Holguin students. Photo: Kevin Manuel Noya

More than 1,530,000 students return to classrooms in Cuba

More than 1,530,000 students in Cuban General and University Education begin the 2025-2026 school year today. Amid a complex national economic outlook, sector officials reported.

In recent statements, the head of the Ministry of Education (MINED), Naima Ariatne Trujillo, assured that despite the difficulties, the State has guaranteed essential resources for the functioning of the Caribbean country’s education system.

The school day begins with a strong component of social commitment from professionals, workers, and institutions. Involved in the collective effort to maintain the continuity of the teaching process, the minister noted.

In this context, the educational situation in the country is diverse and requires specific territorial solutions, Trujillo stated. Explaining that “each region faces different challenges, from teacher coverage to school logistics.”

She also emphasized that educational projects must adapt to local conditions. So “flexibility and collaborative work are key to overcoming obstacles” when students from different educational levels arrive in the classroom, she stated.

Regional inequalities require differentiated strategies and centralized support. The Caribbean island’s educational system prioritizes equity but recognizes material limitations.

However, the school infrastructure has been prepared through community effort, the participation of families, and teaching groups, the head of the Ministry of Education (MINED) stated.

The Cuban education system requires more than 3.6 million items of clothing. But 2.2 million have been produced to date, according to officials from the Ministry of Industry.

Cuba allocates almost 24 percent of its public spending to education, a historic priority for the state since the revolutionary triumph of January 1st, 1959, led by Fidel Castro, to whom the school year is dedicated for the centennial of his birth on August 13th, 2026.

With information from Prensa Latina