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Mali's Education System: Structure and Key Training Programs

22/02/2026 4 min read 84

General Structure of Mali's Education System

Mali's education system is governed by Law No. 99-046 of December 28, 1999 on education orientation. This law establishes the foundations of national education and defines the different education cycles.

Organization of Education Cycles

Mali's education system comprises four main levels:

  • Pre-school education: Ages 3-6 (non-compulsory)
  • Fundamental education: Ages 6-15, divided into 6-year and 3-year cycles
  • General secondary education: 3 years (ages 15-18)
  • Higher education: from age 18

Languages of Instruction

Although French is the official language of instruction, Law No. 2017-001 of January 11, 2017 promotes the use of national languages in fundamental education. The main national languages used include:

  • Bambara (spoken by approximately 80% of the population)
  • Fulfulde (Peul)
  • Dogon
  • Soninke
  • Sonrai

Fundamental and Secondary Education

First Cycle of Fundamental Education

This 6-year cycle serves children aged 7-12. The primary school enrollment rate was approximately 68% in 2020 according to Ministry of National Education data (to be verified).

Second Cycle of Fundamental Education

This 3-year cycle (ages 13-15) concludes with the Fundamental Studies Diploma (DEF). The completion rate was approximately 45% in 2019 (to be verified).

General Secondary Education

The 3-year secondary education concludes with the Baccalaureate in several series:

  • Series A: Letters-Languages
  • Series SH: Human Sciences
  • Series SE: Exact Sciences
  • Series STI: Industrial Sciences and Technologies
  • Series SBio: Biological Sciences

Technical Education and Vocational Training

Structure of Vocational Training

The technical and vocational training system is governed by the Ministry of Employment and Vocational Training and includes:

  1. Certificate of Professional Aptitude (CAP): 2-3 years after DEF
  2. Technician Certificate (BT): 2 years after CAP
  3. Technical Baccalaureate: 3 years after DEF
  4. Higher Technician Certificate (BTS): 2 years after Baccalaureate

Main Vocational Training Institutions

  • National Institute of Vocational Training (INFP)
  • Vocational Training Centers (CFP) - several regional centers
  • Abderhamane Baba Touré National Engineering School (ENI-ABT)
  • Rural Polytechnic Institute for Training and Applied Research (IPR/IFRA) in Katibougou

Priority Training Sectors

Technical training focuses on Mali's key economic sectors:

  • Agriculture and livestock
  • Mining and geology
  • Construction and public works
  • Automotive mechanics
  • Electricity and electronics
  • Information technology and telecommunications
  • Crafts and traditional trades

Higher Education

University of Bamako and its Faculties

The University of Bamako, established in 1996, is the main higher education institution comprising:

  • Faculty of Science and Technology (FAST)
  • Faculty of Medicine and Odonto-Stomatology (FMOS)
  • Faculty of Legal and Political Sciences (FSJP)
  • Faculty of Letters, Languages and Human Sciences (FLASH)
  • Faculty of Economics and Management Sciences (FSEG)
  • Higher Normal School of Technical and Professional Education (ENETP)

Other Higher Education Institutions

  • Higher Normal School (ENSup) - teacher training
  • University Institute of Management (IUG)
  • Higher School of Engineering, Architecture and Urban Planning (ESIAU)
  • Conservatory of Multimedia Arts and Crafts Balla Fasséké Kouyaté

Regional Universities

Mali is also developing universities in the regions:

  • University of Ségou (established in 2009)
  • University of Mopti (to be verified)
  • University projects in Sikasso and Gao (to be verified)

Challenges and Reforms in the Education System

Main Challenges

  • Access: Disparities between urban and rural regions
  • Quality: Lack of qualified teachers
  • Infrastructure: Insufficient school equipment
  • Funding: Education budget represents approximately 4.2% of GDP (to be verified)
  • Security: School closures in northern regions

Ongoing Reforms

The Ten-Year Program for Education and Culture Development (PRODEC) aims to:

  1. Improve access to basic education
  2. Strengthen technical and vocational training
  3. Develop higher education
  4. Promote adult literacy

Key Training Programs for Employment

Growing Sectors Requiring Specialized Training

Given Mali's economy, priority training areas include:

  • Mining: Geology, extraction, mineral processing
  • Agriculture: Agronomy, irrigation, agri-food processing
  • Energy: Renewable energy (particularly solar)
  • Technology: Information technology, telecommunications, maintenance
  • Health: Medical and paramedical personnel
  • Education: Teacher training

The development of these sectors offers significant employment prospects for Malian graduates, particularly in the context of economic growth the country is experiencing despite security challenges.

FAQ

La culture malienne valorise le respect des hiérarchies, la ponctualité (même si flexible) et les relations humaines. Les salutations chaleureuses et le dialogue respectueux sont essentiels. L'importance du groupe prime souvent sur l'individualisme. La patience, l'écoute active et une certaine flexibilité face aux imprévus sont appréciées en milieu professionnel.

Le coût de la vie au Mali est relativement modéré par rapport aux pays européens. Un loyer simple à Bamako coûte 50 000-150 000 FCFA/mois. L'alimentation locale est bon marché, mais les produits importés sont chers. Un budget mensuel de 200 000-300 000 FCFA permet une vie décente pour une personne seule à Bamako.

À Bamako, les principaux transports sont les taxi-brousse (minibus), les taxis individuels et les motos-taxis. Les transports en commun restent limités et peu structurés. Pour les trajets longue distance, les taxi-brousse sont incontournables. Posséder une moto ou une voiture facilite beaucoup la mobilité professionnelle en milieu urbain.

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