Saturday, September 24, 2016

OECD country with fewer college — Mexico – Passing Bulletin

on average, according To that document, the teaching hours in OECD members range from the 644 in secondary education and higher 1.005 in children. However, it is highest among the younger generations, as, while just 12 percent of the population 55 to 64 years of age has a degree of higher education, the same thing happens with the 21% of those who are in the range of 25 to 34 years of age. For their part, those who have a doctorate or a masters degree we tripled the salary discrepancies that the OECD imputed to the few university graduates in the country, and the fact that that there are are concentrated in sectors with more professional screening as engineering, construction and manufacturing.

women with higher education earn 32% less than men. “Mexico recorded similar figures to the Slovak Republic and the united States, and is not reduced”.

“As happens in other Latin american countries, in Mexico the difference in income by having a higher education is very large.” In the same study the OECD points out that teachers of preschool and primary school with 15 years of experience, are those who earn 35% more than other professionals with higher education.

“In Mexico the 73 percent of students that have not attended preschool education had low performance on PISA, compared with 52 percent of those who attended at least one year at that level of education”, indicates the Note Country for Mexico Education at a glance 2016 which was released today. To the higher education is dedicated to 1.1 %, five tenths less than the half of the body.

In the higher education the averages are almost the same: 16 students in Mexico and 17 in the average countries of the Organization.

Australia and Canada are countries with high performance, followed by the Netherlands and Belgium, with data on all the goals and a performance at the reference level in at least seven of the 10 goals.

The OECD recognizes that the expenditure on education public and private en Mexico is on the rise since 2005 and the expenditure corresponds to a relatively high proportion of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and total public expenditure in the country.

So, the expenditure per student in higher education in Mexico is of 7 thousand 600 dollars, which was almost three times greater than the one done by elementary school student (2 thousand 700 dollars).

“Between 2005 and 2014, the rate of enrollment of children 2 years of age in preschool education, nearly doubled, reaching 40 percent in 2014, when the average of the OECD it is 69 percent,” he said.

finally, the OECD considers that the educational reform promoted by the country’s president, Enrique Peña Nieto, seeks to increase the number of young people studying education programs upper secondary-technical.

In the case of teachers of secondary and higher secondary the percentages are the highest of the OECD.

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