Education
Education in Tunisia
Presentation
Since
gaining independence from France in 1956, Tunisian education
officials have been working to develop an education system that is
responsive to the needs of a rapidly developing country, while also
emphasizing the need to develop a distinct national and regional
identity. Building on the French model left behind, the focus of
education reformers has been to “Arabize” curriculum and faculty
at the nation’s schools and universities while producing a skilled
Tunisian workforce that is able to build and manage a modern economy.
The Education Reform Law of 1958, therefore, emphasized technical and
vocational education, and the training of a corps of Tunisian
educators qualified to teach a new uniform school curriculum
emphasizing Arabic language and literature, Islamic thought, and the
history and geography of the Tunisian and North African region.
In the university
sector, the government established the University of Tunis (UT) in
1960 by incorporating several existing higher schools and institutes.
The new university acted as a springboard for the development of
tertiary studies in the country. A higher education law passed in
1969 placed all government-recognized institutions of higher learning
and scientific research under the umbrella of the university. In
1986, the faculties, schools and institutes of UT were separated into
three distinct universities, which have in turn been reorganized over
time to form new universities. Today there are 43 public
university-level institutions in Tunisia (13 universities, 24 higher
institutes of technological studies and six higher institutes of
teacher training).
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