWI, and that the government forcibly relocated Armenians in order to protect and preserve the Turkish nation. A decade later, Turkish high school students were told that Armenians were traitors and propagandists who had tried to take advantage of the weakness of the Ottoman Empire and had 'stabbed Turks in the back. And more recently, high school history textbooks in Turkey described the 'Turkish-Armenian War' that took place between Turks and Armenians following the end of World War 1,160 and mentioned that recent research and excavations have documented the fact that Armenians committed genocide against Turks."
  63. ^ Bilali, Rezarta (2013). "National Narrative and Social Psychological Influences in Turks' Denial of the Mass Killings of Armenians as Genocide: Understanding Denial". Journal of Social Issues. 69 (1): 16–33. doi:10.1111/josi.12001. The interpretations of this period of history in Turkish textbooks include accounts that may be interpreted as psychological justifications or excuses to deflect responsibility: (a) blaming Armenians for treason or for attacking Turkish–Muslim populations; (b) claiming that violent acts were in self-defense (protection from territorial loss and/or protection of the Turkish population that was being targeted by Armenian banditry); (c) shifting responsibility to external factors and third parties (claiming that Armenian deaths were a result of hardship); (d) claiming benevolent motivations behind the deportations (stopping the inter-communal warfare). These interpretations exemplify how moral disengagement mechanisms operate at the level of collective narratives. Three targets of attribution can be readily identified: the in-group (i.e., denial of responsibility), the out-group (i.e., blaming the victim), and situational factors (i.e., blaming third parties or circumstances).
  64. ^ Dixon, Jennifer M. (2010a). "Defending the Nation? Maintaining Turkey's Narrative of the Armenian Genocide". South European Society and Politics. 15 (3): 467–485. doi:10.1080/13608746.2010.513605. S2CID 144494811.
  65. ^ Dixon 2010b, p. 115.
  66. ^ a b Zetler, Reyhan (2014). "Turkish Jews between 1923 and 1933 – What Did the Turkish Policy between 1923 and 1933 Mean for the Turkish Jews?" (PDF). Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft für Judaistische Forschung (23): 26 (PDF p. 14/28). OCLC 865002828.
  67. ^ Zetler, Reyhan (2014). "Turkish Jews between 1923 and 1933 – What Did the Turkish Policy between 1923 and 1933 Mean for the Turkish Jews?" (PDF). Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft für Judaistische Forschung (23): 26-27 (PDF p. 14-15/28). OCLC 865002828.

External links edit

  • OECD Education Policy Outlook: Turkey (in English)
  • (in English)
  • Ministry of National Education (in Turkish and English)
  • , by the Turkish Statistical Institute, Prime Ministry of the Republic of Turkey (Turkish and English)
  • National Education Statistics Formal Education 2012– 2013
  • Information on education in Turkey, OECD - Contains indicators and information about Turkey and how it compares to other OECD and non-OECD countries
  • Diagram of Turkish education system, OECD - Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages. Also in Turkish
  • Turkish Education: Same Old Religious Obsession, Only Worse Burak Bekdil, Gatestone Institute

education, turkey, governed, national, system, which, established, accordance, with, atatürk, reforms, state, supervised, system, designed, produce, skillful, professional, class, social, economic, institutes, nation, scene, from, female, majority, class, psyc. Education in Turkey is governed by a national system which was established in accordance with the Ataturk s Reforms It is a state supervised system designed to produce a skillful professional class for the social and economic institutes of the nation 2 A scene from a female majority class at the Psychology Department of Uludag University in Bursa Turkey In Turkey 47 5 of staff at the top five universities are female a higher proportion than for their equivalents in the United States 35 9 Denmark 31 and Japan 12 7 1 Compulsory education lasts 12 years Primary and secondary education is financed by the state and free of charge in public schools between the ages of 6 and 19 Turkey has over 200 universities as of 2022 3 OSYS after which high school graduates are assigned to university according to their performance 4 Turkey has 97 of primary school enrollment among all eligible children as of 2019 This number has significantly dropped with the Syrian refugee crisis Many Syrian children left school during the crisis 5 In 2002 the total expenditure on education in Turkey amounted to 13 4 billion including the state budget allocated through the National Ministry of Education and private and international funds 6 The share of national wealth invested in educational institutions is higher in Turkey than average among OECD countries 7 Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey is the main national body of R amp D in Turkey The Human Rights Measurement Initiative HRMI 8 finds that when taking into consideration Turkey s income level the nation is achieving 61 7 of what should be possible based on its resources income for primary education and 86 1 for secondary education 9 Contents 1 History 2 Pre primary education 3 Primary education 4 Secondary education 4 1 International education 4 2 Vocational education 4 3 International students 4 4 The new system 4 4 4 5 Universities 5 1 Research 6 Private schools 7 Religious education 7 1 De establishment 7 2 Re establishment 8 Foreign languages 9 Indoctrination 10 Criticism 10 1 Education 10 2 School meals 10 3 Textbooks 10 4 Bias in curricula 11 Mediums of education 12 Education for religious minorities 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory editSee also Education in the Ottoman Empire See also Turkish language Language reform and modern Turkish nbsp Beyazit State Library was founded in 1884 nbsp Beyazit State Library was founded in 1884 nbsp Istanbul University is the oldest university in Turkey nbsp Mithatpasa Primary School 1920s for girls during the Ottoman Empire nbsp Phanar Greek Orthodox College is a Greek minority school founded in the Ottoman Empire in 1454 After the foundation of the Turkish Republic the organization of the Ministry of Education gradually developed and was reorganized with the Law no 2287 issued in 1933 The Ministry changed its names several times It fell under the Ministry of Culture 1935 1941 and was named Ministry of National Education Youth and Sports 1983 1989 Since then it has been called the Ministry of National Education 10 Before the Republic education institutions were far from having a national character Schools were organized in three separate channels which were vertical institutions independent of each other The first and the most common in this organization were the district schools and madrasas based on the teaching of the Quran the Arabian language and memorizing the second were the Reform schools and high schools supporting innovation and the third were the colleges and minority schools with foreign language education 10 failed verification The Law of Integration of Education no 430 was issued on 3 March 1924 With this law the three separate channels were combined the first one was closed the second was developed and the third one was taken under the inspection and monitoring of the Ministry of Education One of its aims was to apply secularism in the area of education 10 By the law for the Education Organization no 789 issued on 22 March 1926 the Ministry of National Education was given responsibility for defining the degrees and equalities of the public and private schools already opened or to be opened by a ministry other than the Ministry of National Education This Law brought new arrangements such as no school can be opened in Turkey without the permission and agreement of the Ministry of National Education or curricula shall be prepared by the Ministry of National Education The vocational technical education institutions formerly directed by local governments were put under the responsibility of the Ministry of Education 10 In 1923 24 there were in Turkey slightly more than 7 000 secondary school students almost 3 000 high school students some 2 000 technical school students and officially 18 000 medrese students of whom 6 000 are claimed to be actual students and the rest who registered to be excluded from military service 11 The population of Turkey was at that moment some 13 14 million nbsp Literacy rates before the language reform in Turkey 1927 The literacy rates rose to 48 4 among males and 20 7 among females by 1950 In modern day Turkey this rate is 98 3 12 On 1 November 1928 Law no 1353 introducing a new Latin based alphabet was accepted In 1931 the Turkish Association of History and in 1932 the Turkish Language Association were established to protect neutrality is disputed Turkish from influences of foreign languages improve it as science suggests and prevent misuse of the Turkish language 10 The Republican Turkish authorities initially had twelve education districts headed by people appointed by the ministry but later gave more power to local authorities with education directors appointed by provincial authorities 13 there were 5 100 schools in 1923 this figure increased to 58 800 in 2001 there were 361 500 students in 1923 this number increased to 16 million in 2001 in 1923 12 200 teachers were employed this number increased to 578 800 in 2001 in 1924 there were 479 medrese Islamic schools on average each one of them had approximately 1 or 1 5 hoca teacher All medrese were closed down that year by the law of Tevhid i Tedrisat 11 In 1938 mobile courses for women were organized in order to support the further education of the rural female population Youths who finished primary school as well women to the age of 45 were admitted to take part in these courses A course lastet for 8 months and then the teachers travelled on to a next village 14 Between 1940 and 1974 almost 305 000 women took part in 13 429 courses About 240 000 graduated from the courses with success 15 nbsp Kuleli Military High School in Istanbul near Bosphorus Until 1997 children in Turkey were obliged to take five years of education The 1997 reforms introduced compulsory education for eight years 16 New legislation introduced in March 2012 prolonged compulsory education to 12 years Ilkogretim ve Egitim Kanunu ile Bazi Kanunlarda Degisiklik Yapilmasina Dair Kanun 17 In July 2017 the Justice and Development Party AKP government presented a new curriculum for schools inter alia removing evolution theory and adding the concept of jihad as part of Islamic law in books 18 Pre primary education editPre primary education includes the optional education of children between 36 and 72 months who are under the age of compulsory primary education Pre primary education institutions independent nurseries are opened as nursery classes and practical classes within formal and non formal education institutions with suitable physical capacity 10 Services related to pre primary education are given by nurseries kindergartens practical classes opened first and foremost by the Ministry of National Education and by day centers nursery schools day care houses child care houses and child care institutions opened by various ministries and institutions for care or education purposes based on the provisions of ten laws two statutes and ten regulations In the academic year 2001 2002 256 400 children were being educated and 14 500 teachers were employed in 10 500 pre primary education institutions 19 Primary education edit nbsp Namik Kemal Lisesi in Izmir Primary school Turkish Ilkogretim Okulu lasts 8 years Primary education covers the education and teaching directed to children between 6 14 is compulsory for all citizens boys or girls and is given free of charge in public schools Primary education institutions are schools that provide eight years of uninterrupted education at the end of which graduates receive a primary education diploma 10 The first four years of primary school is sometimes referred to as First School 1st Level Turkish Ilkokul 1 Kademe but both are correct There are four core subjects at first second and third grades which are Turkish mathematics Hayat Bilgisi literally meaning life knowledge and foreign language At fourth grade Hayat Bilgisi is replaced by science and social studies The foreign language taught at schools changes from school to school The most common one is English while some schools teach German French or Spanish instead of English Some private schools teach two foreign languages at the same time Earlier the term middle school Turkish ortaokul was used for the three years education to follow the then compulsory five years at First School Turkish ilkokul Now the second four years of primary education are sometimes referred to as First School 2nd Level Turkish Ilkokul 2 Kademe but both are correct Primary schools may be public or private Public schools are free but private schools admission fees change from school to school Foreign languages taught at private schools are usually at a higher level than at public schools since most private schools prefer hiring native speakers as teachers There are five core subjects at sixth and seventh grades Turkish mathematics science social studies and foreign language At eighth grade social studies is replaced by Turkish History of Revolution and Kemalism Turkish T C Inkilap Tarihi ve Ataturkculuk In the academic year 2001 2002 10 3 million students were being educated and 375 500 teachers were employed in 34 900 schools 19 Secondary education editSee also List of high schools in Turkey nbsp Robert College in Istanbul nbsp Besiktas Anatolian High School in IstanbulSecondary education includes all of the general vocational and technical education institutions that provide at least three years of education after primary school The system for being accepted to a high school changes almost every year Sometimes private schools have different exams sometimes there are 3 exams for 3 years sometimes there s only one exam but it is calculated differently sometimes they only look at your school grades Secondary education aims to give students a good level of common knowledge and to prepare them for higher education for a vocation for life and for business in line with their interests skills and abilities In the academic year 2001 2002 2 3 million students were being educated and 134 800 teachers were employed in 6 000 education institutions 19 General secondary education covers the education of children between 15 and 17 for at least three years after primary education General secondary education includes high schools foreign language teaching high schools Anatolian High Schools high schools of science Anatolia teacher training high schools and Anatolia fine arts high schools 19 Vocational and technical secondary education involves the institutions that both raise students as manpower in business and other professional areas prepare them for higher education and meet the objectives of general secondary education Vocational and technical secondary education includes technical education schools for boys technical education schools for girls trade and tourism schools religious education schools multi program high schools special education schools private education schools and health education schools 19 Secondary education is often referred as high school education since the schools are called lyceum tr lise In public high schools and vocational high schools students attend six classes each day which last for approximately 40 minutes each In Anatolian high schools and private high schools the daily programme is typically longer up to eight classes each day also including a lunch period All 9th graders are taught the same classes nationwide with minor differences in certain cases These classes are Turkish language Turkish literature mathematics physics chemistry biology geometry world history geography religion amp ethics physical education a foreign language in most cases English a second foreign language most commonly German but could be French Italian Japanese Arabic Russian or Chinese When students enter the 11th grade they typically choose one of four tracks Turkish language mathematics science social sciences and foreign languages In vocational high schools no tracks are offered while in science high schools only the science tracks are offered Different schools may have different policies some but not many schools offer electives instead of academic tracks giving students a wider range of options For the 10th 11th and 12th grade the compulsory courses are Turkish language Turkish literature and republican history In addition to that students may be taught the following classes depending on the track they choose and or the high school they attend mathematics geometry statistics physics biology chemistry geography philosophy psychology sociology economy logic arts and music traffic and health computer physical education first and second foreign language nbsp Istanbul High School Istanbul Erkek Lisesi in Turkish was founded in 1886 The students used to be given a diploma for the academic track they had chosen which gave them an advantage if they wanted to pursue their higher education in the corresponding fields as the University Entrance Exam scores were weighted according to the student s track e g A science student would have an advantage over a Turkish Mathematics student when applying for Medicine As of the 2010 2011 educational year all high school students are given the standard high school diploma 20 At the end of high school following the 12th grade students take a high school finishing examination and they are required to pass this in order to take the University Entrance Exam and continue their studies at a university There are four score types for different academic fields including but not limited to Turkish language mathematics international relations law education psychology economy business management and similar Science engineering computer science medicine and other science related professions Social sciences history geography and education Foreign languages language linguistics and language teaching International education edit nbsp Lecture Hall at the Ayazaga campus of Istanbul Technical University The International Baccalaureate has been available in Turkey since 1994 when the first school was authorized by the IB 21 and 53 schools now offer one or more of the IB programmes Vocational education edit nbsp Haydarpasa campus of Marmara University originally the Imperial College of Medicine Mekteb i Tibbiye i Sahane Istanbul Vocational and technical secondary education involves the institutions that both raise students as manpower in business and other professional areas prepare them for higher education and meet the objectives of general secondary education 19 Vocational and technical secondary education includes technical education schools for boys technical education schools for girls trade and tourism schools religious education schools multi program high schools special education schools private education schools and health education schools In the academic year 2001 2002 821 900 students were being educated and 66 100 teachers were employed in 3 400 vocational and technical secondary education schools 19 According to Article 37 of Vocational Education Law no 3308 the Ministry of National Education is organizing vocational courses in order to prepare the people who have left the formal education system and do not possess the qualifications required for employment for any vacant positions in the business sector Based on apprenticeship training programs the Ministry of National Education pays the insurance premiums against occupational accidents sicknesses during the vocational period and other sicknesses of participants attending courses in relation to their occupation These participants may take experienced apprenticeship exams after the education they have received and the work they have performed are evaluated according to the Regulations for Evaluating the Certificates and Diplomas in Apprenticeship and Vocational Training 22 People who work in the 109 branches mentioned in Law no 3308 have finished primary education and are below the age of 14 may receive training as candidate apprentices or apprentices Law no 4702 gives apprenticeship training opportunity to those over 19 The period of apprentice training changes between 2 4 years depending on the nature of vocations 22 Adolescents who have not attended the formal education system or left the system at any stage may take the experienced apprenticeship exam after 1 year of adaptation training provided they had reached the age of 16 at the date when the said profession was included in the coverage of law Those at the age of 18 may directly take the experienced apprenticeship exam if a certificate is provided to prove that he she is working in the related profession 22 Those who graduate from vocational and technical secondary education institutions or from vocational and technical schools and institutions may take proficiency exam in their own professions Graduates of technical high school or of 4 year programs in vocational and technical schools and institutions are given a certificate to start businesses with the privileges and responsibilities of a proficiency certificate In 2001 248 400 apprentices were being educated and 5 100 teachers were employed in 345 vocational training centers 22 International students edit In recent years Turkey has become a popular destination for international students The main reasons are the affordable tuition fees compared to destinations of similar reputation such as Eastern Europe and easier accessibility for international students Applicants can take the YOS exam Turkish university entrance exam for foreign students or apply with international university admissions such as SAT or high school diploma The new system 4 4 4 edit nbsp Presidential Library is the largest library in Ankara with a collection of over four million books In March 2012 the Grand National Assembly passed new legislation on primary and secondary education usually termed as 4 4 4 4 years primary education first level 4 years primary education second level and 4 years secondary education Children will begin their primary education in the first month of September following their sixth birthdays and will come to a close during the school year in which students turn 14 years old 23 The primary education stages which includes the first two stages of four years education each will entail four years of mandatory elementary education followed by an additional mandatory four years of middle school education in which students will be able to choose whether they want to study at a general education middle school or a religious vocational middle school which are referred to as Imam Hatip schools The new legislation includes the reopening of Imam Hatip middle schools Primary education establishments will be set up separately as independent elementary schools and middle schools 23 Universities edit nbsp Main entrance gate of Istanbul University nbsp The former Robert College building on South Campus of Bogazici University Istanbul nbsp SantralIstanbul is an amphitheater concert halls and a public library complex in Istanbul Bilgi University Campus Istanbul nbsp Students of Middle East Technical University Ankara nbsp Middle East Technical University campus nbsp Istanbul Technical University building See also List of universities in Turkey See also OSS Higher education includes all levels of institutions giving education past the secondary school level for a period of at least 17 years 22 Higher education institutions include Universities Faculties Institutes Higher education schools Vocational higher education schools Conservatories Application and research centersIn the 1930s at the suggestion of Albert Einstein the Ataturk government hired over a thousand established academics including world renowned emigre professors escaping the Nazi takeover in Germany Most were in medicine mathematics and natural science plus a few in the faculties of law and the arts Germany s exiled professors served as directors in eight of twelve Istanbul s basic science Institutes as well as six directors of Istanbul s seventeen clinics at the Faculty of Medicine 24 25 In the academic year 2001 2002 there were 76 universities 53 of which belonged to the state and 23 to foundations In these institutions 66 700 personnel were working 63 000 in state universities and 3 700 in others 22 After the national university entrance examination organized by the national examining body students if they succeed continue with their studies at a university Foreign students take the Yos exam or provide equivalent credentials approved by the Higher Education Council YOK 26 27 Universities provide either two or four years of education for undergraduate studies while graduate programs last a minimum of two years Some universities also ask for an additional year of English preparatory study to be completed before the start of studies unless an exemption examination is passed There are around 820 higher education institutions including universities with a total student enrollment of over 1 million Tertiary education is the responsibility of the Higher Education Council and funding is provided by the state for public institutions that make up the bulk of the tertiary education system There are 167 universities in Turkey which are classified as either public or foundational private and 373 353 students were graduated from these universities in 2006 citation needed Public universities typically charge very low fees while private foundation universities are highly expensive with fees that can reach 30 000 per annum Since 1998 universities have been given greater autonomy and were encouraged to raise funds through partnerships with industry The quality of education at the Turkish universities varies greatly some providing education and facilities on par with internationally renowned schools the technical universities are often compared with universities in the United States and are regularly visited by the US Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology and their engineering programs deemed substantially equivalent to comparable programs in the US Turkish universities actively participate in the Socrates Erasmus program of the European Commission aiming to increase student and academician mobility within the European Union the European Economic Area countries and other EU candidate states An increasing number of Turkish university students complete a part of their studies abroad at other participating countries universities and Turkish universities receive students of the same status from abroad With the passage of law 2547 the rectors of all the public universities are appointed jointly by the faculty Higher Education Council and the President of Turkey 28 The former president Abdullah Gul suggested that the system might be changed to eliminate the Higher Education Council and political influence 29 30 Research edit The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey TUBITAK coordinates basic and applied research and development acting on proposed policies by the Turkish Academy of Sciences TUBA There are more than 60 research institutes and organizations Turkey s R amp D strengths include agriculture forestry health biotechnology nuclear technologies minerals materials IT and defence Private schools editIn the Turkish education system private schools may be grouped into four Private Turkish schools In these schools which are opened by real or corporate bodies of Turkish nationality public education programs at pre primary primary and secondary education levels are given Private schools for minorities These have been established in the Ottoman Empire period by Greek Armenian and Jewish minorities and were placed under guarantee by the terms of the Lausanne Treaty These schools are attended by students at pre primary primary and secondary education levels who belong to these minority classes and are of the Turkish nationality Private foreign schools These are schools established during the Ottoman Empire by French German Italian Austrian and American people who continue their activities under the terms of the Lausanne Treaty Today these schools are attended by Turkish children Private international education institutions They have been opened and are active as per the provisions in the amended article 5 of the Law no 625 31 There are many dershane in cities They will transform into academic high schools in 2015 as the new law requires 32 33 Religious education edit nbsp Robert College was founded in 1863 in Istanbul by Cyrus Haimlin and Christopher Robert The school began its education program in the theology building of the American Missioners Commission Today the school is a secular leading private school nbsp Ince Minaret Medrese is a 13th century medrese Islamic school located in Konya now housing the Museum of Stone and Wood Art nbsp Cifte Minareli Medrese is an architectural monument of the late Seljuk period in Erzurum Built as a theological school a few years before 1265 nbsp Semsi Pasha Mosque and medrese Islamic school was built by Ottoman imperial architect Mimar Sinan in 1580 the most important architect of Ottoman Empire De establishment edit In 1927 all courses concerning religion were excluded from the curriculum of primary secondary and high schools on the basis that non Muslims also live in Turkey Between 1927 and 1949 religious instruction was not permitted in schools In 1949 the Ministry of Education allowed a course on religion in 4th and 5th grades of primary school Re establishment edit In 1956 as a result of multi party democracy a new government was established Being more sympathetic towards the religious sentiments of society this new government introduced a religion course into secondary schools This time if the parents wanted to exempt their children from the course they had to apply to the school with a written request After nearly ten years in 1967 the religion course was introduced to the 1st and 2nd grades of high school Students however were enrolled for the course with the written request of their parents In 1975 the course was extended to the third last grade of the high schools And finally following the military coup in 1980 the religion course became schools was also constitutionally secured The exact title of the course was The Culture of Religion and Knowledge of Ethics In 1985 the Institute for Creation Research a United States creationist group helped advise Turkey s education minister Vehbi Dincerler on how to introduce creationism in high schools Turkish academics have stated that the resulting ignorance of evolution led to Turkey coming last in a survey that measured knowledge of evolution in 34 industrialised nations 34 Currently religious education courses begin at the 4th grade age10 of primary school and continues throughout secondary and high schools From the 4th to the 8th grade classes consist of two hours per week At the high school level there is one hour of class per week Thus a student who has graduated from high school receives 8 continuous years of religion courses There are no fixed books for the course Rather each school decides which book to follow provided that the book for each level is approved by the Ministry of Education Nearly half of the content of these courses concerns religion and Islam whom majority are Muslims with remaining topics ranging from secularism to humanism and from ethical values to etiquette The major world religions such as Judaism Christianity Hinduism and Buddhism are included in the content of the course Foreign languages edit nbsp Galatasaray University and Galatasaray High School teaching in French The most common foreign language is English which in public schools is taught from 2nd grade age 8 onwards through to the end of high school citation needed In high school a second foreign language is introduced However the number of lessons given in public schools is minimal compared to private schools which begin teaching English in kindergarten have two or three times as many English lessons in the timetable and in many cases employ native speakers of English as teachers In 2011 the Ministry of Education under pressure from the Prime Minister to improve the learning of English in Turkey announced that the approach to language would be thoroughly revised part of which would include a plan to hire 40 000 foreigners as language assistants in public schools 35 As a result of the poor standards achieved by the public system many students take an intensive English language prep year when entering university These are offered by both state and private universities throughout Turkey In 2012 the Ministry of Education included Kurdish based on both Kurmanji and Zazaki dialects 36 to the academic programme of the basic schools as optional classes from the fifth year on 36 Later the Ministry of Education also included Abkhaz Adyghe Standard Georgian and Laz languages in 2013 and Albanian as well as Bosnian languages in February 2017 37 In 2015 the Ministry of Education announced that as of the 2016 17 academic year Arabic courses as a second language will be offered to students in elementary school starting in second grade The Arabic courses will be offered as an elective language course like German French and English According to a prepared curriculum second and third graders will start learning Arabic by listening comprehension and speaking while introduction to writing will join these skills in fourth grade and after fifth grade students will start learning the language in all its four basic skills 38 39 Indoctrination editSee also Turkish textbook controversies nbsp A Turkish flag a portrait of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk the lyrics of the Turkish national anthem and Ataturk s speech of advice to Turkish youth hanging on a classroom wall Turkish education system requires students to be educated on the basis of Turkish nationalism in Ataturk s thought Ataturk milliyetciligi and aims to create individuals who are committed to laique democratic values of Turkey 40 148 41 77 During Ataturk s presidency schools to Turkefy the Kurds such as the Elazig Girls Institute were set up 42 In the late 1990s the National Security Council which at the time was dominated by a secular military demanded the administration of the Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan to carry out regulations aiming to curb rising Islamic fundamentalism 43 147 Every weekday early in the morning student oath was to be sung by students until it was abolished in 2013 44 In every classroom a portrait of Ataturk lyrics of the National Anthem and text of Ataturk s Address to Turkish Youth are hung high up at the wall In history lessons nationalistic values are promoted 45 and denialism of Armenian genocide is taught 46 787 47 48 Criticism edit nbsp Ministry of Education in AnkaraEducation edit Constant alterations of education system in Turkey has caused controversy In 2005 preparatory classes for foreign languages were abolished with only a few high school being exempt from The examination system for entrance to high schools and universities has been constantly changed since the early 2000s 17 thousand students getting full scores in first session of TEOG transition exam from basic education to secondary education has also caused controversy Counselor of Ministry of National Education Yusuf Tekin answered this concern by stating students who get full scores in both sessions must be treated as people actually taking the first place which 665 such students exist 49 Reduction of topics about Ataturk downgrading in positive sciences teaching and promotion of religious content has drawn reactions 40 147 153 School meals edit In late 2010 a group of students brought food to school from home and shared their meal with each other in order to boycott the school canteen due to the rising prices which resulted in 3 students being taken into police custody 50 In early 2012 another school canteen was boycotted in a similar manner which resulted in one student being expelled from the school due to him giving information to the press and distributing leaflets without obtaining permission from the school principality 51 In 2018 school canteens were criticised for selling banned products such as chocolate covered wafer cakes and plastic toys which were designated to be unhealthy for children 52 Textbooks edit Although the government distributes free textbooks there is a high demand for private textbooks due to the low quality of state approved textbooks The purchase of private textbooks is not obligatory nevertheless families feel compelled to buy them so that their children receive a better education As of 2019 the total cost of private textbooks for a student can be about 500 53 The usage of private textbooks in schools is officially prohibited 54 55 Bias in curricula edit This section is an excerpt from Bias in curricula Turkey edit Turkish schools regardless of whether they are public or private are required to teach history based on the textbooks approved by the Ministry of Education 56 57 The state uses its monopoly to increase support for the official position of Armenian genocide denial 57 58 demonizing Armenians and presenting them as enemies 59 60 For decades these textbooks omitted any mention of Armenians as part of Ottoman history 61 62 Since the 1980s textbooks discuss the events of 1915 but deflect the blame from the Ottoman government to other actors especially imperialist powers who allegedly manipulated the Armenians to achieve their nefarious goals of undermining the empire and the Armenians themselves for allegedly committing treason and presenting a threat to the empire Some textbooks admit that deportations occur and Armenians died but present this action as necessary and justified Most recently textbooks have accused Armenians of perpetrating genocide against Turkish Muslims 62 63 64 In 2003 students in each grade level were instructed to write essays refuting the genocide 65 Teachers are instructed to tell seventh year students State to your students that the Russians also made some Armenians revolt on this front and murder many of our civilian citizens Explain that the Ottoman State took certain measures following these developments and in May 1915 implemented the Tehcir Kanunu Displacement Law regarding the migration and settlement of Armenians in the battleground Explain that care was taken to ensure that the land in which the Armenians who had to migrate were to settle was fertile that police stations were established for their security and that measures were taken to ensure they could practice their previous jobs and professions 59 Mediums of education editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2023 In addition to education in Turkish the Treaty of Lausanne has guarantees of allowing education in other languages Hebrew was the instructional language of Judaism and so the Treaty of Lausanne protected instruction in Hebrew but not in Judaeo Spanish a language passed along in families but never used in school instruction As the Treaty of Lausanne went into effect and was intended to protect languages of instruction for ethnic minorities French was not included and so schools for Jewish children teaching in French converted into being Turkish medium schools The quantity and quality of French instruction declined in those schools for Jewish children and so many Jewish students began attending other language medium private schools 66 Education for religious minorities editThe Treaty of Lausanne had guarantees for education of religious minorities After the establishment of the Republic of Turkey the government made it illegal for schools to have classes which teach religion By 1928 many schools for Jewish children had monetary collapses and or had ended operations 66 Eventually remaining Jewish schools had curricula that resembled that of mainstream Turkish schools 67 See also editNation s schoolsPortals nbsp Turkey nbsp EducationReferences edit Grove Jack 2 May 2013 Global Gender Index 2013 Times Higher Education Retrieved 2 June 2017 Ozelli M Tunc January 1974 The Evolution of the Formal Educational System and Its Relation to Economic Growth Policies in the First Turkish Republic International Journal of Middle East Studies London Cambridge University Press 5 1 77 92 doi 10 1017 s0020743800032803 ISSN 0020 7438 JSTOR 162345 S2CID 154739517 Destination Guides Study in Turkey www topuniversities com Retrieved 15 March 2022 Guide For Foreign Students Who Wants To Education In Turkey Archived 15 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Turkey Primary school enrollment www theglobaleconomy com Retrieved 15 March 2022 2002 Report by Turkish Statistical Institute Prime Ministry of the Republic of Turkey Education at a Glance 2021 www oecd ilibrary org OECD Indicators Retrieved 15 March 2022 Human Rights Measurement Initiative Human Rights Measurement Initiative Retrieved 1 May 2023 Turkey Rights Tracker org Retrieved 1 May 2023 a b c d e f g Overview of the Historical Development of the Ministry of National Education National Education at the Beginning of 2002 Ministry of National Education Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 a b Feriha Ozkan Ataturk un Laiklik Anlayisinin Egitim Sistemimizdeki Yansimalari 1919 1938 Dumlupinar Universitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitusu Yuksek Lisans Tezi Kutahya 2006 Taeuber Irene B April 1958 Population and Modernization in Turkey Population Index Office of Population Research 24 2 110 doi 10 2307 2731516 JSTOR 2731516 OCLC 41483131 Shaw Stanford J and Ezel Kural Shaw History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Volume II Cambridge University Press 27 May 1977 ISBN 0521291666 9780521291668 p 386 Gocek Fatma Muge 30 June 2017 Contested Spaces in Contemporary Turkey Environmental Urban and Secular Politics Bloomsbury Publishing p 139 ISBN 978 1 78673 228 6 Gocek Fatma Muge 30 June 2017 p 143 Ilhan Dulger May 2004 Turkey Rapid Coverage for Compulsory Education The 1997 Basic Education Program Accessed 4 November 2012 Basbakanlik Mevzuati Gelistirme ve Yayin Genel Mudurlugu www resmigazete gov tr Retrieved 30 April 2020 Turkish education ministry reveals new curriculum Evolution out jihad in Hurriyet Daily News 18 July 2017 a b c d e f g Taken from the Education Statistics by the Ministry of Education for 2002 accessed on 3 November 2012 Decision of the Turkish Ministry of National Education in Turkish TURKEY Retrieved 16 December 2017 a b c d e f 2002 report of the Ministry for Education on Higher Education accessed 3 November 2012 a b See an article in English Sabah of 31 March 2012 Modern Turkey s new liberal education system accessed on 4 November 2012 Arnold Reisman German Jewish Intellectuals Diaspora in Turkey 1933 55 The Historian 69 3 2007 450 478 Arnold Reisman Jewish Refugees from Nazism Albert Einstein and the Modernization of Higher Education in Turkey 1933 1945 Aleph no 7 2007 pp 253 81 online Anasayfa Devletin Kisayolu turkiye gov tr Retrieved 20 May 2017 Uluslararasi Ogrenci Giris Sinavi Ondokuz Mayis Universitesi Retrieved 20 May 2017 In order to study at Turkish Universities candidates should take the International Student Exam YOS or take one of the internationally valid exams and have the exam results and baccalaureate specified in the international student application and admission directive of the desired university Dogan Yonca Poyraz 8 September 2008 Prof Soysal Most Turkish universities are still autocratic Today s Zaman Retrieved 7 September 2008 Before law No 2547 rectors were appointed only by the president Then upon the initiative of some of the universities including Bogazici University the system was changed Now there is a middle ground Both voting by the faculty and YOK are involved in the process As a result YOK and the president are involved in appointing rectors permanent dead link Rektorleri cumhurbaskani secmemeli Politika Radikal in Turkish 27 August 2008 Retrieved 28 August 2008 Universiteler yeniden yapilanirken rektorlerin secimi veya tayini ile ilgili yeni bir usul olmasi lazim Bunlarda siyasi yaris gibi secim olmamasi lazim Onemli olan bir universitenin rekabetinin buyumesinin gelismesinin one alinmasi lazim Ben yeni bir sistemin getirilmesini cumhurbaskaninin hic bu ise karismamasini arzu ediyorum Bu konuda hem hukumete hem meclise cagrida bulunmak isterim Hedefyum Konu Anlatimi Turkiye nin en Buyuk Konu Anlatimi Sitesi Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 3 August 2019 The Ministry of Education in 2002 Types of School accessed on 3 November 2012 10 soruda Dershane Yasasi 14 March 2014 Retrieved 16 December 2017 Dershanelerin donusumu icin tarihler belli oldu Retrieved 16 December 2017 Songun Sevim 27 February 2009 Turkey evolves as creationist center Hurriyet Daily News Retrieved 17 March 2009 Turkey to hire 40 000 native English speakers as guest teachers Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 26 March 2011 a b Kurtce Ilk Kez Mufredata Girdi Kurdish Is on the Academic Programme for the First Time Hurriyet Egitim Milliyet com tr in Turkish Milliyet 12 September 2012 Bosnakca ve Arnavutca Mufredata Girdi Bosnian and Albanian Languages Are on the Academic Programme Hurriyet Egitim Hurriyet com tr in Turkish Hurriyet 23 February 2017 Al Monitor Turks divided over plans to introduce Arabic language teaching 2 November 2015 Retrieved 25 September 2018 Hurriyet Daily News Arabic to be offered as second language in Turkish elementary schools 23 October 2015 Retrieved 25 September 2018 a b Karaosmanoglu Unal Bakan Degistikce Egitim Sistemi Degisti Sorunlar Sorular Sorumlular Ankara Galeati Yayincilik ISBN 978 605 81208 2 2 Milli Egitim Bakanligi Orta Ogretim Kurumlari Yonetmeligi PDF Archived PDF from the original on 18 August 2019 Ugur Umit Ungor The Making of Modern Turkey Nation and State in Eastern Anatolia 1913 1950 Oxford University Press pp 170 210 Retrieved 10 August 2022 Karacan Serpil 1997 Turkish Education Past Present and Future Insight Turkey 5 147 153 ISSN 1302 177X JSTOR 26726629 Andimizin kaldirilmasi kimin talebiydi Archived from the original on 19 October 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2021 Inal Kemal Yazar 1998 Turkiye de ders kitaplarinda demokratik ve miliyetci degerler 27 Mayis ve 12 Eylul askeri mudahale donemlerine iliskin bir inceleme Thesis thesis in Turkish Ankara Universitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitusu Egitim Programlari ve Ogretim Egitimin Sosyal ve Tarihi Temelleri Anabilim Dali Erbal Ayda 2015 The Armenian Genocide AKA the Elephant in the Room International Journal of Middle East Studies 47 4 783 790 doi 10 1017 S0020743815000987 ISSN 0020 7438 JSTOR 43998041 S2CID 162834123 Adak Hulya 2016 Teaching the Armenian Genocide in Turkey Curriculum Methods and Sources PMLA 131 5 1515 1518 doi 10 1632 pmla 2016 131 5 1515 ISSN 0030 8129 S2CID 164859829 Dixon Jennifer M 2010b Education and National Narratives Changing Representations of the Armenian Genocide in History Textbooks in Turkey The International Journal for Education Law and Policy 2010 Special Issue 103 126 MEB Mustesari ndan TEOG daki 17 bin birinciyle ilgili aciklama www haberturk com in Turkish Retrieved 27 December 2020 Celik Emir Liselinin Kantin Boykotu Idare Polis Isbirligine Takildi Retrieved 15 July 2021 Boykot Edersen Okuldan Atilirsin Retrieved 15 July 2021 Okul kantini degil sanki supermarket www sozcu com tr in Turkish 10 March 2018 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Yuce Muzeyyen 17 September 2019 Yetersiz MEB kitaplari kaynak kitap lari mecbur kildi gazeteduvar in Turkish Archived from the original on 15 July 2021 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Ogretmenlere uyari www haberturk com in Turkish Retrieved 15 July 2021 Okullarda Kaynak Kitap Yasak Kurala Uymayan Ogretmen Sonucuna Katlanir Milliyet in Turkish 28 September 2018 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Ekmekcioglu Lerna 2016 Recovering Armenia The Limits of Belonging in Post Genocide Turkey Stanford University Press p xii ISBN 978 0 8047 9706 1 OCLC 936219299 a b Gocek Fatma Muge 2015 Denial of Violence Ottoman Past Turkish Present and Collective Violence Against the Armenians 1789 2009 Oxford University Press pp 63 64 ISBN 978 0 19 933420 9 OCLC 870211367 Dixon 2010b p 105 a b Aybak Tunc 2016 Geopolitics of Denial Turkish State s Armenian Problem PDF Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 18 2 125 144 doi 10 1080 19448953 2016 1141582 S2CID 147690827 This officially distributed educational material reconstructs the history in line with the denial policies of the government portraying the Armenians as backstabbers and betrayers who are portrayed as a threat to the sovereignty and identity of modern Turkey The demonization of the Armenians in Turkish education is a prevailing occurrence that is underwritten by the government to reinforce the denial discourse Galip Ozlem Belcim 2020 New Social Movements and the Armenian Question in Turkey Civil Society vs the State Palgrave Macmillan p 186 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 59400 8 eISSN 2523 7993 ISBN 978 3 030 59400 8 ISSN 2523 7985 Additionally for instance the racism and language of hatred in officially approved school textbooks is very intense These books still show Armenians as the enemies so it would be necessary for these books to be amended Cheterian Vicken 2015 Open Wounds Armenians Turks and a Century of Genocide Hurst p 64 ISBN 978 1 84904 458 5 The ruling Turkish elite subsequently chose to erase any trace of the Armenians from Turkish history In the period between 1945 and the 1980s school textbooks in Turkey made no mention of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire or the deportation of 1915 The Armenians had simply ceased to exist a b Gurpinar Dogan 2016 The manufacturing of denial the making of the Turkish official thesis on the Armenian genocide between 1974 and 1990 Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 18 3 217 240 234 doi 10 1080 19448953 2016 1176397 S2CID 148518678 The Armenians were conspicuous by their absence in the school curriculum for decades Their historical existence in Anatolia was deliberately dismissed This deliberate omission ceased abruptly in the mid 1980s when a new sub chapter was introduced tellingly entitled Armenian problem This sub chapter depicted the Armenian problem as an exploit and machination of Great Powers i e Britain and Russia who exploited Armenians as instruments to destabilize the Ottoman Empire and impose their mischievous plots Dixon 2010b p 104 In the 1950s 60s and 70s Turkish high school students did not learn anything about Armenians existence in the Ottoman Empire or about their deportation during World War I WWI Starting in the 1980s however high school history textbooks taught Turkish students that Armenians rose up and violently attacked the Ottoman government and innocent fellow citizens prior to and during WWI and that the government forcibly relocated Armenians in order to protect and preserve the Turkish nation A decade later Turkish high school students were told that Armenians were traitors and propagandists who had tried to take advantage of the weakness of the Ottoman Empire and had stabbed Turks in the back And more recently high school history textbooks in Turkey described the Turkish Armenian War that took place between Turks and Armenians following the end of World War 1 160 and mentioned that recent research and excavations have documented the fact that Armenians committed genocide against Turks Bilali Rezarta 2013 National Narrative and Social Psychological Influences in Turks Denial of the Mass Killings of Armenians as Genocide Understanding Denial Journal of Social Issues 69 1 16 33 doi 10 1111 josi 12001 The interpretations of this period of history in Turkish textbooks include accounts that may be interpreted as psychological justifications or excuses to deflect responsibility a blaming Armenians for treason or for attacking Turkish Muslim populations b claiming that violent acts were in self defense protection from territorial loss and or protection of the Turkish population that was being targeted by Armenian banditry c shifting responsibility to external factors and third parties claiming that Armenian deaths were a result of hardship d claiming benevolent motivations behind the deportations stopping the inter communal warfare These interpretations exemplify how moral disengagement mechanisms operate at the level of collective narratives Three targets of attribution can be readily identified the in group i e denial of responsibility the out group i e blaming the victim and situational factors i e blaming third parties or circumstances Dixon Jennifer M 2010a Defending the Nation Maintaining Turkey s Narrative of the Armenian Genocide South European Society and Politics 15 3 467 485 doi 10 1080 13608746 2010 513605 S2CID 144494811 Dixon 2010b p 115 a b Zetler Reyhan 2014 Turkish Jews between 1923 and 1933 What Did the Turkish Policy between 1923 and 1933 Mean for the Turkish Jews PDF Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft fur Judaistische Forschung 23 26 PDF p 14 28 OCLC 865002828 Zetler Reyhan 2014 Turkish Jews between 1923 and 1933 What Did the Turkish Policy between 1923 and 1933 Mean for the Turkish Jews PDF Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft fur Judaistische Forschung 23 26 27 PDF p 14 15 28 OCLC 865002828 External links editOECD Education Policy Outlook Turkey in English Guide For International Students in English Ministry of National Education in Turkish and English Population and Development Indicators by the Turkish Statistical Institute Prime Ministry of the Republic of Turkey Turkish and English National Education Statistics Formal Education 2012 2013 Information on education in Turkey OECD Contains indicators and information about Turkey and how it compares to other OECD and non OECD countries Diagram of Turkish education system OECD Using 1997 ISCED classification of programmes and typical ages Also in Turkish Turkish Education Same Old Religious Obsession Only Worse Burak Bekdil Gatestone Institute Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Education in Turkey amp oldid 1193543724, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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