It would probaly be segragated.
There probably would have been slavery to this day
It would depend on which education system. In some there is a great deal in others none.
the present system of education meet the requirement of islamic fiqah
There were no state schools or any expectation that anyone would complete any level of education. It was a hit-and-miss affair totally dependent on how much money you had, rather like the US medical system.
Purely because his State (Virginia) had voted to join the Confederacy. If it hadn't, he would have accepted Lincoln's offer to command the whole U.S.Army, and history would have been vastly different.
I was told to answer the question. There would be a different educational system in place. When I was younger, I actually read the biography. Research this subject my student.
No.
It didn't, except in the very loose sense that the numerous states would be equal members in a unifying federal system in the same way that the various Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) tribes would be equal members in the united Haudenosaunee Confederacy.
First of all understand that there was no concept of "university" in the ancient Roman world. Their education system was very different from ours. While the primary education was given at home and then in schools, the higher education was always given by tutors who specialized in certain subjects. For example, many young Roman men were sent to Greece to learn rhetoric from one of the masters who had a school there. (rhetoric was very important in politics and public life) Politics would not be taught. A Roman such as Caesar, would absorb the ins and outs of the political system from family and social connections. He would get noticed by either prosecuting or defending in the senate.
the same what you would feel if you were the elder brother........
what would you change about the education system in your country
The North was in fear that Great Britian was an ally of the Confederacy. The theory was that the Confederacy would exchange cotton for British military and naval supplies. There was even a document proposing that Jefferson Davis would give control of the Confederacy to the Queen of England and in exchange the Confederacy would be treated as a "Priveledged Colony". (Great Britian coincidentally had a cotton surplus the year that the Confederacy offered cotton for military and naval supplies.)