Daxia: Difference between revisions

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Education in Corumm is under the responsibility of the national government and its Ministry of Education, local and province level governments having very little input on the subject. Primary education begins at age six lasts for six years, roughly until the child is age twelve. At this point the educational system branches out into two divergent systems. The fifteen percent lowest ranked students of any class are filtered out into the Technical Training Track (TTT) where further academics are discontinued and instead they receive a six year education on technical skills and factory processes to prepare them for life as blue collar workers, tradesmen and other types of skilled manual labor.
Education in Corumm is under the responsibility of the national government and its Ministry of Education, local and province level governments having very little input on the subject. Primary education begins at age six lasts for six years, roughly until the child is age twelve. At this point the educational system branches out into two divergent systems. The fifteen percent lowest ranked students of any class are filtered out into the Technical Training Track (TTT) where further academics are discontinued and instead they receive a six year education on technical skills and factory processes to prepare them for life as blue collar workers, tradesmen and other types of skilled manual labor.


Those students who avoid the technical track can continue their secondary level education along what is termed as the Party Specialist Track. Students in this system have a well rounded education that prepares them for specialized education in the State universities. Anyone aspiring to work in government must necessarily have gone through the Party Specialist track of education. Party membership upon completion of their university courses is not guaranteed for these students, but it is much more likely than for technical training students.
Those students who avoid the technical track can continue their secondary level education along what is termed as the Party Specialist Track. Students in this system have a well rounded education that prepares them for specialized education in the State universities. Anyone aspiring to work in government must necessarily have gone through the Party Specialist track of education. Party membership upon completion of their university courses is not guaranteed for these students, but it is much more likely than for technical training students. The majority of the professional, bureaucrat and entrepreneurial classes are formed in this education track.
 
Ethnic minorities, children with development and mental deficiencies and foreigners with no status are forced into a separate system called the Low-Grade education track. Low-Grade students are taught only reading, writing, the basics of mathematics, heavily curated classes on the basics of Islam (for Rusanis only) and intensive doses of government propaganda.