Spanish Baccalaureate
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The Spanish Baccalaureate (, ) is the post-16 stage of education in Spain, comparable to the A Levels in
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, the French Baccalaureate in
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or the
International Baccalaureate The International Baccalaureate Organization (IBO), more commonly known as the International Baccalaureate (IB), is a nonprofit foundation headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, and founded in 1968. It offers four educational programmes: the I ...
. It follows the ESO (compulsory stage of secondary education). After taking the ''Bachillerato'', a student may enter vocational training (Higher-level Training Cycles, ''Ciclos Formativos de Grado Superior'') or take the " ''PAU''" (also commonly known as " ''PEvAU''" or "'' Selectividad''") exams in order to be admitted into a public university. There are two parts, a core curriculum with the compulsory subjects (" fase de acceso") and a specialist part (" fase de admisión") with a number of pre-selected branches to choose from. The latter of these is technically optional, however reaching the necessary grade is significantly harder or impossible to achieve.


History

In Spanish (and Hispano-American) education from the 13th century up to the 17th or 18th century, the term ''Bachiller'' referred to the lower grade of university studies, enabling entry to a profession without reaching the higher grades of ''licenciado'' or ''doctorado''. Before 1953 in Spain, the term ''bachillerato'' covered all of
secondary education Secondary education is the education level following primary education and preceding tertiary education. Level 2 or ''lower secondary education'' (less commonly ''junior secondary education'') is considered the second and final phase of basic e ...
, which was taken after passing an entrance examination by those students expected to go to university. It consisted of seven yearly stages, normally taken between the ages of 10 and 17. On completion, students took a State Examination (''Examen de Estado''). From 1949 there was also a vocational or technical version (''Bachillerato Laboral''). In 1953 the ''bachillerato'' was divided into two parts: ''Bachillerato Elemental'' (elementary) and ''Bachillerato Superior'' (higher). The first was taken over four years, at ages 10–14, and the second over two years at 15 and 16; each stage terminated with a final examination (''Reválida''). Students who had remained in primary education up to the age of 14, on passing the first-stage ''Reválida'', could still enter the ''Bachillerato Superior'', in which there were two branches: Sciences and Arts. Following this, students could take a one-year stage of pre-university studies (''Preuniversitario'', or "''Preu''" for short). Reforms during the 1970s absorbed the ''Bachillerato Elemental'' into the upper stages of the basic education system for 6- to 14-year-olds, and replaced the ''Bachillerato Superior'' with a three-year ''Bachillerato Unificado Polivalente'' (BUP). At the age of 14 a student could now opt to enter the BUP without having to pass a specific test, or could go into vocational training. The "''Preu''" was replaced by a ''Curso de Orientación Universitaria'' (COU). The introduction under "" of compulsory secondary education up to age 16 (''Educación Secundaria Obligatoria'', ESO) took place during the 1990s. The ''Bachillerato'' now became a two-year course following the completion of compulsory education, with middle-grade vocational training as an alternative. It had five branches: Arts, Technology, Social Sciences, Health Sciences, and Humanities. Further reforms were made under the "" of 2006, and under the "" of 2013.


Present

As established under LOE (the Spanish Educational Law) of 2006, the Baccalaureate is studied over two years, usually upon the completion of compulsory secondary education (ESO). Following the enactment of LOMCE, there are four distinct branches: Arts (two paths), Sciences and Technology, Humanities and Social Sciences (with two "itineraries" for the Humanities and Social Sciences branch) and General. As in the compulsory primary and secondary stages of education, in the Baccalaureate there is a distinction between "core subjects", "specialist subjects" and "subjects chosen by the
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or Galician), if any. The national Government determines a set of core subjects, while the educational administrations of the autonomous communities may specify additional core subjects and will decide upon the list of non-core subjects. Admission to the Baccalaureate is subject to a certificate of completion of compulsory secondary education (''Graduado en Educación Secundaria Obligatoria''), or certain technical qualifications.


First year

In the first year, "general" core subjects (brown background in the table) are taught, together with "optional" core subjects (white background), of which two are chosen in each modality, and specified subjects (green background).


Core subjects


Specialist subjects

Specialist subjects, of which either two or three are to be chosen, depending on provision at the education centre: # Anthropology and Sociology # Applied Anatomy # Artificial Intelligence # Biomedicine # Computer Science I # Contemporary Artistic Languages # Digital Creation and Computational Thinking # Education for Democratic Coexistence I # Energy Resources and Sustainability # Entrepreneurial and Business Culture # European Union # Human Biology and Health # Information and Communication Technologies I # Legal and Democratic Culture # Music Production # Oratory # Personal and Vocational Training and Guidance # Photographic Creation and Film # Psicology # Scientific Culture # Second Foreign Language I # Society, Environment and Sustainable Territories # The Classical Legacy # Another first-year subject not taken by the student


Second year


Core subjects

In the second year, "general" core subjects (brown background in the table) are taught, together with "optional" core subjects (white background), of which two are chosen in each modality.


Specialist subjects

Specialist subjects, of which between two and four are to be chosen, depending on provision at the education centre: # Musical analysis II # Earth Sciences and Environmental Sciences # Artistic Drawing II # Technical Drawing II # Foundations of Administration and Management # History of Music and Dance # Image and Sound # Psychology # Religion # Second Foreign Language II # Techniques of Graphic-Plastic Expression # Industrial Technology II # ICT II # Material from the block of core subjects not taken by the student


Provision for adults

Other means of study are especially designed for adults who wish to re-take their studies. These form part of the standard educational provision of some institutes, and are also offered in separate adult education centres. The "nocturnal" version is provided on a timetable of evening classes. The details may vary according to location, but normally there are four teaching periods of 50 minutes with a 30-minute break in the middle, between 4pm and 10pm. To cater for working adults with less time to study, individual subjects are assessed annually; thus a pass in a subject, once obtained, remains valid in following years. The course content, however, is identical with what is taught at a daytime school.


Notes


References

{{Reflist Academic degrees of Spain