Title: Education In Vietnam
1Education In Vietnam
ResourceLesson 4
- A long tradition
- Information from Vietnams Education
- The Current Position and Future Prospects
- Pham Minh Hac, The Gioi Publishers, Hanoi, 1998
2(No Transcript)
3Centuries of Chinese dominationover 1,000 years
4Chinese domination 111 B.C. to 938 A.D.
- Chinese rulers opened public schools, mainly to
train their children to become civil servants for
the ruling class and structure.
5Chinese Rule
- Children of nobles were sent to school to study
to a certain level without any examination and
then appointed to the position of mandarin, a
public official in the Chinese Empire.
6Chinese Rule
Statues of mandarinspublic officials in the
Chinese Empire
7- The appointment system was abolished late in the
Chinese domination and replaced with a system of
examinations for a doctorate degree. -
- Outstanding Vietnamese students were sent to
China for examinations.
8Throughout Chinese domination, the education
system may be called one of examinations.
Stelae with names, places of birth and
achievements of men who received doctorates by
examination
9Stelae at the Temple of Literature
10Chinese Rule
- Later, a number of upper class Vietnamese
children were allowed to attend these Chinese
schools.
11Confuciusin the Temple of Literature Hanoi
12Independence
- After independence in 938 A.D., education was
carried out at private and pagoda (temple)
schools, but education was not well-developed.
13The country was ruled by the King from Huethe
capital city
14Independence
Children of common people were admitted to two
kinds of schools
- 1. Private schools managed by the people
themselves at the village and communal level, and
15Independence
- 2. under the Kings direct management in the
capital cityHue, - and a few at the district level and provincial
level.
16 One-pillar Pagoda
17French Rule (1859-1954)
- In mid-19th century, the French colonialists
kept the feudal Confucian education of the
previous dynasty. - After 1919, Chinese-like schools and
examinations were abolished.
18The French Governor's Home in Hanoi
19French Rule
- The French developed education horizontally
by opening elementary schools with the first
three grades of primary, not vertically.
20Schools were modeled after the French system of
education
- Primary schools with only a few grades were
opened in some communes. -
- Primary schools with six grades were opened in a
number of towns.
21French Rule
- Junior secondary schools with four grades were
opened in some big cities. - Senior secondary schools were opened in Hanoi,
Hue and Saigon.
22Higher Education began in the 1900s.
- In 1908, a number of schools were merged
together to form what was called universite. - In 1919, the first preparatory college courses
were created to teach physics, chemistry, and
biology.
23Also, at the beginning of the 20th century
- The French colonial administration developed a
number of specialized schools. - Most of them were for training of workers or
medium-level technicians.
24French Rule
- In 1923, a training course for medical doctors
began. - In 1939-40, Indochinese University consisted of
schools for law and agronomy (soil management),
and had 582 students.
25As a result
- Over 95 of Vietnamese were illiterates,
especially women and ethnic minority people. - The history of the Vietnamese nation was
neglected in the curricula. - The history of the Vietnamese nation was
neglected in the curricula. - Textbooks did not mention Vietnam as a
countrybut spoke only of the five countries in
French Indochina.
26Ho Chi Minh Led The Communist Party In Vietnam
27- During 1926-1935, the Vietnam Association of
Youth Revolutionary Comrades opened courses on
national language. - In 1930, the Indochinese Communist Party urged
education for the whole people and condemned
the policy of horizontal education (several
years only) for laborers and youth.
28The spread of the national language and literacy
learning was combined with the development of the
struggle for independence. Slogans were
- School for everybody!
- Fight against illiteracy!
- Spread education!
29In 1945, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam put
for forward two pressing tasks in education
- To fight against the French educational policy of
enslavement, assimilation of the Vietnamese
people, and illiteracy - To educate the people against the habits and
customs inherited from the old regime and turn
the Vietnamese into a valiant, patriotic,
labor-loving nation, worthy of independence.
30The Communist Party Headquarters in Hanoi
The politbureau, the executive committee, met
under Hos home
31Ho Chi Minhs simple home
32The promotion of education became an integrated
part of the revolutionary cause.
- An ignorant nation is a weak one. Therefore, I
propose that a campaign against illiteracy be
launched. - President Ho Chi Minh
33On October 4, 1945, Ho appealed to
- the entire people to fight against the lack of
education - the illiterates to regard learning as a right and
obligation - the literates to teach illiterates as a duty
- the women to study
- the youth to march in this work.
34There was a nationwide campaign against
illiteracy in Vietnam.
- From September 8, 1945-August 8, 1946
- 75,000 classes were opened with 96,000 teachers
and over 2.5 million pupils -
- From 1946 to 1954
- 10 million people learned to read and write
-
35Children are still reminded today that Ho Chi
Minh encouraged learning
36 The work did not stop at learning to read and
write.
- After 1945, the government of the Democratic
Republic of Vietnam continued to develop general
education, secondary vocational education and
higher education.
37On April 30, 1975, the Vietnam Peoples Army
liberated Saigon and unified the country.
- The demarcation line at the 17th parallel had
divided South Vietnam and North Vietnam in 1954
and had created two educational systems.
38Following Reunification of North and South
Vietnam
- The Polibureau of the Communist Party of Vietnam
issued many decisions on educational reforms of
structure, contents and methods.
391975