Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Education_in_Madagascar> ?p ?o }
- Education_in_Madagascar abstract "Education in Madagascar has a long and distinguished history. Formal schooling began with medieval Arab seafarers, who established a handful of Islamic primary schools (kuttabs) and developed a transcription of the Malagasy language using Arabic script, known as sorabe. These schools were short-lived, and formal education was only to return under the 19th-century Kingdom of Madagascar when the support of successive kings and queens produced the most developed public school system in precolonial Sub-Saharan Africa. However, formal schools were largely limited to the central highlands around the capital of Antananarivo and were frequented by children of the noble class andriana. Among other segments of the island's population, traditional education predominated through the early 20th century. This informal transmission of communal knowledge, skills and norms was oriented toward preparing children to take their place in a social hierarchy dominated by community elders and particularly the ancestors (razana), who were believed to oversee and influence events on earth.Since coming under French colonial authority in 1896, the education system in Madagascar has steadily expanded into more remote and rural communities while coming under increased control of the state. National education objectives have reflected changing government priorities over time. Colonial schooling taught basic skills and French language fluency to most children, while particularly strong students were selected to receive training for civil servant roles at the secondary level. Post-independence education in the First Republic (1960–1975) under President Philibert Tsiranana retained a strong French influence with textbooks and teachers of French origin. The post-colonial backlash that brought about the Second Republic (1975–1992) saw schools serve as vehicles for citizen indoctrination into Admiral Didier Ratsiraka's socialist ideology. The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 prompted a wave of democratization across Africa, launching the democratic Third Republic (1992–2010). Renewed international cooperation resulted in significant foreign aid for the education sector, which adopted numerous reforms promoted by United Nations organizations and other partners in the international development sector.Education was prioritized under President Marc Ravalomanana (2001–2009), who sought to improve both access and quality of formal and non-formal education. A massive campaign of school renovation, expansion and construction has been coupled with the recruitment and training of tens of thousands more teachers. This initiative was supported with funds from intergovernmental organizations such as the World Bank and UNESCO, and bilateral grants from many countries, including France, the United States and Japan. A key pedagogical objective of these reforms included a shift from a traditional, didactic teaching style to a student-centered form of instruction involving frequent group work. As of 2009, Madagascar was on target to achieve the Education For All objective of universal enrollment at the primary level. Student achievement, teacher quality, widespread shortage of materials and access to secondary and tertiary schooling continue to be challenges, as are poverty-related obstacles such as high repetition and attrition rates and poor student health. The 2009 political crisis in Madagascar resulted in cessation of all but emergency aid to the country, further exacerbating poverty-related challenges and threatening to undo much recent progress in the education sector.".
- Education_in_Madagascar thumbnail Diego_Suarez_Antsiranana_urban_public_primary_school_(EPP)_Madagascar.jpg?width=300.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageID "16577079".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageLength "26223".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageOutDegree "73".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageRevisionID "680998389".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink 2009_Malagasy_political_crisis.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Africa.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Agronomy.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Andriana.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Antananarivo.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Antsiranana.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Arabic_script.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Bilingual.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Category:Education_in_Madagascar.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Christianity_in_Madagascar.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink College.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink David_Jones_(missionary).
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Didier_Ratsiraka.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Diploma.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Dissolution_of_the_Soviet_Union.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Education.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Education_For_All.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Fady_(taboo).
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Fianarantsoa.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink French_Madagascar.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Human_science.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Human_sciences.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Imerina.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink James_Cameron_(missionary).
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Madagascar.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Latin_alphabet.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Imerina_monarchs.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Malagasy_monarchs.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink London_Missionary_Society.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Madagascar.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Mahajanga.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Maktab.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Malagasy_language.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Marc_Ravalomanana.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Merina_Kingdom.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Multilingualism.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Philibert_Tsiranana.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Primary_school.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Private_sector.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Rainilaiarivony.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Ranavalona_I.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Ranavalona_II.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Ranavalona_III.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Rasoherina.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Ratsiraka.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Riot.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Rova_of_Antananarivo.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Secondary_school.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Sorabe.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Sorabe_alphabet.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Toamasina.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Toliara.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink UNESCO.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink UNICEF.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink United_Nations.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink United_Nations_Childrens_Fund.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink United_States_of_America.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Madagascar.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Vocation.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink Vocational.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink World_Bank.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink File:Besakana_traditional_Merina_andriana_house_Rova_Antananarivo_Madagascar.jpg.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink File:Colonial_school_in_Madagascar.jpg.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink File:Diego_Suarez_Antsiranana_urban_public_primary_school_(EPP)_Madagascar.jpg.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink File:Ministry_of_Education_Madagascar.JPG.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink File:School_material_EPP_Brickaville_Madagascar.JPG.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLink File:Students_doing_group_work_with_slates_in_Antsiranana_Madagascar.JPG.
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "Education in Madagascar".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "Palace School".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "constructed a school".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "education system".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "establish schools and churches".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "first school in Imerina".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "first school".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "network of public schools".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "new schools".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "school".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageWikiLinkText "training centre for Malagasy civil servants".
- Education_in_Madagascar align "left".
- Education_in_Madagascar alt "One-room schoolhouse with woven bamboo walls and corrugated tin roof".
- Education_in_Madagascar alt "one-story brick and whitewashed schoolhouse with green wooden shutters and peaked roof".
- Education_in_Madagascar footer "A historic school in the Central Highlands town and a new school in a coastal village".
- Education_in_Madagascar hasPhotoCollection Education_in_Madagascar.
- Education_in_Madagascar image "Rural school outside Antananarivo Madagascar.JPG".
- Education_in_Madagascar image "School Madagascar EPP Ambodiriana.jpg".
- Education_in_Madagascar sign "H. Raharijaona".
- Education_in_Madagascar source "Le droit de la famille à Madagasikara".
- Education_in_Madagascar text "learn to respect elders and the ray aman-dreny and to conform to their opinions, speak the appropriate words, follow the rules of traditional wisdom and fear the castigation they can expect in response to their antisocial actions.".
- Education_in_Madagascar width "200".
- Education_in_Madagascar wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Education_in_Africa.