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Secondary education in Italy lasts eight years and is divided in two stages: ''Scuola secondaria di primo grado'' (Lower secondary school), also known as ''Scuola media'', which corresponds to the Middle School grades, and ''Scuola secondaria di secondo grado'' (Upper secondary school), which corresponds to the high-school level. ==Scuola secondaria di primo grado (middle school)== The ''Scuola secondaria di primo grado'' (''lower secondary school'', previously scuola media, ''middle school'', by which it is still called) it is mandatory, lasts 3 years (roughly from age 11 to 14) and is the first stage in which different specialized professors teach different subjects. It provides further education on the subjects studied at the ''scuola primaria'', with the addition of technology and a language other than English (typically French, Spanish or German). It has a common programme for all pupils, and covers all the classical subjects (Italian language and literature, History, Geography, Mathematics, Natural sciences, English language, a second Foreign Language - usually French, German or Spanish, Technology, Arts, Music, and Physical Education). At the end of the third year students sit an exam which enables them to continue their education, which includes: *4 written tests prepared by each examining board: Italian, Mathematics, and the two foreign languages *an experimental nationally assessed test for tracking progresses in reading comprehension, language knowledge, reasoning skills and basic mathematical skills *an overall oral examination on all subjects. The final grade is a number from 6 to 10 (the best). Before the Moratti reform it was called "Scuola media di primo grado" or "Scuola media inferiore". 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Secondary education in Italy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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