When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Education in ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_ancient_Rome

    Education in ancient Rome progressed from an informal, familial system of education in the early Republic to a tuition-based system during the late Republic and the Empire. The Roman education system was based on the Greek system – and many of the private tutors in the Roman system were enslaved Greeks or freedmen.

  3. Alphonsian Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphonsian_Academy

    Alphonsus Liguori, whose teachings inspired the establishment of the Academy.. The Pontifical Alphonsian Academy (Italian: Pontificia Accademia Alfonsiana; Latin: Pontificia Academia Alphonsiana), also commonly known as the Alphonsianum, is a pontifical institution of higher education founded in 1949 by the Redemptorists and located in Rome, Italy.

  4. Accademia Vivarium Novum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accademia_Vivarium_Novum

    The Academy Vivarium Novum was founded with the intent to preserve the tradition of Renaissance schools, their teaching methods, and the vision of the world that such an education fosters. It wants to induce a rebirth of the humanities [ 5 ] based on the belief that dignity ( dignitas hominis ) may be attained only by continuous self ...

  5. History of education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_education

    Higher education in Rome was more of a status symbol than a practical concern. Literacy rates in the Greco-Roman world were seldom more than 20 percent; averaging perhaps not much above 10 percent in the Roman empire, though with wide regional variations, probably never rising above 5 percent in the western provinces.

  6. Roman academies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Academies

    Roman academies refers to associations of learned individuals and not institutes for instruction.. Such Roman Academies were always connected to larger educational structures conceived during and following the Italian Renaissance, at the height of which (from the close of the Western Schism in 1418 to the middle of the 16th century) there were two main intellectual centers, Florence and Rome.

  7. Ancient higher-learning institutions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_higher-learning...

    It was reorganized as a corporation of students in 849 by the regent Bardas of emperor Michael III, is considered by some to be the earliest institution of higher learning with some of the characteristics we associate today with a university (research and teaching, auto-administration, academic independence, et cetera). If a university is ...

  8. Pontifical universities in Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Pontifical_universities_in_Rome

    Pontifical universities divide studies into 3 cycles: the first cycle of varying duration, after which is obtained a Bachelor (Baccalaureato), the second cycle, which leads to the conferment of a License degree (Licenza), and finally the third cycle, which grant a Graduate degree (Dottorato).

  9. Pontifical Gregorian University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontifical_Gregorian...

    Pontifical Gregorian University (Italian: Pontificia Università Gregoriana; also known as the Gregorian or Gregoriana), is a private pontifical university in Rome, Italy. The Gregorian originated as a part of the Roman College, founded in 1551 by Ignatius of Loyola, [4] and included all grades of schooling.