They are thought about a subject called civics, which seems to be mandatory in the national school leaving examination (commonly also called ESSLCE).
I have to admit that I didn't know what this subject is all about and had to search in google, after seeing the subject listed on the certification of the following student, Sifan Fita.
At the same time the home-grown languages are not (no more) mandatory in the country itself to pass the exam, where these students are going to join the workforce down the road and are expected to master at least one or more of those languages.
I was recently looking at a job-opening in which the fleuency in 3 languages was written out (it was for the Oromia region). Part of the requirements: fluency in Amharic, Afan Oromo and English.
I am not sure about the rest but in Europe the students are taught about Economics, Accounting, Language proficiency (in more than one language) but not in politics, at the secondary school level. That is why they don't throw stones and burn properties, because they understand "accounting".
The American universities will be sniffing at such talented students and will soon engulf them with admissions to their universities, with a relatively better paid scholarships. Such students will end-up serving the country which didn't contribute in bringing them up but catched them afterwards elsewhere and we turn around and complain about a phenomenon called "brain drain".
This young student will end-up in one of the American univesities and spend most of her time to use her talent for somewhere else, like many have done before her.