(1) French universities | Non-Selective Nonsense; Students with shaky maths should not have a right to take a taxpayer-funded degree in the subject.
https://www.economist.com/news/l ... rance-where-grossly
Note:
(a) Alain Peyrefitte, then France's education minister failed to reform admission to French universities, after students protests in 1968. "Now President Emmanuel Macron, attempting a similar reform, has also brought students out on the streets (see article [do not read it]), and the French hear echoes of soixante-huit [French for sixty eight; nouns: soixante 60 and huit 8 (French for six is six (same); soixante came from Latin noun sexāgintā 60]."
(b) "That model traces its roots to 1808, when Napoleon Bonaparte introduced the baccalauréat and decreed that anybody who passed it was entitled to a place at university. For many years, keeping that promise was easy because so few held what was then an elite qualification. In 1950 only 5% of pupils attempted the baccalauréat. That has changed dramatically: these days almost everyone takes the bac and, in 2016, nearly 80% of pupils passed it. Yet the entitlement has not changed. The bac's holders still have the right to enter the university of their choice to study the course of their choice. * * * Since the costs of public university are paid almost entirely by the state and the fees are low—an average of €189 a year ($227) in 2017—the results are predictable. Universities are overwhelmed. [Students flunk out.] * * * The same system prevails in Italy and bits of Latin America. Odd as it may seem, this 'republican' model of higher education commands great support in France, so Mr Macron is treading lightly in his attempts to reform it."
My comment:
(a) You do not have to read it. If you do, you can stop in the first several paragraphs.
(b)
(i) English dictionary:
* baccalaureate (n; etymology: from Latin)
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/baccalaureate
(ii)
(A) baccalauréat (noun masculine; from the same Latin root as English noun baccalaureate) Wiktionary.
(B) baccalauréat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baccalauréat
("often known in France colloquially as bac * * * Although it is not legally required, the vast majority of students in their final year of secondary school take a final exam. Unlike some US high school diplomas, this exam is not for lycée completion but university entrance")
(C) French-English dictionary:
* lycée (noun masculine; etymology: Aristotle's gymnasium near Athens): "a public secondary school"https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/lycée
Compare cynic (n; Did You Know? -- about Antisthenes's gynasium outside Athens)
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cynic
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