The national rhetoric of prioritising high-quality education seems to be going nowhere.
Educators and concerned citizens have been urging a major increase in public allocation for the education sector.
If you walk through an alley in any neighbourhood in the capital, you would see kindergartens and private primary schools swarming the area with each and every one of them boasting of their high standard.
Both private and public universities in the country seem to be in a state of flux, with dissatisfied students and teachers waging separate movements to realise their demands.
The national rhetoric of prioritising high-quality education seems to be going nowhere.
Educators and concerned citizens have been urging a major increase in public allocation for the education sector.
If you walk through an alley in any neighbourhood in the capital, you would see kindergartens and private primary schools swarming the area with each and every one of them boasting of their high standard.
Both private and public universities in the country seem to be in a state of flux, with dissatisfied students and teachers waging separate movements to realise their demands.