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The
Tanzimat or Reform Period of 1839-1876 marks
the beginning of westernisation in Turkey. One
of the important innovations of these years
was the establishment of vocational schools
for girls who had graduated from primary or
junior high schools, the first being the Dârülmuallimât
or Teacher Training College for Girls which
opened in 1870, followed shortly afterwards
by the Girls College of Art. An important turning
point had been the Regulations for Public Education
of 1869 which made primary education compulsory
for boys and girls. To train women teachers
for girls' schools, Minister of Education Saffet
Paşa decided to establish a teacher training
college, and an entrance examination was held
on 8 February 1870. Thirty-two girls won places
at the new school, whose curriculum was to consist
of religion and morality, grammar, arithmetic,
domestic science, embroidery, drawing, calligraphy,
Ottoman history and geography. Music lessons
would be introduced at a later date. The schoo'su
first headmaster was an elderly intellectual
named Emin Efendi, and the teaching staff, consisting
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