Discussion Papers 1988. 
Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
148 
Bozena GALCZYNSKA 
SPATIAL DIFFERENCES IN THE LEVEL OF EDUCATION OF 
POLAND'S AGRICULTURAL POPULATION 
The main task of agriculture is to meet the 
demand for food required by a still growing pupula-
tion uader conditions of a continually decreasing 
supply of agricultural land. To fulfill this task, 
modern technology and new forms of organization 
should be introduced and agricultural methods should 
be changed. 
Modern agriculture requires specialized 
machines, fertilizers, and new techniques of pro-
duction. However, to stimulate progress, not only 
are skilled operators necessary, but also individual 
farmers should possess both general and specialized 
knowledge. A certain departure can now be observed 
from the traditional cultural pattern, when the heir 
inherits not only the farm but also takes over all 
practical procedures applied by his parents, which 
he learns when working under their guidance but 
which are no longer adequate 
/Rosner 1973/. 
One of the essential factors contributing to 
increased agricultural production, which is also 
one of the basic components of progress in agricul-
ture, is the level of education and professional 
knowledge of farmers. In agriculture, this factor 
is even more important than in many other branches 
of the economy because it determines not only the 
standard of management but also the scale of activi-
ties. 
In the rich literature dealing with  various 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
149 
aspects of education in the countryside, many 
studies, mainly on the scale of the country or 
selected regions, are concerned with relations 
between the level of education and production ef-
fects /Malanicz 1965; Kurek 1971; ZiOlek 1978; 
Trzcinski 1979; Debowski, Kozok 1983; Klank 1985; 
etc/; but not many of them analyse spatial dif-
ferences in the education of the agricultural 
population /Krzymowska - Kostrowicka 1979; 
Trzcinski 1981/. The lack of spatial analyses 
of the level of education of the agricultural 
population at the commune scale for the whole 
country and of relations existing between the 
education of the agricultural population and 
production effects has induced the author to 
carry out the described study. Initial results, 
which were concerned with the level of farmer's 
education and production effects, are described 
by the author together with Kulikowski /1986/, 
and those concerned with the spatial differences 
in the level of education of agricultural popula-
tion in Poland in a paper by the author /1986/. A 
summarized description of these studies is included 
in this paper. 
In post-war Poland, progress in the develop-
ment and dissemination of education has been con-
siderable. The number of people with above-primary 
/higher, secondary, or vocational/ education has 
increased significantly. The share of people en-
gaded in agriculture who possess above-primary 
education increased from 2.7 % in 1960 to 19.1 % 
in 1978, of which in peasant farming the levels in-
creased from 2.1 % to 17.1 % and in socialized 
farming from 13.6 % to 49.3 %. 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
150 
The number of people not completing primary 
school declined from  73.3 %  in 1960 to 26.6 % in 
1978 /31.3 % in peasant farming and 6.9 % in soci-
alized farming/. However, in 1978 65 % of the total 
unqualified labour force working in the national 
economy was still employed in agriculture 
/Padowicz 1984/. The share of population with above- 
primary education in the countryside was still 
three times lower than in the towns 
/Muszynska 
1983/. 
The statistical data used in the study are 
taken from the 1978 General Census, which presents 
them separately for five levels of education /higher, 
secondary, vocational, primary, and primary not- 
completed/ mainly of self-employed farmers, grouped 
according to communes for Poland as a whole. The 
1978 General Census indicated that there were in 
Poland  5.3  million people active in agriculture aged 
15 or over. Employment in peasant farming amounted 
to 4.25 million and  3.936  million were mainly self- 
employed /92.6 % of the total force employed in 
peasant farming and 74.3 % of the total labour en-
gaged in agriculture/. 
Almost 12 % of the self-employed farmers are 
graduates of above-primary schools /0.2 % from 
higher schools, 2.8 % from secondary schools, and 
8.7 % from vocational schools/. The dominant propor-
tion /57.4 %/ completed primary education, about 31 
% did not finish a primary school. 
The highest percentage of people with above-
primary education was found in Greater Poland, 
Cuiavia, and the areas along the Lower Vistula  /Fig.  
1/. In the communes situated there, the proportion 
— 
of that group oscillated from 20 to 30 %; in many 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
1 5 1 
'I  1. 

EDI  2' 
111:11  
alTh 3 
Kt§  7' 
MMM 
Individual  agriculture  1978 
1= 
<5 
5=  20-25 
2= 
5-10 
6=  25-30 
3=  10-15 
7= 30< 
4=  15-20 
FIFURE 1 Percentage of people with above-primary 
education of total actively employed on 
own farms 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
152 
communes in the Leszno voivodship, it exceeded 
30 
The percentage of people with above-primary 
education was higher in these commures than 
elsewhere in Poland /15-20 %/ 
A high percentage of the agricultural 
population with abom primary education /over 20 %/ 
was registered in Upper Silesia, Cieszyn Silesia, 
numerous communes in Warsaw's suburban zone, cer-
tain communes in the Silesian Lowland and the 
Sudeten Foreland, as well as in Western Pomerania. 
However, in most of Poland the agricultural 
population with above-primary education did not 
exceed 15 % of self-employed farmers; in north 
eastern Poland, this percentage was even 5-10 %. 
The lowest percentages of self-employed farmers 
with above-primary education /under  5 %/ were found 
in the communes of Poland's central region /Piotrkow, 
Kielce, and the southern part of Radom voivodship/ 
and in the south-east /Przemysl voivodship/. 
The highest number of graduates from voca-
tional schools was registered in the areas where 
the share of population with above-primary educa-
tion exceeded 20 %; it oscillated from 15 to 20 % 
and, in the voivodships of Leszno or Poznan, it 
even exceeded 20 %. In the same areas the number of 
graduates from secondary education was also the 
highest /over  5 %/.  At the same time the percentage 
of self-employed farmers who did not complete a 
primary school was lowest there /from 5 to 10 %/; 
in many communes in Opole Silesia, Cieszyn Silesia, 
and Greater Poland, part of Cuiavia, and the Cas.. 
subian Lakeland it was even under  5 % /Fig. 2/. 
Those territories are traditionally known as having 
attained very high agricultural standards, where 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
11 1 
ME  5 
ED 2 
MU 6 
EH 3 
14#1 7. 
EUB 
Individual agriclutre 1973 
1= <5 
5= 30-40 
2= 5-10 
6= 40-50 
3=10-20 
7= 50< 
FIGURE 2 Percentage of people with uncompleted primary 
education of total actively employed on own 
farms 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
1 5 4 
for generations the custom of acquiring profes-
sional knowledge and improving qualifications 
has been preserved, and where this task is thought 
to be of the utmost significance. 
The situation with regard to the level of 
education is also quite auspicious in southern 
Poland, where the share of farmers with above- 
primary education was large /10-15 %/ and the 
number of people with uncompleted primary educa-
tion relatively small /10-30 %/. These territories 
are characterized by a high proportion of bioccupa-
tional population; obtaining a job in non-agricul-
tural occupations requires at least the completion 
of a primary school or professional training. 
In turn, the percentage of people with un-
completed primary education was highest /30-40 %/ 
in large areas in eastern and central Poland,which 
are characterized by a low or even very low percen-
tage with above-primary education; in many communes 
the percentage  even  exceeded 40 % and sporadically 
in the communes of the Bialystok and Piotrkow voi-
vodship even 50 % of self-employed farmers. 
A similar situation was noted in the Recov,- 
ered Territories, where the share of people who did 
not complete primary school was 30-50 %„ This is 
due to the fact that up to the present most of the 
farmers are people who settled there, having come 
from central Poland and the USSR, mostly from the 
areas where agricultural standards were low and 
where there was not an inborn tendency to raise 
one's own qualifications. The specific features 
characterizing these areas are, on the one hand, 
a high proportion of people with uncompleted pri- 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
15 5 
mary education, and, on the other hand, a high 
percentage /10-15 %/ of mainly young people with 
above-primary education /mostly graduates of voca-
tional and secondary schools/. 
The introduction of the general system of 
education has caused young farmers to be much bet-
ter educated than their parents /Adamkiewicz  1979; 
Wyderko 1980/. In 1982, 34.5 % of agricultural 
workers up to 45 years of age were graduates of 
above-primary schools, but only 13.6 % completed 
agricultural schools /Galczynska, Kulikowski 1986/. 
Szemberg /1980/ tells us that almost half of the 
future farm owners have completed above-primary 
schools and that the number of heirs who did not 
complete a primary school is very small /5-6 %/ 
There are also differences in the level of 
farmers' education in holdings of various sizes. 
If we analyse data of 1978, we will see that the 
proportion of farmers with above-primary education 
in farms up to 2 ha was 13 %, from 2 to  5  ha  9.7 %, 
from  5 to  10 ha 11 %, and 16 % in farms of over 
10 ha /Trzcinski 1981/. 
In peasant farming in Poland the share of 
people with above-primary education is determined 
by the number of people with completed vocational 
schools /Poland's average = 8.7 %/; graduates of 
secondary education play a lesser role /2.8 %/. 
There are few graduates of higher education in 
peasant farming /Poland's average = 0.2 %/. Their 
number is higher in towns and communes lying in 
the vicinity of large urban centres. The only ex-
ception is the Warsaw voivodship, where for many 
communes the respective index exceeds 1 % and in 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
156 
certain communes it is even higher: Lesznowola 2.1 
%, BrwinOw 1.8 %, Michalowice and Jablonna 1.6 %, 
A positive relationship between the level 
of education and production effects is emphasized 
in many studies carried out by economists /Malanicz 
1963; Kurek 1971; Ziolek 1978; Klank 1985/ and by 
geographers /Galczynska, Kulikowski 1986/. The 
studies point out that the higher the level of 
education, the greater the land productivity and 
the degree and level of commercialization /Malanicz 
1965; Galczynska, Kulikowski 1986/. Properly trained 
farmers as a rule obtain from the same area 1.5-2 
times greater production at a much lower cost 
/Brzoska 1976/. Net production per ha of agri-
cultural land in farms managed by people with above-
primary education is almost 15 % more than that 
obtained in farms run by people with uncompleted 
primary education; final production is even higher 
by almost 20 % /Klank 1985/. 
The level of education is also a factor that 
differentiates agriculture in separate farms, since 
better educated farmers are more willing to use 
modern methods. The more advanced the level of educa-
tion, the higher are material and financial inputs 
per ha of agricultural land and the lower are labour 
inputs /Malanicz 1965/. Farmers with above-primary 
education manage their farms much more efficiently, 
i.e., they use less labour to produce a certain 
net production /Trzcinski 1979/ and also they wil-
lingly introduce all new techniques /Adamkiewicz 
1979,  Rosner 1973/. 
In Poland as a whole the processes effecting 
agricultural progress have accelerated more rapidly 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
157 
in the northern, western, and south-western regions. 
Fertilization is much more intensive /200 kg per ha 
of agricultural land/ and mechanical power is used 
more frequently in the areas where the farmers/level 
of education is higher, as in the territories along 
the Lower Vistula, Greater Poland, Cuiavia, Lower 
and Upper Silesia, as wellasi3certain communes of 
Western Pomerania and the Sudeten Foreland; the use 
of draught animals is much less frequent here /under 
30 %/. Undoubtedly, agricultural qualifications 
gained by the farmers condition a rational use of 
inputs. 
Modern progressive agricultural methods are 
also applied in the vicinity of large urban agglo-
merations /e.g., around Warsaw or LOdz/. The devel-
opment of modern market gardening /production of 
vegetables and fruit/ is an example of abandoning 
traditional agricultural methods in the most rapid 
way 
/Stys 1983/. The vicinity of a big town with 
a well-developed network of all types of schools, 
makes it possible for future farmers to acquire 
general and specialized knowledge, whereas the ap-
plication of modern farming methods brings about 
concrete economic results encouraging the operation 
of highly specialized farms. Suburban areas are 
characterized by the highest proportion of farmers 
who have completed higher education. The existing 
acute regional differences in the level of educa-
tion among private farmers result from the still 
extant historical conditions of the development of 
the country's separate parts. 
Because of an evident interdependence between 
the level of education of farmers and production ef-
fects, the identification of spatial differences in 

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
158 
the level of education of the agricultural popula-
tion has not only cognitive values but also prac-
tical effects, since it may influence the further 
course of the development and intensification of 
agriculture. It is, however, of vital importance 
to continue studies in this respect, including 
such topics as an analysis of links between the 
level of farmers' education and age structure, or 
between the level of education and orientations 
in agricultural production. 
References  
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Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
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Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
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-

Bozena Galczynska : Spatial Differences in the Level of Education of Poland's Agricultural Population 
Discussion Paper 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 148-161. p.
161 
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