The goal is to get up to 40,000 additional spaces for more young Mexicans to enter high schools or high school and coverage at this educational level reaches 85% in the next two years. Until the 2023-2024 school year, the coverage was 81%.
To achieve this, some secondary schools will also be converted. The morning shift will be for high school students and in the evening, upper media classes will be taught.
One of the first works started this Saturday in Mérida, Yucatán, where the authorities placed the first stone in the center of industrial technological baccalaureate (CBTIS) No. 305.
This school will have 12 classrooms, three technical workshops, a multifunctional laboratory and a computing classroom. It is expected to have space for 900 students distributed in two shifts.
