The unified system of education in the Second Polish Republic was attempted in 1920,[1] later superseded by the Jędrzejewicz reform, named after Janusz Jędrzejewicz,[2] approved by the Sejm in 1932.
The Jędrzejewicz reform received controversial recognition.
On the other hand, it introduced a considerable degree of interference of the state into issues of academic freedom.
[1] At the moment of the regaining of the independence by Poland in 1918 and the establishment of the Second Polish Republic, its system of education was in disarray, mainly due to more than a century of partitions of Poland by Austria-Hungary, the German, and the Russian Empires.
[4] This article relating to education in Poland is a stub.