The Scotsman

Children should start primary school at seven, say campaigner­s

- ALISTAIR MUNRO

SCOTLAND’S education leaders are being urged to follow the lead of Scandinavi­a’s kindergart­en system in a bid to best develop the country’s youngest children.

The Upstart Scotland campaign is leading calls for a radical overhaul of education for preschool children to better prepare them for entering primaries – by delaying their formal schooling until the age of seven.

This system is based on Scandinavi­an models. The Scottish campaign group, which includes teachers, parents and research- ers, claim five-year-olds are not sufficient­ly developed to perform adequately in a formal classroom environmen­t.

Sue Palmer, a literacy specialist who chairs Upstart Scotland, claimed the current education system is antiquated. The member of the Scottish Government’s Early Years Task Force said: “We have school starting at the age of five because in 1872 politician­s wanted kids off the street as early as possible so that their mums could go into the factories.

“It was an economic decision. Developmen­tal psychologi­sts have found six or seven is the most appropriat­e formal learning.

All the research shows that the children who do best in the long run are the kids who, at the age of five or six, have their social and emotional developmen­t taken care of.

“The more we push them early, the more we aren’t giving the child the chance to develop in an all-round way.

“We are doing so much damage to children by pushing and pushing them before they are ready.”

Ms Palmer saw the Finnish system during a visit to the country, and found they lead the

age

to

start way in the world in literacy and numeracy.

She said: “When I asked how they had achieved this, the answer was that they were thinking ‘How do we get a good society?’

“The answer they came up with was ‘By doing our best for our youngest children’. Finland formed its childcare policy in the 1970s and the reason they started then was that the mums wanted to go out to work. We didn’t get that hitting until the 1990s.”

Ms Palmer said it was noticeable that once the children did start school, their concentrat­ion threshold was much higher.

“They could focus much better. The teacher wasn’t constantly distracted by the pupils from the business of teaching.”

Ms Palmer argues enacting the change would mean improving training for practition­ers, not building new infrastruc­ture.

She said: “It’s not about taking children out of the classroom. It’s about concentrat­ing on children’s overall health and wellbeing up until the age of seven, rather than being distracted by specifics in terms of cognition.

“That way, when formal schooling does begin, they are ready.” A GROUP of Scouts from Germany has been rescued from the hills on Skye after their campsite was hit by torrential rain.

The 14 young people were helped off the Trotternis­h Ridge by Skye mountain rescue team, then airlifted to Portree by the Coastguard. They were met by volunteers from the British Red Cross yesterday, who took them to the organisati­on’s base at Kyle of Lochalsh which has been turned into a rest centre.

The Scouts - males and females aged between 14 and 22 - were able to use the centre’s showers and are said to be “in good spirits”. Red Cross service manager Anne Eadie said: “The young people were exhausted.”

 ??  ?? The starting age of five is said to be based on a policy from 1872, when the aim was to get as many children off the streets so mothers could work in factories
The starting age of five is said to be based on a policy from 1872, when the aim was to get as many children off the streets so mothers could work in factories

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