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France to lower school starting age from six to three

Change will only affect a small number of children, as most French families already send their children to nursery school aged three or even two.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Children in France will start school at the age of three instead of six, under new reforms announced by President Emmanuel Macron, reports the BBC.

The change will give France one of the lowest compulsory school starting ages in Europe.

But it will only affect a small number of children, as the majority of French families already choose to send their children to nursery school at three.

Only 2.4% of children are not enrolled at that age, government figures show.

Mr Macron said the change was intended to reduce inequality in education, as parents in poorer areas of France and in overseas territories are less likely to send their children to nursery school.

In Paris, 93% of three-year-olds are enrolled but the figure is much lower in some overseas territories, according to Le Monde.

"I hope that with this obligation, from the start of the school year in 2019, we can... correct this unacceptable differential," Mr Macron told a conference on Tuesday.

Read more of this report from the BBC.