ABOVE TRANSLATION: Adelle, Australian placement school teacher will be present in the class all week. |
International school placement
4th February, 2016
Adelle explores the differences between children aged 4 and 5 in French and Australian schools
I have been lucky enough to have a week placement in a
French school in the city of Grenoble, the capital of the Alps, in France. This
experience was really interesting. You see, the class I was in had children
from two levels, a composite class, and the children were 4 and 5 years old. In
Australia these children would have been in grade prep, starting their first
year of school. This is the first point of difference in France. It is not
mandatory to put children into school until they turn six and they do not
technically start their curriculum education until this age. They can however,
and most do, start in a school setting called maternelle which is comparable to three years of kinder before. In
these years before, children speak, are taught to recognise letters and numbers, they develop
their fine motor skills and use a lot of play to learn. Below is a table I have constructed of a day
comparison from a grade prep placement in Australia to maternelle placement in France.
Notice the times that school starts and ends as well as how
many play times there are as well as lunch breaks.
**Note. This may not a
typical day in every French or Australian school, it is just from the
experiences I have had in my French and Australian placements of the same aged
children.
French school day AGE 4/5
maternelle
|
Australian school day AGE 4/5 Foundation
|
8.45am school starts
|
9.00 School starts
|
9.00 Gym. Exercising in the morning using games for muscle
development
|
9.15 literacy, perhaps game and play based
|
10.00 Recreation, students play outside
|
10.00 Maths skills
|
10.45 Cross curricula activity, eg: maths and literacy,
science and literacy
* I experienced drawing observations and verbally
explaining how a carrot top grew leaves resting in water
|
10.30 Recess
|
11.45 LUNCH BREAK
|
11.00 Music
|
·
Students have the choice to go for lunch with
their parents or eat in the school cafeteria
·
Lunch break is 1 hour and 45 minutes
|
12.00 Language
* specialist subjects |
1.30 resume school with quiet time, (music or audio story)
while some children finish their ‘after lunch nap’ in the sleeping room.
|
1.00 LUNCH BREAK
|
1.45 Spanish lesson in small groups, all teachers and some
extra helpers teach Spanish.
|
1.45 Religion
|
2.30 Recreation, students play outside
|
2.45 Whole school assembly
|
3.00 cross curricula activity, eg: maths and literacy,
science and literacy
|
3.20 FINISH SCHOOL
|
4.00 FINISH SCHOOL
|
As you can see Australian children are guided during the day
with the necessary curriculum and as I have seen in the French school it is
possible to only do two activities over the whole day. Grade prep children in
Australia, I feel, are taught to read and write a lot earlier and are perhaps
less free inside the classroom than the French.
Inside the classroom is much the same. Colour and work is
displayed, the room is filled with books and art supplies, educational games
and desks. However in the classroom I observed in, children did not sit on the
ground in front of the teacher. Instead they all shared large bench seats in
the class. Children would either call the teacher MaƮtresse or by their first name. Calling teachers by their first
name is something I have started to see more of in Australia and I think it creates
a more open trusting and familiar relationship between teachers and students.
France is general is more ‘touchy’ country. They do not have
‘hands off rule’ as Australian schools do. Touching is a part of social
normalities here and it is important for school aged children to learn to
respect each other. The act of touching or not touching when appropriate is a part
of their education early on. Instead of saying hands off completely they are
taught respect and boundaries without the banning of touching at all. It is a part of everyday life to greet friends and family with two kisses on the cheeks, or three depending on the region of France. Normal for male-male, female-male and female-female connections.
After just a week I have observed a lot of differences as
well as similarities within the French school and I think its important to
remember that there are multiple ways for students to go through their
schooling lives. The goal in a school is to educate regardless of the culture,
country, age or system.
I am researching into more international school systems and
it is clear that there are successful stories and processes from all of them.
As educators, our field of work is constantly updating or changing and although
there is not one perfect system there are countless ways to teach and it’s
important to find the one that works for your classroom. We are aware of
different teaching styles and maybe you have one that is natural for you or one
you prefer. However, does that style suit the needs of your students?
- Adelle
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