North Korea EDUCATION
Students in P'yongyang rehearse for Kim Il Sung's
eightieth birthday celebration, April 1992.
Courtesy Tracy Woodward
Students playing traditional Korean instruments in a
music class at the Mangyngdae Schoolchildren's Palace,
P'yongyang, opened in May 1989
Courtesy Tracy Woodward
An English class at P'yongyang Senior Middle
School
Courtesy Tracy Woodward
Figure 5. Structure of the Education System, 1991
Source: Based on information form K ktong Munje Yn'quso,
Pukhan Chns, 1945-1980 (A Complete North Korean
Handbook), Seoul, 1980, 595; "Public Education System of the
DPRK," in Do You Know about Korea?, Pyongyang, 1989, 50;
and Park Youngsoon, "Language Policy and Language Education in
North Korea," Korea Journal [Seoul], 31, No. 1, Spring
1991, 33.
Formal education has played a central role in the social and
cultural development of both traditional Korea and contemporary
North Korea. During the Chosn Dynasty, the royal court
established a system of schools that taught Confucian subjects in
the provinces as well as in four central secondary schools in the
capital. There was no state-supported system of primary
education. During the fifteenth century, state-supported schools
declined in quality and were supplanted in importance by private
academies, the swn, centers of a neo-Confucian revival
in the sixteenth century. Higher education was provided by the
Snggyungwan, the Confucian national university, in Seoul. Its
enrollment was limited to 200 students who had passed the lower
civil service examinations and were preparing for the highest
examinations.
The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries witnessed
major educational changes. The swn were abolished by the
central government. Christian missionaries established modern
schools that taught Western curricula. Among them was the first
school for women, Ehwa Woman's University, established by
American Methodist missionaries as a primary school in Seoul in
1886. During the last years of the dynasty, as many as 3,000
private schools that taught modern subjects to both sexes were
founded by missionaries and others. Most of these schools were
concentrated in the northern part of the country. After Japan
annexed Korea in 1910, the colonial regime established an
educational system with two goals: to give Koreans a minimal
education designed to train them for subordinate roles in a
modern economy and make them loyal subjects of the emperor; and
to provide a higher quality education for Japanese expatriates
who had settled in large numbers on the Korean Peninsula. The
Japanese invested more resources in the latter, and opportunities
for Koreans were severely limited. In 1930 only 12.2 percent of
Korean children aged seven to fourteen attended school. A state
university modeled on Tokyo Imperial University was established
in Seoul in 1923, but the number of Koreans allowed to study
there never exceeded 40 percent of its enrollment; the rest of
its students were Japanese. Private universities, including those
established by missionaries such as Sungsil College in P'yongyang
and Chosun Christian College in Seoul, provided other
opportunities for Koreans desiring higher education.
After the establishment of North Korea, an education system
modeled largely on that of the Soviet Union was established. The
system faces serious obstacles. According to North Korean
sources, at the time of North Korea's establishment, two-thirds
of school-age children did not attend primary school, and most
adults, numbering 2.3 million, were illiterate. In 1950 primary
education became compulsory. The outbreak of the Korean War,
however, delayed attainment of this goal; universal primary
education was not achieved until 1956. By 1958 North Korean
sources claimed that seven-year compulsory primary and secondary
education had been implemented. In 1959 "state-financed universal
education" was introduced in all schools; not only instruction
and educational facilities, but also textbooks, uniforms, and
room and board are provided to students without charge. By 1967
nine years of education became compulsory. In 1975 the compulsory
eleven-year education system, which includes one year of
preschool education and ten years of primary and secondary
education, was implemented; that system remains in effect as of
1993. According to a 1983 speech given by Kim Il Sung to
education ministers of nonaligned countries in P'yongyang,
universal, compulsory higher education was to be introduced "in
the near future." At that time, students had no school expenses;
the state paid for the education of almost half of North Korea's
population of 18.9 million.
Data as of June 1993
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