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As of the 2023–2024 school year, there were 76 schools in Macau, including eight public schools and 68 private schools. Of the 73 schools that offered formal education, six were not a part of Macau's free education network. [1] As of 2006 many of the schools in Macau are operated by Catholic organizations. [2]
These private schools are not a part of Macau's tuition-free education network. Preschool through secondary school and special education School of the Nations – Taipa [81] Preschool through secondary school Colégio Diocesano de São José (聖若瑟教區中學) – Sé [82] Colégio Diocesano de São José 5 – Nossa Senhora de Fátima [83]
The International School of Macao (Portuguese: Escola Internacional de Macau; [2] Chinese: 澳門國際學校), is an international school in Taipa, Macao [3] next to the Macau International Airport. It occupies blocks K and Q of the Macau University of Science and Technology. [4] It is accredited by Alberta, Canada. [5]
Education and Youth Development Bureau (Chinese: 教育及青年發展局; Portuguese: Direcção dos Serviços de Educação e de Desenvolvimento da Juventude, DSEDJ) is the education agency of Macau. Its head office is in Sé. [1] It was created in 2021 to succeed the Education and Youth Affairs Bureau and the Higher Education Bureau, which ...
Education and Youth Affairs Bureau (Portuguese: Direcção dos Serviços de Educação e Juventude or DSEJ; Chinese: 教育暨青年局) was the education agency of Macau. It merged with the Higher Education Bureau, becoming the Education and Youth Development Bureau , in 2021.
1996: Gradually implement the reform of the secondary school curriculum, from a five-year secondary school curriculum to a six-year secondary school curriculum; March 1, 1997: Teacher Liang Youcheng was appointed as the principal; May 11, 1997: Escola Secundaria Luso Chinesa de Luis Gonzaga Gomes Parents Association was established
The International General Certificate of Secondary Education (IGCSE) is an English language curriculum offered to secondary students to prepare them for the International Baccalaureate, A Level and BTEC Level 3 curriculums. It is based on the older GCE O-Level and is recognized internationally as being equivalent to the British GCSE.
The kindergarten and secondary sections are privately run and require parents to pay a fee (secondary students who are also Macau citizens are also totally subsidised by the government), while the primary section is government-subsidized and free for Macau residents. In the secondary school, forms 1–3 are subsidised but forms 4–6 are not. [5]