Educational Policy in Comparative Perspective: The Case of Estonia and Azerbaijan 79 Estonian educational policy from different standpoints Education has been a focal need of the Baltic nations since recovering autonomy. As a little
nation with constrained normal assets, Estonia sees its human capital as a critical resource for
being the member of the European Union and to contend in the worldwide economy [12]
highlighted several successful changes in Estonian education since independence as: Estonia
built strong legal structure of education by adopting following acts in the field of pre-school
education, basic and secondary education, vocational education, higher education, private
education, adult education and so forth; formation and modernization of the curricular for basic
and secondary schools; creation of the national assessment system in accordance with renovation
of the national examination in order to improve quality of education and build accountability for
all; establishment of accessibility of IT and computerization of schools; renovation of vocational
schools on the basis of building strong links between skill development and knowledge
attainment; reforms in higher education in terms of development research abilities and making
them internationally competitive; together with progress on universities also Estonia tried to
improve colleges due to demand of labour market; significant initiatives on presenting new
projects on education such as Open Estonia Foundation, Educational Forum. These all successful
attempts were due to real encouragement and will to change and innovation.
Adaptability and openness are the attributes and pervasive standards of Estonia's financial
arrangement. Estonia is an e-nation with a positive business atmosphere and expense favourable
circumstances that are additionally open to development. This success is done on the support
and believe in human capital. Enhancing the country's state funded schools is one of the most
astounding needs of Estonia's government, state, and nearby governments [10]. Among the goals
picking up consideration as of late is the need to create school pioneers who are equipped for
practicing more carefulness over guideline and building up an institutional society those
backings compelling instructing practices. To catalyse changes in understudy realizing,
numerous states have instituted new administration gauges for principals and changed criteria
for pioneer preparing projects. Areas, as well, have started to pay more notice to their own
human asset pipelines by setting up projects to prepare yearning principals and to build up the
aptitudes of mid-profession principals [7].
The educational policy of Estonia since 1991 has built on liberal economic and political
developments. The central issues in educational policy are privatization of schools and increase
community responsibility for schools and create cost efficiency in education. The reforms were
held by Initiatives and changes made during independence Learning Estonia, Tiger Leap
Programme and Education Forum brought new approaches to the Estonian educational system.
In 1999-2000
Learning Estonia educational strategy came into existence, prepared by the Ministry
of Education of Estonia and Education Forum Task Force. The draft was discussed for two years
and was adopted in 2001. In 2001 other documents such as development strategy Knowledge
Based Estonia, the Action Plan for the Development of Vocational Education, the Higher
Education Reform Strategy and National Development Strategy on Youth Work were developed
by the government as well. As mentioned above Estonia came across with several challenges,
they are followings: (1) change in old-dated and ideological curricular of the Soviet times; (2)
integration modern teacher trainings; (3) existence of separate schools for Russian migrants or
Russian speaking people in Estonia; (4) development and improvement of IT and (5) adaptation
to the changes.