Education in Asia

Aerial view of Nanyang Model High School in Shanghai, China, one of the oldest public secondary schools in Asia
The Nakano Junior and Senior High School Attached to Meiji University, an example of an affiliation of primary, secondary, and tertiary institutions common in China, Japan, and Korea.
The Hall of Classics at Guozijian, in Beijing, China, which was the foremost Chinese institution of higher education throughout the Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties. During the imperial era of China, only a small fraction of the population received formal education.
Academic buildings at Peking University, the modern successor of the Guozijian and a top-ranked university in China, Asia, and globally.

Enrollment in educational institutions varies considerably across the continent of Asia, as evidenced by data maintained by United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).[1] UNESCO's measurement categories for education are used in the context of international development work and are adopted by the World Bank in its EdStats database.[2] The United Nations issues a Human Development Index for each nation, of which the Education Index is a component.

  1. ^ "UNESCO Institute for Statistics".
  2. ^ "World Bank EdStats".

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search