Portugal implements 12 compulsory education, including basic education (4 years for primary school, 2 years for preparatory classes for middle school and 3 years for junior high school) and secondary education (3 years, equivalent to senior high school in China). Higher education lasts 4-5 years. In 2005, the budget for compulsory education was 47.9/kloc-0.00 billion euros, and the budget for higher education was/kloc-0.73 billion euros. The main institutions of higher education are the University of Lisbon, the University of Coimbra, the University of Porto, the Technical University of Lisbon, the University of Minio, the University of Aveiro, the University of Evora and the National School of Administration. Teacher Liu, who once studied abroad, pointed out that Coimbra University is very influential in the world.
In Portugal, education is free and compulsory until the educated reaches the age of 18, that is, they complete secondary education (12 grade). Portugal has an average of 22.2 students per class. Teacher Liu introduced that Portugal's investment in education accounts for 5.8% of GDP, compared with 5.2% in Canada and 5.7% in the United States. There are many public and private universities in Portugal. Some private colleges offer dual-degree courses in cooperation with the United States, Britain, Germany, France and Switzerland. In Portugal, there are international schools with German, French, Spanish and English as teaching languages, mainly focusing on primary and secondary education. These schools are mainly concentrated in Lisbon and Algavi. Most schools offer international certificate courses, and you can enter most universities in the world for further study without examination. ?