A
A

After the Carnation Revolution: what has changed in education?

15 min
Watch episode

In the early 1970s, Portugal was a country where one in every four Portuguese couldn't read and only 5% of school-aged children were enrolled in schools. What has changed in five decades of democracy?

Education is one of the keys to the development of countries, and Portugal is a success story in terms of democratising education and sustainably increasing people’s qualifications.

In addition to social inequalities, the Carnation Revolution in 25 April 1974 also brought down another form of inequality – gender inequality. Since 1986 more than half of the students enrolled in higher education institutions are women, and today over 50% of young women have a college degree.

50 years later, school is for everybody, although not all start off from the same point or under the same conditions. At the same time, more and more young Portuguese choose to leave the country and those that stay in Portugal have trouble seeing their qualifications reflected in their salaries. An entrepreneurial fabric based on small and medium-sized enterprises, with low productivity, continues to pay low salaries and keep the country at the tail end of Europe.

This documentary also opens up one of the critical points in the education system for further discussion: the lack of teachers. While the country had 70,000 teachers in schools in 1974, this figure has since more than doubled – there are now 150,000. But many of them are nearing retirement age and there are not enough teachers left. Overhauling the teaching profession is one of the main challenges for the future of education in the next 50 years.

How do you rate this content?
Your opinion is important
0
3 votes

8

Episodes
1
Imagem de um chaimite no Terreiro do Paço a 25 de abril de 1974. ©Alfredo Cunha, SPA 2024
After the Carnation Revolution: what has changed in education?

In the early 1970s, Portugal was a country where one in every four Portuguese couldn't read and only 5% of school-aged children were enrolled in schools. What has changed in five...

15 min
More about this content

In the early 1970s, Portugal was a country where one in every four Portuguese couldn't read and only 5% of school-aged children were enrolled in schools. What has changed in five...

2
Imagem de um chaimite no Terreiro do Paço a 25 de abril de 1974. ©Alfredo Cunha, SPA 2024
After the Carnation Revolution: How did the economy evolve?

While the country has indeed experienced seven crises in the last 50 years, there's no denying the major progress made in the national economy. In this mini-documentary, some of...

15 min
More about this content

While the country has indeed experienced seven crises in the last 50 years, there's no denying the major progress made in the national economy. In this mini-documentary, some of...

3
Imagem de um chaimite no Terreiro do Paço a 25 de abril de 1974. ©Alfredo Cunha, SPA 2024
After the Carnation Revolution: Are there more or fewer of us?

The last 50 years have witnessed significant demographic changes. The Portuguese are now older, living longer, having fewer children and becoming parents later. As well as being a...

16 min
More about this content

The last 50 years have witnessed significant demographic changes. The Portuguese are now older, living longer, having fewer children and becoming parents later. As well as being a...

4
Imagem de um chaimite no Terreiro do Paço a 25 de abril de 1974. ©Alfredo Cunha, SPA 2024
After the Carnation Revolution: What have women achieved?

Through the testimony of the women, and some men, who have fought for gender equality, this documentary follows the greatest achievements made by women over the last five decades...

23 min
More about this content

Through the testimony of the women, and some men, who have fought for gender equality, this documentary follows the greatest achievements made by women over the last five decades...

5DD logotipo
Série
Others
24EPISODES
2023

Portugal has changed drastically over the last 50 years. Almost five decades on, what profound changes have taken place in the country? And what lessons should we learn to improve the future?

The Foundation has an extensive program to reflect on what has changed and what measures still need to be implemented to improve national democracy.

The programme begins at the Carmo Barracks where the regime fell – with the event "Five decades of democracy, what has changed?" – and extends to more debates, a series of eight mini-documentaries, documentaries, publications and studies, which will allow us to think about and build the collective future.

Read less
English