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Fertile and Fruitful Frisson: Raising the School Starting Age in Scotland

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Since devolution, the Scottish Government has had powers for education and child family policy (The Scotland Act, 1998) which sit apart from England, Wales and Northern Ireland. This is the Scottish Government's great strength. This article begins by exposing the Scottish early learning and childcare context across the spectrum of policy, curriculum developments, national improvements and the tensions that can exist when using a parochial lens to understand children's learning. It goes on to share a longstanding concern with the school starting age. In Scotland the school starting age remains the same today as it did in the 19th century. With a single annual intake in August, children in Scotland can begin primary school at anywhere between 4.5 years and 5.5 years. Drawing from my doctoral dissertation Rules, rules, rules and we're not allowed to skip: listening to children's voices about the transition to Primary One (McNair, 2016), I share data from interviews with parents about the age their child started school. This article ends by drawing from the Scottish Government's vision to raise the school starting age to six years old, rendering the earlier age, of 4.5 years, redundant.

Keywords: CURRICULUM; DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY; EARLY CHILDHOOD; SCHOOL STARTING AGE; SCOTLAND NATIONAL DISCUSSION

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 March 2023

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  • For over 60 years FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education has been the pre-eminent focal point for topical and informed analysis - very often highly forthright and critical - of all aspects of United Kingdom government policy as it influences the education of children from primary through to higher education. FORUM vigorously campaigns for the universal provision of state-provided education, and seeks to identify and expose all attempts to overturn the gains of the past years. Every teacher, headteacher, administrator, parent, or governor should read this exciting publication.
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