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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/polytechnique_3.jpg]]
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3This page is about the UsefulNotes/{{Fr|ance}}ench educational system, not just the ''[[GratuitousFrench grandes écoles]]'' ("great schools"), which are only a small part of it.
4----
5!!Principles
6!!! Jules Ferry's laws
7The principle of the modern educational system were defined under the [[UsefulNotes/FrenchPoliticalSystem Third Republic]] by Jules Ferry who was (usually) Minister of Public Education and/or Prime Minister in 1880-1882. Ferry decided that the educational system must be ''public, laïc, gratuit et obligatoire'' (public, secular, free [[note]]as in "free of charge"[[/note]] and mandatory). He passed laws to create public elementary schools in every town. Before that, education was mostly in the hands of private (religious) institutions. Ferry's laws allowed all children to have access to the same basic education. Professors of elementary schools (called ''instituteurs'', nicknamed ''les hussards noirs de la république'' [[note]]after the colour of their gowns codified during the Third Republic[[/note]]) played a crucial role in the cultural unification of the country, as well as in the suppression of many regional languages.
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9Those laws are still the core of the French educational system. Education is mandatory until the age of 16. Concerning the other principles, they still hold in public schools. Every child can receive a good education that costs their parents almost nothing. Yet about 20% of French children attend private schools, mostly because of religious concerns, though it should be noted that even these have exactly the same curricula as the public schools [[note]]they have real biology and earth science lessons, in which they learn about [[EagleLand evolution and contraception]][[/note]].
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11!!!''Laïcité'' and the public/private school war
12This was, and still is, a very sensitive issue in France. If you think that ''war'' is too strong a word, keep in mind that this issue caused some of the biggest demonstrations in France's history; some politicians and even a few governments had to resign because of it. In fact, at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th, the Catholic church was opposed to the French Republic, so the creation of a secular public school system was a direct attack against the influence of the church. Some priests called the public school ''l'école du diable'' (the devil's school).
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14''Laïcité'', or secularism, means that the state and all public institutions must be neutral with regards to religious beliefs. Civil servants are not allowed to display any religious symbols, and no religious education can be provided in public schools. Recently, a law was passed so that children are also not allowed to display any overt religious symbols [[note]]aka, the Muslim headscarf is banned, although Christian cross pendants are considered more [[DoubleStandard "discreet"]] as long as they aren't seen[[/note]]. Therefore, parents who wish for their children to receive some religious education must send them to a private school. Most private schools have a contract with the French state. They agree to teach the same things as public schools, with the possible addition of some religious course. In exchange, the state pays the teachers.
15
16!!!Grades
17The French educational system may be complex, but the grades are very simple. At every level, from elementary schools to university, the grades range from 0 (the worst) to 20 (the best). This grading system is even standard outside the education system and many newspapers and critics give grades in the same range about everything.
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19For any examination, a candidate must get a grade of at least 10 to pass. Special mentions may be awarded if one's grade is greater than:
20* 16: ''très bien'' (very good)
21* 14: ''bien'' (good)
22* 12: ''assez bien'' (good enough)
23* 10: ''passable'' (pass)
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25Until quite recently, the teacher would announce the grades of everyone from highest to lowest in front of the entire class, with the lower half of the class getting a severe talking to, although this practice has become quite rare in recent times. Some teachers [[note]]namely in ''prépa'', due to it being somewhat more "old-fashioned" in some regards[[/note]] will still do this, but it's mostly frowned upon.
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27The grades also determine if a student advances to the next level, or has to spend another year at the same level.
28
29!!!School conditions
30
31France's school year runs from early September to early July... so you get a two-month holiday. In addition, there are four two-week breaks, around All Saints Day, Christmas, in February and in mid April (the precise dates vary depending on which of three regions you are in). This means that French pupils only spend 144 days a year in school as opposed to the OECD average of 187... but those days are much longer (8am to 4.30pm)
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33In primary schools, pupils used to go to school on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday... and Saturday morning. The Wednesday (Thursday until 1972) was a result of the 1882 introduction of compulsory education where pupils got a day off for religious schooling, and did Saturday morning to make up for it. Recent introduction of Wednesday school mornings (consistent with the ''collège'' and ''lycée'' students working on Wednesday mornings) under the Hollande administration has been controversial to put it mildly; Wednesday is now the day the French cinemas get new films - it's that entrenched.
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35!! Education system before the ''baccalauréat''
36
37!!! ''La maternelle'' (kindergarten)
38Children may begin to attend ''l'école maternelle'' from the age of 2, until they are 5 to 6 years old. This school is not strictly mandatory, but almost all children go there when they are 4 years or older. The school is generally divided into three sections, the ''petite section'' (2-3 years old), ''moyenne section'' (3-4 years old) and ''grande section'' (5-6 years old).
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40!!! ''La primaire'' (elementary school)
41Children begin attending this school from the age of 6, for a period of 5 years. The name of the classes are: CP (''cours préparatoire''), [=CE1=], [=CE2=] (''cours élémentaire'' 1 and 2), [=CM1=], and [=CM2=] (''cours moyen'' 1 and 2). The main goal of elementary school is to learn how to read, write, and perform basic arithmetic, while secondary goals include learning some basic notions of sciences, arts, history, and foreign languages. This is the last school where there is only one teacher per class. After that, there will be one teacher per subject (French, Maths, English, History/Geography, etc.).
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43!!! ''Le collège'' (junior high school)
44While in America, college refers to the university level, in France it refers to junior high school. It is 4 years long, and children normally start ''collège'' when they are 11 years old. The 4 classes are called ''sixième'' (6th), ''cinquième'' (5th), ''quatrième'' (4th) and ''troisième'' (3rd), in that order: it is a countdown to the ''baccalauréat''. Children who have some problems with school may finish ''collège'' at the age of 16 or more, when education is no longer mandatory. Therefore, the ''collège'' is the last school that everyone attends. At the end, children obtain their first qualification, the ''brevet des collèges''. It is fairly easy to obtain, and it is worth almost nothing, but it may be the only diploma some people ever have. It is, however, the minimal qualification required to be a civil servant (D grade, the lowest).
45
46!!! ''Le lycée'' (high school)
47Unlike previous schools, in which everyone received the same kind of education, there are three kinds of ''lycées'':
48* ''Lycée général'': provides general, more theoretical education that equips students for higher studies of a relatively longer duration in university or ''grande école''. It is three years long, and students take one of three types of ''baccalauréat'' depending on their specialisation: L (literary), S (scientific), or ES (economics-human sciences). [[note]]In this sense it's somewhat similar to the Italian system, although in the light of recent reforms with more electives and the controversial (for some) decision to withdraw History from the previously polyvalent Scientific bac, it seems to be going towards a somewhat more Anglo-Saxon style. History was never completely withdrawn from the Scientific bac, the class was simply considered achieved and therefore evaluated at the end of the second year of high school, but was reintroduced on the same level as in the two other bacs as of school year 2014-2015, meaning evaluated at the end of the third year.[[/note]]
49* ''Lycée technique'': provides technical education. In theory, it is for children who do not wish to spend too much time on higher studies. It is three years long, and it ends with one of a number of ''bac[calauréat]s techno[logiques]'' analogous to the other types, although there are many, many more different "filières" (pathways) reflecting a further level of specialization than the three of the ''bac général'': e.g. accounting, tourism...
50* ''Lycée professionnel'': provides professional knowledge, to suit the profile of children who wish to enter the workforce without going through higher studies. It ends with a CAP (1 year of study) or BEP (2 years) specialized in a profession. People may also study 2 more years to get a ''bac pro[fessionnel]''.
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52In theory, students are able to choose which ''lycée'' they will go to. In practice, there is an element of selection: students with the best, or at least average, grades tend to go to the ''lycées généraux'', while those with the worst grades go to the ''lycées techniques'' or the ''lycées professionnels''.
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54!!! ''Le baccalauréat'' (high school diploma)
55Called ''le bac'' (a shortened form) by many, this qualification is very important to the French. Since it is obtained when one is 18, which is the age of legal majority in France, the ''bac'' is considered as a RiteOfPassage.
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57The ''bac'' is an institution in itself: every year, newspapers publish the results and there are long discussions about it in the media. People over 30 usually say that this diploma was hard when they sat the exams for it, but is worth nothing today since most people get it easily. The topics of the philosophy tests are announced on TV news (after the tests, of course) and becomes a national conversation starter for a few days thereafter. Since everybody in France has the same subjects, teachers put a lot of efforts to preserve secrecy, everyone starts the tests at the exact same time, and there is a spare topic if the main one happens to be leaked.
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59Candidates first undergo a series of written tests; the marks are then converted into a weighted mean out of 20 (see above). Candidates whose weighted mean mark is more than 10 earn their ''bac''. A weighted mean mark of less than 8 means that the candidate has failed and has to redo their final year of high school, or ''terminale''. Should a candidate obtain a weighted mean mark between 8 and 10, s/he may take some oral tests to get a better grade. Should the weighted mean mark still not be equal to or greater than 10, the candidate is considered to have failed the ''bac''.
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61!! Higher education
62
63There are universities in France, like in all other countries. The oldest one is the university of Paris, called ''la Sorbonne''. But there is another higher education system, called ''les grandes écoles'', that exists only in France. The ''grandes écoles'' are similar to colleges or graduate schools, but are very selective.
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65!!!La Sorbonne
66The University of Paris was founded in the mid-12th century and is thus one of the oldest in the world. It was nicknamed ''la Sorbonne'', which was technically the main college of the university. The building still exists, but the University of Paris was split to create 13 smaller universities in 1970, only 3 of which kept the word ''Sorbonne'' in their name. The historical place of the university, in the 5th ''arrondissement'' of Paris, is still famous for the universities and ''grandes écoles'' that are there.
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68Since the university is located in the capital of France, its students took part in many protests and revolutions that happened there. The last major one occurred in May 1968, and those protests, as well as the massive strike that happened at the same time, threatened the power of President Charles de Gaulle, who resigned a few months after the protests.
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70!!!Other universities
71There are about 80 universities in France. In the big cities, the universities that existed before 1970 were split. That is why French universities' names often have numbers added after the name of the city in which they are located, as in the case of (to name a few) ''Université de Bordeaux 1'' (science and technologies), ''Université de Bordeaux 2'' (medicine and life science), ''Université de Bordeaux 3'' (history/geography and humanities), and ''Université de Bordeaux 4'' (law).
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73There is no real selection to enter an university, and the tuition fees are extremely low. Consequently, the universities are often viewed in much the same way that [[UsefulNotes/AmericanEducationalSystem Americans view community colleges]] -- overcrowded and poor. There is a high failure rate during the first years, so the classes are overcrowded only during the ''licence'', equivalent to a Bachelor's degree (3 years). After one obtains one's ''licence'', one may stay on to obtain a ''master'' (2 years), or Master's degree. Some continue beyond their ''master'' for 3 years or more to obtain a ''doctorat'' ([=PhD=]).
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75!!!''Grandes écoles''
76The ''grandes écoles'' (lit. great schools) are colleges or graduate schools that require would-be students to sit a competitive entrance exam. Students prepare for this exam over 2 or 3 years. This preparation is done in special preparatory classes in ''lycées'', called CPGE -- ''classes préparatoire aux grandes écoles''. So the students of ''grandes écoles'' may never go to the university but receive a Master's degree after 3 years in one of those ''grandes écoles''. Only about 10% of students attend one of these special schools, but this small minority includes a large majority of political leaders, corporate executives and renowned scientists.
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78The most famous ''grandes écoles'' are:
79* the '''Écoles normales supérieures''' (ENS), which are schools that train future teachers and scientists. Most French Nobel Prize and Fields medal winners hail from these schools. Alumni are called ''normaliens''. Professors teaching core subjects in ''prépa'', even in the less prestigious of them, seem to [[HistoryRepeats invariably hail from these]]. Famous alumni include philosophers [[Creator/JeanPaulSartre Jean-Paul Sartre]] and Simone de Beauvoir, sociologue Pierre Bourdieu or chemist Louis Pasteur among many others.
80* the '''École polytechnique''' (nicknamed ''l'X'') is an engineering school with a strong military tradition. Alumni are called ''polytechniciens''. Many French scientists and mathematicians from UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution and [[UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte Napoleon]]'s First Empire like Laplace and Cauchy studied there and/or taught there. Many French people know them for being part of the Bastille Day military parade, marching in [[UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte Napoleon]]-style bicorn hats.
81* the '''École des Mines''', popularly known as ''Mines [=ParisTech=]'', is technically the oldest engineering school still active, since it was founded during the Ancien Régime.
82* the '''École Nationale Supérieure des Arts et Métiers''', a.k.a. ''[[IHaveManyNames ENSAM]]'', a.k.a. ''[[IHaveManyNames Arts et Métiers]]'', officially ''[[IHaveManyNames Arts et Métiers]] [[NonIndicativeName ParisTech]]'', is [[NonIndicativeName not a fine arts school]] but an engineering school founded by a liberal noble [[TangledFamilyTree before, during, and after The Revolution]]. Is semi-(in)famous in France for alleged cases of hazing, for having its own dialect, and for its students' unusual dress sense. Is incidentally one of only two institutions in France allowed to keep a military-inspired uniform despite no longer actually being linked to the military, which is otherwise forbidden by law. Alumni include several inventors and engineers, one of Mustafa Kemal's Western "alphabet counselors", a tech consultant for the Clinton administration, the current head of Caltech, and if his bio on Website/TheOtherWiki [[SarcasmMode is to be believed]], one ''[[MyFriendsAndZoidberg porn baron]]'' [[note]]Jean-Daniel Cadinot, mentioned by name in UK's ''Series/{{Queer as Folk|UK}}''. [[ItsForABook In case you were wondering.]][[/note]].
83* '''Sciences Po''', officially ''Institut d'études politique'' (IEP), is a school attended by future journalists and politicians. There are several IEP, the most famous of which is in Paris. Further complicating the matter is that Sciences Po Paris itself has branches dotted all over the country. Seven of the last eight French presidents, including current President Macron, attended Sciences Po.
84* '''École des hautes études commerciales''' (HEC) is a business school. Former IMF director Dominique Strauss-Kahn and former President Hollande both studied there at some point.
85* '''École nationale d'administration''' (ENA) trains high level civil servants and politicians. Contrary to the others, students attend this school after obtaining a Master's from another ''grande école''. Alumni are called ''énarques''. Several [[UsefulNotes/ThePresidentsOfFrance Presidents and Prime Ministers]] are ENA alumni, including current President Macron and former Presidents Hollande and Giscard d'Estaing. So are Hollande's [[TheCasanova ex-ex-partner]], former presidential candidate Ségolène Royal, SNCF executive officer Guillaume Pépy, and several senior members of every administration and every major political party. Enarques have usually previously studied in Sciences Po as well and because of this many politicians know each other personally, much in the same way as British public school alumni do. Unsurprisingly, populist parties across the board tend to dislike what they depict as cronyism.
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87There are other institutions of higher learning commonly considered ''grandes écoles'', but most of them are semi-obscure business schools and engineering schools. They tend to have good reputations within those communities but have practically no profile outside them. A good example of this is INSEAD (''Institut européen d'administration d'affaires'', "European Institute of Business Administration"), a private business school often ranked as among the top in the world (sometimes only behind Harvard Business School—which is fitting, as it was founded by a Frenchman who went to HBS and wanted to establish a business school like that in France) but of which many French are barely aware of at best.
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89The common factor of all of these schools is invariably a strong alumni network, comparable to that of British universities and public schools and almost inexistent in regular French universities. Their critics view them as the symbol of an entrenched, self-perpetuating caste of political and economic elites, while their supporters point out that few systems in France are so fundamentally meritocratic. The truth is, obviously, more complex than either of these assertions, especially when applied to several different institutions with sometimes very different histories. This comes from the fact that some of the most prestigious of the afore-mentioned ''grandes écoles'' have their roots in the aftermath of UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution, when the nobility was either exiled or wiped out, and the now-centralised French republic took to creating a whole new caste of [[SelfMadeMan Self-Made Men]]. Today, one has far more chances of being encouraged towards ''grandes écoles'' if one is from a somewhat specific income bracket, so ''grandes écoles'' contain a disproportionately low number of students from a working-class background, even though they're largely all free of charge.
90
91!! In fiction
92* Creator/MarcelPagnol wrote some books about his childhood and his time at school. His father was an ''instituteur'' of the French Third Republic, and the book describes well what French elementary school was like at that time.
93* ''Film/TheClass2008'' is a movie about a teacher in a ''collège'' near Paris.
94* ''Être et avoir'' is a film/documentary about an old ''instituteur'' in a remote area.
95* ''[[Film/Napoleon1927 Napoléon]]'' (1927) starts with a young UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte at the Brienne military college, where he first demonstrates his skills as a commander in a SnowballFight.
96* ''Film/{{Tanguy}}'' is a ''normalien'' who does not want to finish his ''doctorat''. His dad is a ''polytechnicien''.
97* ''WesternAnimation/MiraculousLadybug'': The two main characters, Marinette Dupain-Cheng and Adrien Agreste, attend the fictional Collège Françoise Dupont school in Paris, France.
98* Nicolas Bourbaki is a NomDePlume of several French mathematicians (alumni of the ENS)[[note]]the group also included a Polish-born mathematician and several Americans[[/note]]. It started as a student prank, but it ended with a series of books that changed the way in which maths is taught.

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