Off the wire
Czech Republic to provide assistance to Serbia over migrant crisis: PM  • Bank of China to open first branch in Vienna  • Hundreds of migrant minors roam Swedish streets  • Russia assumes rotating UN Security Council presidency for September  • Lithuania officially eligible for meat exports to U.S.  • Tusk says EU has to do more on migrant crisis  • Commentary: Learning from past, looking ahead to future a major consensus of world conference  • Israeli PM says ready to resume peace talks with Palestinians "immediately"  • Sri Lanka remains vigilant of emerging security threats, says top defence official  • Life in Gaza could become unattainable in next five years: report  
You are here:   Home

Swedish gov't vows to strengthen school system

Xinhua, September 2, 2015 Adjust font size:

The Swedish government announced a reform package on Tuesday to help the country's school system turn results around.

The center-left coalition pledged to spend fresh funds totaling 2.4 billion SEK (283 million U.S. dollars) to raise teachers' salaries, ensure the right to adult education and bolster the number of specialized teachers.

"Regardless of where one studies, one must have the right to complete a high-school education," Upper Secondary School Minister Aida Hadzialic said, according to news agency TT.

Swedish municipalities will be given extra resources to receive up to 70,000 additional students while the government will bump the salaries of around 60,000 teachers by 3,000 SEK a month.

Prime Minister Stefan Lofven said the wage hike was a priority and stressed that the number of applicants to teachers' colleges in the country is too low.

The government will present the changes in full in its fall budget, due in three weeks.

In May, the OECD urged Sweden to introduce "system-wide change" to its school system, which slid heavily in the international Pisa education rankings published in 2012. (1 U.S. dollar = 8.48 SEK) Endit