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- Q6878766 subject Q7061190.
- Q6878766 subject Q8304312.
- Q6878766 abstract "Mission Sucre (launched in late 2003) is one the Bolivarian Missions (a series of anti-poverty and social welfare programs) implemented by former Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez. The program provides free and ongoing higher (college and graduate level) education to the two million adult Venezuelans.Mission Sucre was originally referred to as El Plan Extraordinario Mariscal Antonio José de Sucre, shortened as Misión Sucre. Named after the 18th century independence leader Antonio José de Sucre, Mission Sucre establishes as a strategy the mass education and graduation of university professionals in three years, as opposed to the traditionally mandated five or more years. The mission is thus an attempt to popularize, reform, and expand Venezuelan higher education beyond its traditional role of educating the children of a proportion of Venezuelans that can pay for collateral costs involved while studying in a college or university, due to uneven geographically distributed high education institutes (transportation expenses, housing). The program is thus geared especially towards economically excluded high school students and the poorest and most marginalized segments of society, providing an opportunity for all people desiring a higher education.In this mission, certain matters and subjects, such as foreign languages, are mostly left out of the curriculum. The program functions mostly at the margins of the Venezuelan tertiary education system, although several key institutions, such as Simon Bolivar University, have endorsed the program. For example, thousands of non-traditional, mostly low income students are currently undergoing training to become licensed physicians in a unique and accelerated curriculum.Mission Sucre imparts tertiary education; other educational missions include Mission Robinson (for instructing the illiterate) and Mission Ribas (for obtaining secondary studies, classes, and graduation certificates).".
- Q6878766 wikiPageExternalLink www.misionsucre.gov.ve.
- Q6878766 wikiPageExternalLink www.misionvenezuela.gov.ve.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q1148329.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q162719.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q182137.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q189779.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q191164.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q311323.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q41144.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q41146.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q43271.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q638434.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q6878690.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q6878707.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q6972526.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q7061190.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q717.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q808945.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q8304312.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q8440.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q891365.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q891367.
- Q6878766 wikiPageWikiLink Q948495.
- Q6878766 comment "Mission Sucre (launched in late 2003) is one the Bolivarian Missions (a series of anti-poverty and social welfare programs) implemented by former Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez. The program provides free and ongoing higher (college and graduate level) education to the two million adult Venezuelans.Mission Sucre was originally referred to as El Plan Extraordinario Mariscal Antonio José de Sucre, shortened as Misión Sucre.".
- Q6878766 label "Mission Sucre".
- Q6878766 homepage www.misionsucre.gov.ve.