MongoliaEducation
Young Pioneer entertainers, Olgiy Middle
School, Bayan-Olgiy Aymag
Courtesy Steve Mann
The School System
Education in Mongolia traditionally was controlled by the
Buddhist monasteries and was limited to monks. Tibetan was the
language of instruction, the canonical and liturgical language,
and it was used at the lower levels of education. Higher-level
education was available in the major monasteries, and often many
years were required to complete formal degrees, which included
training in logic and debate. With the exception of medicine,
which involved an extensive pharmacopoeia and training in herbal
medicines, higher education was esoteric and unworldly. Major
monasteries supported four colleges: philosophy, doctrine, and
protocol; medicine; mathematics, astrology, and divination; and
demonology and demon suppression. In the early twentieth century,
officials and wealthy families hired tutors for their children,
and government offices operated informal apprenticeships that
taught the intricacies of written records, standard forms, and
accounting. Official Mongolian sources, which tended to depict
the prerevolutionary period as one of total backwardness,
probably underestimated the level of literacy, but it was
undoubtedly low.
Secular education began soon after the collapse of Chinese
authority in 1911. A Mongol-language school under Russian
auspices opened in Yihe Huree in 1912; much of the teaching of
the forty-seven pupils was done by Buryat Mongols from Siberia.
In the same year, a military school with Russian instructors
opened. By 1914 a school teaching Russian to Mongolian children
was operating in the capital. Its graduates, in a pattern that
was to become common, went to cities in Russia for further
education. Perhaps in response to the challenge of the few
secular schools, monasteries in the 1920s were running schools
for boys who did not have to take monastic vows. Such schools
used the Mongol language and the curriculums had a heavily
religious content.
Education expanded slowly throughout the 1920s. As late as
1934, when 55 percent of all party members were illiterate,
secular state schools enrolled only 2.7 percent of all children
between the ages of eight and seventeen, while 13 percent of that
age group were in monastic schools. Suppression of the
monasteries in 1938 and 1939 closed the monastic schools, and the
state schools expanded steadily throughout the 1940s and the
1950s. In 1941 the traditional Mongol script, based on the Uighur
script, was replaced by Cyrillic. It took from 1941 to 1946--
sources differ on the date--to implement the change completely.
Mongolian authorities announced that universal adult literacy had
been achieved by 1968. A Russian-owned printing shop, opened in
Yihe Huree in the early twentieth century, turned out Mongolian
translations of Russian novels and political tracts; in 1915 it
printed Mongolia's first newspaper, Niysleliyn Hureeniy Sonon
Bichig (News of the Capital Huree).
In 1981 education consumed 20 percent of the state budget,
and by 1985 27 percent (511,200) of the country's population was
enrolled in educational institutions from primary through
university levels. The education system, based on the Soviet
model, had eight years of compulsory education and a ten-year
school system, enrolling students between the ages of seven and
seventeen. The first four years were primary education; the
second four, were secondary. Some students left school after the
eighth year, while the others went on to either two more years of
general secondary education or to specialized vocational schools.
Some remote settlements offered only four-year primary schools,
after which students transferred to a central eight-year school.
Many schools in rural areas were eight-year schools, called
incomplete secondary schools. Full ten-year schools, complete
secondary schools, were common in cities, and they represented
the goal that all regions hoped to achieve. In 1988 about 40
percent of the graduates of general schools went on to vocational
schools; 20 percent, to higher education; and the remainder
joined the work force. Most rural schools had boarding facilities
to serve the children of dispersed and nomadic herders; 77
percent of rural pupils in 1984 were boarders. From the lowest
grades, efforts were made to link schooling with the world of
work, and students routinely put in a few hours a week on useful
work outside the school. Military training, including weapons
instruction and outdoor exercises, began in the schools.
For students who had completed eight years of schooling,
there were two types of career-oriented schools: vocational
schools (sometimes called vocational/technical schools in
Mongolian publications) and specialized secondary schools. The
distinction between the two was not clear. Vocational schools
appeared to train more highly skilled workers, such as
machinists, heavy-equipment operators, and construction workers,
providing a terminal education to students who did not excel in
the classroom. The specialized secondary schools, which
corresponded to the Soviet technicum provided two-year or
three-year courses at the junior college level. They trained
paraprofessionals and technicians, such as primary school
teachers, medical technicians, or bookkeepers. Students with
diplomas from specialized secondary schools could apply for
admission to higher education. As more funds and more technically
trained teachers became available, the number of vocational
schools increased. In 1988 there were 43 vocational schools,
which enrolled 30,000 students in 110 fields. Specialized
secondary schools offered two-year or three-year courses, and
students received room and board and a monthly stipend. During
their stints of practical work in factories or other enterprises,
they received the normal salary for their work. The reform of
secondary education under way in the 1988-89 school year called
for three-year vocational courses for students with eight years
of general education. Students who graduated from complete tenyear courses could spend one year in vocational schools. The
ninth-year and tenth-year classes in general education schools
prepared students for college admission or for generalized whitecollar work.
In 1985 Mongolia had more than 900 general education schools,
40 vocational schools, 28 specialized secondary schools, 1
university, and 7 institutes. The general schools enrolled
435,900 students; vocational schools, 27,700; specialized
secondary schools, 23,000; and higher education, 24,600 (see
table 6, Appendix). Women made up 63 percent of all students in
higher education, and girls constituted 58 percent of students in
specialized secondary schools. Women were 67 percent of all
teachers in general schools, 50 percent of teachers in
specialized secondary schools, and 33 percent of higher education
faculty. In 1985 kindergartens, serving families in which both
parents worked full time, enrolled 20 percent of the children who
were three to seven years old.
Data as of June 1989
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