Czech children return to school

Photo: CTK
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After nine weeks away, Czech school children and secondary school students have returned to their classrooms. Among the 1.4 million pupils are also 93,000 first graders - the number is up again after several years of stagnation or decline and reflects a slight increase in the birth rate in 2000.

Photo: CTK
School in this country traditionally starts at the beginning of September, a date established in around 1905, and schools break up at the end of June. Prior to that school used to start around the middle of September. Originally, the summer holidays were not meant to be a time of rest and recreation for the children. Children were necessary helping hands during harvest work. As children were much needed labourers in previous centuries, their parents often did not send them to school when there was work to do in the field or about the house. Bad weather was also a reason not to go to school. Villages often could not afford to heat up the classroom in winter.

Compulsory primary education was introduced in the Czech lands by the Habsburg Empress Maria Theresa in 1774, even though primary schools existed long before that even in small villages, often founded along with local parishes. In many cases the teachers were church wardens or retired soldiers, often lacking any qualification for the profession. It was not rare that the children left school without having acquired even the most elementary knowledge.

Almost a hundred years later, in 1869, compulsory education was extended from six to eight years and attendance was more strictly monitored. After several changes were introduced between 1945 and 1989, it was established in 1995 that children in the Czech Republic are obliged to complete nine years of schooling.

The starting school year 2006-2007 is the last time when primary schools use old curricula. The trial run of a new system will be completed this year and as of next September, all schools will follow a new set of courses. The aim is to reduce the central role of the state and give more leeway to the schools themselves, which can choose how to teach certain topics. However, there will be a number of given frameworks so that the knowledge mastered by children by a certain age could be comparable and compatible.