Tag Archives: manar bramah

Israel Education: Blazing a Trail into the Future

UPDATES 9 am Israel time, Friday, September 20 2013: *The battle on Israel’s southern border between the Egyptian Army and Hamas has heated up even more over the last 24 hours. The Army poured tanks and heavy weapons into Rafah … Continue reading

Posted in News | Tagged 46% of the country hold college degrees, 4775, 505, 7.2% GDP on education, all parts of the israeli population are benefiting from the israel push for academic achievement, apple junction, ariel, around gaza, attacked, Australia, bagrut, based on percentage population with college degrees, beit jann, ben gurion university, blazing a trail, blow up, Canada, chemical weapons, chemistry, communities, computer science, defense minister, delay, druze, education, egyptian army, engineering, female paratroopers, Finland, from door to door, front line communities, Gaza, hamas, heavy weapons, hebrew university, helicopters, homeland of palestine, IDF, ireland, Israel, israel defense forces, israeli universities, Japan, kibbutzim, knives, kochav yair, life sciences, maan, manar bramah, mathematics, matriculation to college, medical school, molotov cocktails, morphed, moshe yaalon, most highly educated countries in the world, national security service, new weapon, New Zealand, north south road from Beersheva to Nazareth, northern israel, nuclear program, oecd, only source of fuel, organization for economic cooperation and development, outcry, palestinian terrorist attack, physics, plo, power outages, pullout, putin, rafah, route 60, russia, sheikh zawayda, shoham, sixth highest of all the countries in the world, smuggling tunnels, South Korea, spending, Syria, tanks, tapuach junction, technion, technologically advanced, tel aviv university, terrorists, the list of the top 10, there are few 18 year olds at israeli universities, tiny israel ranks second in the world, to heaven, top 100, towns, United Kingdom, united states, Weizmann insitute | Comments Off on Israel Education: Blazing a Trail into the Future