Published by Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Poland
Poland’s traditions of academic education
go back to 1364, when King Casimir
the Great established the Cracow
Academy, known today as Jagiellonian
University. The Cracow Academy, one
of the oldest in the world, took after
academies in Bologna and Padua, and
was the second university in Central
Europe after the school in Prague.
Around two centuries later, in 1579,
King Stefan Batory transformed the
existing Jesuit College in Vilnius into
the Vilnius Academy, and in 1661 John
Casimir, King of Poland, converted
the Jesuite College in Lviv into the
Lviv Academy. Thus, by the end of the
17th century, the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth had three flourishing
universities, providing academic education
to both national and international
students.
Today, the Polish higher education
system is developing dynamically. Poland
holds the fourth place in Europe
(after the United Kingdom, Germany
and France) in terms of the number of
people enrolled in higher education.
The total student population, at over
450 university-level schools, is almost
2 million. Each year, almost half a million
young people begin their learning
at higher education institutions here.
Polish university-level schools offer
over 200 first-rate fields of study as an
integral part of the European Higher
Education Area. Most higher education
institutions also offer their courses in
foreign languages.
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