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Skovgaard-Petersen, Vagn. "Towards an education policy in Denmark: Danish education planning in the nineteen forties." Scandinavian Journal of History 6.1-4 (1981): 55–76. Skovgaard-Petersen, Vagn. "Forty years of research into the history of education in Denmark." Scandinavian journal of educational research 41.3-4 (1997): 319-331. Stubager ...
Any child resident in Denmark is subject to 10 years of compulsory education from the age of six to sixteen. [1] The first year is pre-school, referred to as kindergarten class or 0th form. An additional non-compulsory 10th form is offered at many schools.
The responsible authority for the content and examinations is the Ministry of Education. The title of the examination taken at the end of the HF-programme is the higher preparatory examination (Danish: højere forberedelseseksamen). Students who have passed the examination are issued with a certificate, which contains the following information:
Basic education (primary education) in Latvia goes from ages 7 to 16 years old and include grades 1 through 9. Primary education is mandatory and free of cost for students. [18] The purpose of basic education (primary education) in Latvia is to provide students with the basic knowledge and skills that are needed for their everyday lives.
Bagsværd Kostskole og Gymnasium; Bornholms Erhvervsskole; Birkerød Gymnasium- HF, IB og Kostskole; Christianshavn School; Copenhagen International School
The right to pre-school education was also emphasised in the Social Assistance Act of 1976, which demanded that the municipalities create the necessary infrastructure to meet the needs of families. In 1987, the state delegated responsibility for the financial administration of the pre-school institutions to municipalities.
Part of a series on: Education in Denmark; Pre-school; Primary education ; Secondary education; Higher education; Adult education; Types of secondary education
The HTX Programme was established in 1982 by the Ministry of Education as an experiment to oblige the rising demand for more technical and scientific educated labour in Denmark at the time. Before 1982 there were only three ways to get a university degree in the Danish education system; through the ‘ Gymnasium (STX)’, ‘ Higher Preparatory ...