Kristina Alda (19.4.2006 - The Prague Post)
Students speak: Ondřej Vocilka, second from left, thinks education should be free. Štěpán Kovařík, right, thinks tuition would raise quality.
Cristina Muntean (18.4.2006 - Czech Business Weekly)
Czech scientists will have their value-added tax (VAT) refunded if a government-backed draft amendment to the VAT law makes it through Parliament this week.
Cristina Muntean (6.2.2006 - Czech Business Weekly)
Before the Velvet Revolution, fewer than one in 10 Czechs went on to study at the college or university level.
Jeffery White (20.7.2005 - The Prague Post)
Klára Matoušková, 20, is saving for a trip to England before college. It's with a broad smile that 23-year-old Jakub Feige, when asked about his summer plans, says he intends to do nothing much at all. "I'm at home," Feige says, standing in the hallway of Charles University's Philosophical Faculty in Old Town, where he studies history. Home is Jablonec nad Nisou, up north. There he'll ride his bike, he says. He'll play football.
Lenka Ponikelská (7.2.2005 - Czech Business Weekly)
Even as more and more students realize the importance of gaining real-world work experience prior to graduating, the government has thrown up an administrative barrier for employers willing to offer students part-time jobs.
Petr Matějů (24.11.2004 - The Prague Post)
Reforms to the system of higher education in Central and Eastern Europe display both common and unique features, with the commonality derived mostly from the similarity of tasks faced by the post-communist countries at the beginning of their transformation. One of these was the need to reform the "Soviet" or "communist" model of higher education and research.
Dinah A. Spritzer (January 29.2004 - The Prague Post)
Facts emphasized at creativity's expense, inspection office says
Petr Matějů (5.2. 2003 - The Prague Post)
Putting Havel's name on an international research center would be a fitting way to make use of his global stature
Previous Page | Next Page
|