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The first higher education institutions (HEIs) emerged in Ukraine during the late 16th and early 17th centuries under the Kingdom of Poland.. The first was the Ostrozka School, or Ostrozkiy Greek-Slavic-Latin Collegium, similar to Western European higher education institutions of the time.
There are more than 300 law schools in Ukraine. [1] These include: Kharkiv Law Academy; Odesa Law Academy; University of Kyiv, law faculty; Lviv Ivan Franko National University School of Law; Kyiv University of Law; National University of Ostroh academy, Institute of Law; Kyiv National University of Trade and Economics, faculty of international ...
Diplomatic Academy of Ukraine named after Hennadiy Udovenko [54] European University [55] Financial-Legal College [56] Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute (aka National Technical University of Ukraine) [40] Institute of Ecology of Economy and Law [57] Institute of Neurosurgery named after Acad. A .P. Romodanov National Academy of Sciences ...
Currently in Ukraine, school attendance is designated for children and teenagers from age 6 to 17. Ukraine has several types of general education institutions. Some schools may be boarding schools and named school-internat or lyceum-internat. Middle School of General Education (ZOSh) or Middle School; Lyceum (Technikum in the Soviet times ...
Anna Vishnina, 17, returns after completing her National Multi-subject Test for Ukrainian refugee high school graduates seeking to further their educational goals on Tuesday.
Yaroslav Mudryi National Law University (Ukrainian: Національний юридичний університет імені Ярослава Мудрого) is a self-governing state higher law educational establishment of the IV level of accreditation, a national university, located in Kharkiv, Ukraine, named after Yaroslav the Wise.
Second higher education can also be obtained at DNU. Before Russian aggression in the East of Ukraine in 2014, the University had 20 faculties with 1,300 academics. The number of students came to about 22,000 (with 3,000 international students among them).
During the 200 years of the existence of the Higher School in Nizhyn it has changed its role several times: Prince Bezborodko Gymnasium of Higher Learning (1820–1832), Technical (Physics and Mathematics) Lyceum (1832–1840), Law School (1840–1875), Prince Oleksandr Bezborodko Historical-Philological Institute (1875–1921), Nizhyn ...