“…During the Portuguese dictatorship regime (1933–1974), specifically in the 1950s, when primary education was the only offer for the majority of the population, the national educational offer was divided in secondary schools and industrial or commercial schools, which had different targets, according to students’ socio-cultural backgrounds. The first was intended to the middle/upper classes, and the second to the underprivileged classes, being prominently practical (Martins and Martins, 2016). Until the April Revolution of 1974, this education modality was reinforced and subject to several restructurings, developing public policies based on the need to ensure economic development, framed in a logic of access to post-primary education, specifically, to a path of secondary education differentiated from the high school education, and without the possibility of continuing studies in higher education (Grácio, 1998; Martins and Martins, 2016).…”