art and literature and music
Children were taught by their parents, and for the rich, household tutors.
Hey! i had the same question a couple days ago. i figured out that the sophists were usually atheists (do not believe and god). They taught subjects such as making the weaker argument the strong one, and discovering the truth in things. They sometimes also taught things such as math or science.
Queen Cleopatra of Egypt has an Egyptian Royal was educated by both scholars and priests in all subjects very similar to those kids in our days are taught with the difference that they had private classes with their tutors and the classes also included protocol of state, and subjects such as Diplomacy and Politics.
most Egyptian children didn't go to school. Though,they had tutors at home. some boys went to a special school just for boys were they were taught how to be a scribe.Another answerEducation for all children is a fairly recent thing. For the ancient Egyptians, education was for the rich. These children had tutors who taught one or two children in the home and girls were not part of the system. Boys who were the second child in the family could be trained in the priestly class. The reason why is that the first born boy inherited the family title and wealth so he didn't become a priest. Reading and writing were considered to be important subjects for the wealthy people, not for everybody.
Inti is the sun god and he taught his kinds the art of civilization and sent them to earth to instruct mankind.
Samoan children are taught all subjects as taught in overseas countries
Reading, writing, math and Flute
The subjects taught in Chinese school are generally the same as anywhere else. Language, geography, math, social science, and art are the common subjects.
In the 1980s, children were taught subjects such as math, science, language arts (English), social studies, physical education, and sometimes computer education. The curriculum also included art, music, and sometimes foreign language classes. Religious education was often taught in private schools.
The Church in the Middle Ages was the schooling for the nobility. Priests taught children as tutors for noble families and chose the subjects taught according to The Bible and god.
Subjects taught in residential schools often included basic academic subjects like reading, writing, and arithmetic; vocational training in trades like farming or domestic work; religious education; and cultural assimilation practices aimed at erasing Indigenous languages and traditions. These schools were designed to strip Indigenous children of their identity and culture in order to assimilate them into Euro-Canadian society.
The Church in the Middle Ages was the schooling for the nobility. Priests taught children as tutors for noble families and chose the subjects taught according to the Bible and god.
In Sparta, the subjects taught to the youth included military training, physical education, survival skills, Spartan law, and obedience to the state. Academic subjects like reading, writing, and arithmetic were also taught, but they were not as important as physical and military training.
Irish, English, Maths, Geography, History, Science, Religion, Computers are some. Lots of languages and specific sciences are taught. Lots of more specialised subjects are taught in technical schools.
art and literature and music
Reading, writing, arithmatic, English, Latin, and religion. Other subjects depend on gender and ethnicity. For example: females were also taught homemaking skills and males were taught book keeping.
Egyptian children were taught to become scribes if that's what they studied. If you weren't studying to become a scribe you would have went with a person who was working as what you wanted to work as. In modern Egypt, children learn almost the same subjects taught in Western Countries. Students in Egypt study math, Arabic, English, science, geography, history, PE, religion mainly in primary school.