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===Africa=== In West Africa, "school" can also refer to "bush" schools, Quranic schools, or apprenticeships. These schools include formal and informal learning. Bush schools are training camps that pass down cultural skills, traditions, and knowledge to their students. Bush schools are semi-similar to traditional western schools because they are separated from the larger community. These schools are located in forests outside of the towns and villages, and the space used is solely for these schools. Once the students have arrived in the forest, they cannot leave until their training is complete. Visitors are prohibited from these areas.<ref name=":2">{{cite journal|last1=Watkins Hanna|first1=Mark|title=The West African "Bush" School|journal=American Journal of Sociology|date=May 1943|volume=48|issue=6|pages=666β675|doi=10.1086/219263|s2cid=144208852}}</ref> Instead of being separated by age, Bush schools are separated by gender. Women and girls cannot enter the boys' bush school territory and vice versa. Boys receive training in cultural crafts, fighting, hunting, and community laws among other subjects.<ref name=":2" /> Girls are trained in their own version of the boys' bush school. They practice domestic affairs such as cooking, childcare, and being a good wife. Their training is focused on how to be a proper woman by societal standards.[[File:Serrekundamadrassa.JPG|thumb|A ''[[madrasah]]'' in the Gambia|left]]Qur'anic schools are the principal way of teaching the Quran and knowledge of the Islamic faith. These schools also fostered literacy and writing during the time of colonization. Today, the emphasis is on the different levels of reading, memorizing, and reciting the Quran. Attending a Qur'anic school is how children become recognized members of the Islamic faith. Children often attend state schools and a Qur'anic school. In Mozambique, specifically, there are two kinds of Qur'anic schools. They are the tariqa based and the Wahhabi-based schools. What makes these schools different is who controls them. Tariqa schools are controlled at the local level. In contrast, the Wahhabi are controlled by the Islamic Council.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bonate|first1=Liazat|title=Islamic Education in Africa|date=2016|publisher=Indiana University Press}}</ref> Within the Qur'anic school system, there are levels of education. They range from a basic level of understanding, called chuo and kioni in local languages, to the most advanced, which is called ilimu.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bonate|first1=Lizzat|title=Islamic Education in Africa|date=2016|publisher=Indiana University Press}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> In Nigeria, the term ''school'' broadly covers [[Child care|daycares]], [[Preschool|nursery schools]], [[primary school]]s, [[secondary school]]s and [[Tertiary education|tertiary institutions]]. Primary and secondary schools are either privately funded by religious institutions and corporate organisations or government-funded. Government-funded schools are commonly referred to as public schools. Students spend six years in primary school, three years in junior secondary school, and three years in senior secondary school. The first nine years of formal schooling is compulsory under the Universal Basic Education Program (UBEC).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ubec.gov.ng/about/who-we-are/|title=Universal Basic Education Commission {{!}} Home|website=www.ubec.gov.ng|access-date=2019-12-17|archive-date=17 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191217011131/https://www.ubec.gov.ng/about/who-we-are/|url-status=live}}</ref> Tertiary institutions include public and private universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education. Universities can be funded by the federal government, state governments, religious institutions, or individuals and organisations.
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