Primary education in Wales has a similar structure to primary education in England, but teaching of the Welsh language is compulsory and it is used as the medium of instruction in many schools. The introduction of the Foundation Phase for 3- to 7-year-olds is also creating increasing divergence between Wales and England.
Stages
In Wales, statutory education begins in the term after a child's fifth birthday, although many children start primary school earlier than this or their parents choose to home educate them.
Under the 2008 curriculum, between the ages of 3 and 11 a child's education was divided into two main stages:
Foundation phase - (ages 3–7) (replacing Early Years (ages 3–5) and Key Stage 1 (ages 5–7)[1]
Under the new curriculum, the key stages are replaced with "progression steps" with guidance of what level pupils are expected to reach at different ages. During the primary school years, these take place at age five, eight and eleven years old.[3]
The curriculum which is being formally introduced in primary schools in 2022 gives schools more freedom to decide what children are taught.[4] Instruction is grouped into six different areas;
Primary school league tables were abolished in Wales in 2001; a Bristol University study indicated that this had caused a fall in standards in about 75% of schools.[7] Statutory testing for children finishing Key Stage 1 and 2 was introduced across England and Wales in 1989.[8] It was abolished in 2002 and 2005 respectively.[9][10] Being replaced with teacher assessments with limited oversight.[8] In 2013, standardised testing was reintroduced for children in the later years of primary school in 2013.[11]