. , a kindergarten, elementary, junior high, and high school, and college in
Ibillin. Israel operates an Arab education system for the
Israeli-Arab minority, teaching Arab students, in Arabic, about their history and culture. Israel is a signatory of the
Convention against Discrimination in Education, and ratified it in 1961. The convention has the status of law in Israeli courts. However, there have been claims that the Jewish education system gets more resources. According to the Follow-Up Committee for Arab Education, the Israeli government spends an average of $192 per year on each Arab student, and $1,100 per Jewish student. It also notes that drop-out rate for Israeli Arab citizens is twice as high as that of their Jewish counterparts (12 percent versus 6 percent). The same group also noted that in 2005, there was a 5,000-classroom shortage in the Arab sector. According to a 2016 study by the
Pew Research Center, 33% of Jews (based on a sample of 3,020) have a college degree (ranging from 13% for
Haredi to 45% for
Hiloni), compared to 18% for Christians (based on a sample of 375).
Christian Arabs tend to have had the highest rates of success in the matriculation examinations, both in comparison to the
Muslims and the
Druze, and in comparison to all students in the
Jewish education system. Arab Christians were also the vanguard in terms of eligibility for
higher education, In 2001, a
Human Rights Watch report stated that students in government-run Arab schools received inferior education due to fewer teachers, inadequate school construction, and lack of libraries and recreational space. Jewish schools were found to be better equipped, some offering film editing studios and theater rooms. In 2009, Sorel Cahan of
Hebrew University's School of Education claimed that the average per-student budget allocation for students with special needs at Arab junior high schools was five times lower. In 2007, the Israeli Education Ministry announced a plan to increase funding for schools in Arab communities. According to a ministry official, "At the end of the process, a lot of money will be directed toward schools with students from families with low education and income levels, mainly in the Arab sector." The Education Ministry prepared a five-year plan to close the gaps and raise the number of students eligible for high school matriculation. A 2009 report showed that obstacles to Arab students participating in higher education resulted in over 5,000 moving to study in nearby Jordan. The
Association for Civil Rights in Israel and various scholars have criticized wide disparities in education access between Jewish Israelis and Arab Israelis, and underfunding of Arab schools. The Ministry of Education announced in April 2010 that the suggested curriculum for the coming school year would not include civics, democratic values, or Jewish-Arab coexistence, and focus more on Zionist and Jewish values. In 2010, the number of computer science teachers in the Arab sector rose by 50%. The Arab sector also saw a rise of 165% in instructors teaching technology classes and a 171% increase in the number teaching mathematics. The number of physics teachers in Arab schools grew by 25%, those teaching chemistry by 44% and in biology by 81.7%. According to a 2012 report by the Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, there is a shortage of 6,100 classrooms and 4,000 teachers in Arab communities. In 2011, the
Council for Higher Education introduced a 5-Year Plan to increase accessibility to higher education among Arab,
Druze and
Circassian students. The first plan ran through 2015/16, and was subsequently extended through 2021/22. The plan is being implemented in 30 institutions of higher education that receive their budgets from the CHE's Planning and Budgeting Committee, and where the student body includes Arab, Druze, and Circassian students. The program relates holistically to the many stages involved in succeeding in higher education: from providing information and guidance in grades 11 and 12, to offering pre-academic preparatory courses, to financial support while studying, to assistance in transitioning to the labor market. There are scholarships for excellence in postgraduate studies and academic staff. Beyond assistance to the individual students, a special effort is made to address the overall organizational culture of the institutions in terms of the degree to which they are culturally inclusive. Beyond governmental 5-Year Plans, nonprofit partnerships have played a growing role in closing educational gaps. Through its Ruad ("Pioneers") program,
Aluma - Youth for Change provides academic guidance, mentoring, and scholarships for Arab, Druze, and Circassian students across 20 higher education institutions. ==Gender statistics==