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France to make school obligatory from age three

French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Tuesday that school will become obligatory for all children from age three, instead of six, as part of his plans to shake up the education system.

French President Emmanuel Macron visits the primary school of Rilly-sur-Vienne in central France on 15 March 2018.
French President Emmanuel Macron visits the primary school of Rilly-sur-Vienne in central France on 15 March 2018. Guillaume Souvant/Pool via Reuters
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The move to lower the threshold would affect only a minority of families, with 97.6 percent of French children already enrolled at school at age three, education ministry figures show.

But Macron stressed that the change was intended to fight inequality in overseas territories and the poorest areas of mainland France in particular, where more parents opt not to send their children to school.

"I hope that with this obligation, from the start of the school year in 2019, we can correct this unacceptable differential," he told a conference organised to discuss pre-school education.

He promised that pre-school "is and will be more in the future a founding moment in the French education system".

Macron, who has named education as one of the priorities of his term, has appointed neuropsychiatrist Boris Cyrulnik to help shape changes to the pre-school curriculum in conjunction with education minister Jean-Michel Blanquer.

- with AFP

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