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Education in Honduras is free for seven years. [8] In 1999, the gross primary enrollment rate was 97.3 percent and the net primary enrollment rate was 85.7 percent. [8] Among working children, an estimated 34 percent complete primary school. [8] A lack of schools prevents many children in Honduras from receiving an education, as do costs such ...
Mascot. Pumas. Website. www .unah .edu .hn. The National Autonomous University of Honduras ( Spanish: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras) is the national public university of Honduras. Founded in 1847, it has over 140 programs from the Bachelor 's level to the Doctorate, and is the largest and highest ranked university in Honduras.
Ecos del bicentenario del nacimiento de Morazán, by Rafael Pineda Ponce, Consejo Ejecutivo del Partido Liberal de Honduras, Tegucigalpa, D.C. Honduras, C.A., 1992, OCLC 868015334 La excelencia académica y la responsabilidad histórica de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras , by Rafael Pineda Ponce, Tegucigalpa, D.C. Honduras, C.A ...
Lycée Franco-Hondurien. La Estancia School. Elvel School. Macris School. Centro Escolar Antares. Centro Escolar Aldebarán. Nashville School Tegucigalpa. Summer Hill School. Skills World School.
History. Between independence from Spain in 1821 and 1915, Honduras did not have an official national anthem and used various unofficial anthems such as "La Granadera" (by Rómulo E. Durón), "El Himno Marcial", "Un Salva Hondureño" (of unknown authorship), "Himno Nacional" (by Valentín Durón), "Marcha a Gerardo Barrios" (by Belgian author Coussin, used during the presidency of José María ...
Conversely, Ecuador, Mexico, Venezuela, Paraguay, Peru and Guatemala see between 50% and 75% of their enrollments within the public sector. Cuba, Uruguay, Bolivia, Panama, Honduras and Argentina see the vast majority of their total enrollment within the public sector as well.
Marcial Solis. Marcial Solis was the Honduras Minister of Education. [1] [2] He was formerly the head of Honduras' National Council of Education and Auditor of the National University of Agriculture (UNA). He replaced Rutilia Calderon. [3]
María Trinidad del Cid was born in Magdalena, Intibucá, Honduras, in 1899. She completed her primary studies in both Honduras and El Salvador, due to Magdalena's proximity to the border. At age 16, in 1915, she began studying to be a schoolteacher at the Girls' Normal School of Comayagüela. After graduating in 1922, she began contributing to ...