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education |
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educationProcess, beginning at birth, of developing intellectual capacity, skills, and social awareness, especially by instruction. In its more restricted sense, the term refers to the process of imparting literacy, numeracy, and a generally accepted body of knowledge. History of educationThe earliest known European educational systems were those of ancient Greece. In Sparta the process was devoted mainly to the development of military skills; in Athens, to politics, philosophy, and public speaking, but both were accorded only to the privileged few.In ancient China, formalized education received impetus during the Han dynasty (206 BC–AD 220). An imperial decree in 165 BC established open competitive examinations for the recruitment of members of the civil service, based mainly on a detailed study of literature. The Romans adopted the Greek system of education and spread it through Western Europe. Following the disintegration of the Roman Empire, widespread education vanished from Europe, although Christian monasteries preserved both learning and Latin. In the Middle Ages, Charlemagne's monastic schools taught the ‘seven liberal arts’: grammar, logic, rhetoric, arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy; elementary schools, generally presided over by a parish priest, instructed children of the poor in reading, writing, and arithmetic. From the monastic schools emerged the theological philosophers of the Scholastic Movement, which in the 11th–13th centuries led to the foundation of the universities of Paris (Sorbonne), Bologna, Padua, Oxford, and Cambridge. The capture of Constantinople, capital of the Eastern Roman Empire, by the Turks in 1453 propelled its Christian scholars into exile across Europe, and revived European interest in learning. The Renaissance humanist movement encouraged the free study of all classical writers, both Latin and Greek, with the aim of assimilating their reasoning and making a philological study of the texts. It owed much to Arabic scholarly activity, which – beginning with the translation and augmentation of Greek scientific texts – had continued unabated during the Dark Ages and had reached Europe via Moorish influences in Sicily and Spain. The curriculum of humanist schools, of which Latin was the foundation, was widely adopted, although by the 17th century it had failed to adapt to society's changing needs and by the early 18th century organized education was at a low level. Compulsory attendance at primary schools was first established in the mid-18th century in Prussia, and has since spread almost worldwide. Compulsory schooling in industrialized countries is typically from around age 5 or 6 to around age 15 or 16; in 2001 public education expenditure was around 5% of GNP (Spain 3.2%, Japan 4.4%, Denmark 7.7%).
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