Education in France
Education in France is organized in a highly centralized manner, with many subdivisions. It is divided into the three stages of primary education, secondary education, and higher education. Two year olds do not start primary school, they start preschool. Then, by the age of six, a child in France starts primary school and soon moves into higher and higher grade levels until they graduate.
In French higher education, the following degrees are recognized by the Bologna Process : Licence and Licence Professionnelle, and the comparably named Master and Doctorat degrees.
The Programme for International Student Assessment coordinated by the OECD in 2018 ranked the overall knowledge and skills of French 15-year-olds as 26th in the world in reading literacy, mathematics, and science, below the OECD average of 493. The average OECD performance of French 15-year-olds in science and mathematics has declined, with the share of low performers in reading, mathematics and science developing a sharp upward trend. France's share of top performers in mathematics and science has also declined.
France's performance in mathematics and science at the middle school level was ranked 23 in the 1995 Trends in International Math and Science Study. In 2019, France ranked 21 in the TIMSS Science general ranking.
History
began the French university and secondary educational systems. Guizot started the elementary system. Intense battles took place over whether the Catholic Church should play a dominant role. The modern era of French education begins at the end of the 19th century. Jules Ferry, the Minister of Public Instruction in 1881, is widely credited for creating the modern school by requiring all children between the ages of 6 and 12, both boys and girls, to attend. He also made public instruction mandatory, free of charge, and secular. With those laws, known as French Lubbers, Jules Ferry laws, and several others, the Third Republic repealed most of the Falloux Laws of 1850–1851, which gave an important role to the clergy.The French curriculum predominantly emphasized the works of French writers of European descent. Ferry and others considered literature the glue of French identity. The ethnic and cultural demographics of the student body did not factor in to the quest to transmit a "common culture" to the students.
Like literature, history education is recognised as critical to shaping the identity of young people and the integration of immigrants to French identity. Ferry's views continue to exert influence today. Ministry reports have confirmed that the rule of schools in promoting "common culture" is only made more critical by the rising levels of student diversity. According to the ministry, history education in France has, over the course of one century made possible "the integration of children of Italians, Poles, Africans and Portuguese".
Governance
All educational programmes in France are regulated by the Ministry of National Education and Youth. The head of the ministry is the Minister of National Education.All teachers in public primary and secondary schools are state civil servants, making the ministère the largest employer in the country. Professors and researchers in France's universities are also employed by the state.
Image:French Academies Zone.png|thumb|The different Académies and school zones in France
| Zone | Académies/Cites |
| A | Besançon, Bordeaux, Clermont-Ferrand, Dijon, Grenoble, Limoges, Lyon, Poitiers |
| B | Aix-Marseille, Amiens, Caen, Lille, Nancy-Metz, Nantes, Nice, Orléans-Tours, Reims, Rennes, Rouen, Strasbourg |
| C | Créteil, Montpellier, Paris, Toulouse, Versailles |
At the primary and secondary levels, the curriculum is the same for all French students in any given grade, which includes public, semi-public and subsidised institutions. However, there exist specialised sections and a variety of options that students can choose. The reference for all French educators is the Bulletin officiel de l'éducation nationale, de l'enseignement supérieur et de la recherche , which lists all current programmes and teaching directives. It is amended multiple times each year.
Since 2021, schooling is mandatory and families may only provide teaching outside of a school in exceptional circumstances:
- Long-term illness,
- Intensive athletic or artistic activities,
- Distance from a public school,
- Or other specific reasons.
School year
In May, schools need time to organize exams. Outside Metropolitan France, the school calendar is set by the local recteur.
Major holiday breaks are as follows:
- All Saints, two weeks around the end of October and the beginning of November;
- Christmas, two weeks around Christmas Day and New Year's Day;
- winter, two weeks starting in mid-February;
- spring or Easter, two weeks starting in mid-April;
- summer, two months starting in early July..
Primary school
A preschool can be stand-alone or affiliated with an elementary school. As in other educational systems, primary school students in France usually have a single teacher who teaches the entire curriculum, without specialist teachers.
After kindergarten, the young students move on to the. In the first three years of elementary school, they learn to write, develop their reading skills and get some basics in subjects such as French, mathematics, science and the arts. The French word for a teacher at the primary school level is professeur des écoles ; previously called instituteur.
Children stay in elementary school for five years until they are ten to eleven years old. The grades are named: CP, CE1, CE2, CM1 and CM2.
Middle school and high school
The compulsory middle and high school subjects cover French language and literature, history and geography, foreign languages, arts and crafts, musical education, civics, mathematics, physics, chemistry, natural sciences, technology, and PE. The curriculum is set by the Ministry of National Education and applies to most collèges in France and also to AEFE-dependent institutions. Académies and individual schools have little freedom in the State curriculum.Class sizes vary from school to school, but usually range from 20 to 35 pupils.
After primary school, two educational stages follow:
- collège, for children during their first four years of secondary education from the age of 11 to 15.
- lycée, which provides a three-year course of further secondary education for children between the ages of 15 and 18. Pupils are prepared for the baccalauréat or the CAP. The baccalauréat can lead to higher education studies or directly to professional life.
- CFA, which provides vocational degrees: le Certificat d'aptitude professionnelle.
Private schools
- Private schools which respect the State curriculum are private, fee-paying institutions where pupils study the same national curriculum as those in public schools. Teachers in private schools are recruited in the same way and have roughly the same status as their equivalents in public schools. They are also employed directly by the State, but they are not permanently assigned and may not return to a public school position. The great majority of private schools in France are "under contract".
- Private schools without contract employ their teachers directly and may teach their own curriculum; the State, however, still monitors their educational standards. Most of these schools provide religious instruction in parallel with a broad curriculum.
International education
France has its own international school regulator, the AEFE.
Higher education
Higher education in France is organized in three levels, which correspond to those of other European countries, facilitating international mobility: the Licence and Licence Professionnelle, and the Master's and Doctorat degrees. The Licence and the Master are organized in semesters: 6 for the Licence and 4 for the Master. Those levels of study include various "parcours" or paths based on UE, each worth a defined number of European credits. A student accumulates those credits, which are generally transferable between paths. A licence is awarded once 180 ECTS have been obtained; a master is awarded once 120 additional credits have been obtained.Licence and master's degrees are offered within specific domaines and carry a specific mention. Spécialités, which are either research-oriented or professionally oriented during the second year of the Master. There are also professional licences whose objective is immediate job integration. It is possible to return to school later by continuing education or to validate professional experience.
Higher education in France is divided between grandes écoles and public universities. The grandes écoles admit the graduates of the level Baccalauréat + 2 years of validated study whereas universities admit all graduates of the Baccalauréat.
Higher education in France was reshaped by the student revolts of May 1968. During the 1960s, French public universities responded to a massive explosion in the number of students by stuffing approximately one-third of their students into hastily developed campus annexes which lacked decent amenities, resident professors, academic traditions, or the dignity of university status. With so many students ripe for radicalization after being forced to study in such miserable conditions, change was necessary and inevitable. Rather than expand already-overwhelmed parent campuses, it was decided to split off the annexes as new universities.
As a result, French higher education, compared with other countries, is small in size with a multiplicity of establishments, each specialised in a more-or-less broad spectrum of areas. A middle-sized French city, such as Grenoble or Nancy, may have 2 or 3 universities as well as a number of other establishments specialised in higher education. In Paris and its suburbs, there are currently 11 universities, none of which is specialised in one area or another, plus many smaller institutions that are highly specialised. It is not uncommon for graduate teaching programmes to be operated in common by several institutions, allowing the institutions to present a larger variety of courses.
In engineering schools and the professional degrees of universities, a large share of the teaching staff is often made up of non-permanent professors; instead, part-time professors are hired to teach one specific subject. Part-time professors are generally hired from neighbouring universities, research institutes or industries.
Another original feature of the French higher education system is that a large share of the scientific research is carried out by research establishments such as CNRS or INSERM, which are not formally part of the universities. However, in most cases, the research units of those establishments are located inside universities and jointly operated by the research establishment and the university.
In 2021, 1.65 million students are enrolled in French higher education institutions.