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Compulsory age of starting school in European countries, 2007

This table includes information on school starting ages in the 34 countries participating in Eurydice, the information network on education in Europe.1

Age

Country

Four

Northern Ireland

Five

England, Malta, Netherlands, Scotland, Wales

Six

Austria, Belgium, Cyprus2, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece3, Hungary4, Iceland, Republic of Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg 5, Norway, Portugal, Romania6, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Turkey

Seven

Bulgaria, Estonia, Denmark 7, Finland, Latvia8, Lithuania, Poland9, Sweden

The compulsory school starting ages detailed in this table often represent the latest age at which children must start school. In several European countries, most children enter school below compulsory school age (for example, education in the Netherlands is compulsory from age five, but virtually all children start school at four).

There is a trend towards requiring children to start education at a younger age, with several countries having lowered their school starting ages recently and others making pre-school attendance compulsory.

Children in UK countries start school at a comparatively young age, with Northern Ireland having the lowest statutory age of entry to school. The compulsory school starting age in Northern Ireland was changed from five to four years in 1989 because it was thought that all children would benefit from spending a total of 12 full years at school (seven years at primary school and five at secondary school) .

In Scotland, compulsory education starts at age five, although many children start at four because schools have a single intake at the beginning of the school year. Local authorities set a cut-off date (normally 1st March) defining the cohort of children eligible to start school at the beginning of the following school year (normally in August). This means that Scottish children do not usually start school below the age of four years and six months.

England and Wales have a similar system, with a compulsory school starting age of five, although the majority of children start school at four. Because the cut-off date is the same as the beginning of the school year, children born in August can start school in September, just after their fourth birthday.



NB. The information for this briefing is extracted from an article by Caroline Sharp, a Principal Research Officer at the National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER) and Sharon O'Donnell, Head of the Eurydice Unit for England Wales and Northern Ireland for inclusion in the forthcoming CIDREE10 Yearbook 2007.


1. The Eurydice Network includes the Member States of the European Union (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom); the three countries of the European Free Trade Association which are members of the European Economic Area (Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway); and Turkey (an EU candidate country involved in the Lifelong Learning Programme).

2. Cyprus: compulsory school age is determined as children who are five years eight months old before 1st September - the start of the academic year. Pre-primary education is compulsory for five- to six-year olds, that is, for one year, for children who are four years and eight months old by 1st September.

3. Greece: the Government is considering making pre-primary education compulsory.

4. Hungary: but kindergarten attendance is compulsory at age five.

5. Luxembourg: but pre-primary attendance is compulsory from age four.

6. Romania: reduced to six from seven from the 2003-04 school year (at the same time, the period of compulsory education in Romania was extended from eight to ten years).

7.Denmark: the Minister of Education has suggested that pre-primary classes for six- to seven-year-olds are renamed ‘first form’ and made mandatory. This is with a view to easing transition from kindergarten to compulsory education.

8. Latvia: but pre-primary education is compulsory for five- to six-year-olds.

9. Poland: but kindergarten is compulsory at age six.

10. Consortium of Institutions for Development and Research in Education in Europe (http://www.cidree.org).

Last updated August 2007




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