When do children in wales start school




















Home Explore the BBC. This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving. How do I say? About Wales House name generator Your stories. Getting an education Schools in Wales follow a National Curriculum which is very similar to England's, except for extra sections which deal with teaching Welsh. Welsh medium schools Welsh medium secondary schools teach the majority of subjects in Welsh or bilingually. Some prefer to teach science and maths in English, because this is seen as the international language of science.

However, supporters of an all-Welsh curriculum say they get better exam results teaching everything in Welsh. Choosing a school Choices may include the possibility of sending your child to a Welsh medium school, or involve looking at how well Welsh is taught in English language schools.

Catching up Children aged who move into Welsh-speaking areas may need to catch up on their Welsh language skills so they can join a Welsh medium school. Some local authorities provide language centres for latecomers. Pre-school in Welsh Muchiad Ysgolion Meithrin , the Welsh Medium Nursing Association, provides pre-school education in Welsh through a network of over a thousand playgroups and parent and toddler groups.

The JCVI is the expert body which advises all four UK governments, and the priority schedule of vaccination we are working to is the same as the schedule for England, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Further information and updates on our vaccination strategy are available.

Learners or staff can use any tests they may have at home already. If not they can order online, collect from their pharmacy or a local collection site. During term-time, if you attend or work at a school, college or nursery you will get rapid tests through your school, college or nursery. During the school holidays, if you would like to continue regularly testing you should continue to do so.

You can get tests from the channels described in how to get lateral flow test. You can report your results on gov. It means new outbreaks are identified and we understand how the tests are being used.

This includes childcare settings and childminders. For peripatetic staff and other staff supporting childcare and education, please follow the same self-test journey and begin typing your local authority in the text box, selecting either peripatetic staff or transport.

For learners in secondary schools and colleges who are close contacts, Day 2 and 8 refer to the amount of days after a close contact has tested positive. For example if a close contact tested positive on a Monday, Day 2 would be Tuesday and Day 8 would be Monday the following week.

Guidance was strengthened to reduce high coronavirus cases in Wales on 29 October If someone in your household has coronavirus symptoms or has tested positive for coronavirus, further details about what you and members of your household should do are available. If someone in your household has coronavirus symptoms or has tested positive for coronavirus , you should follow the guidance set out.

If you are fully vaccinated or aged 5 to 17 you should self-isolate and take a PCR test. If your test is negative you can stop isolating. If you are over 18 and not fully vaccinated you should self-isolate for 10 days. You should take a PCR test on day 2 and day 8. You should self-isolate for 10 days even if your tests are negative. We do not recommend that people use PCR tests if they have been confirmed positive via a PCR test in the last 90 days.

If you are a secondary pupil and are a household contact you should still use the LFD tests for 7 days from when you household member tested positive — even if you have previously had Covid in the last 90 days.

Children under 5 often find the testing process invasive and distressing and this can make getting a sample very difficult and distressing for parents and carers.

Also children under 5 do not spread COVID in the same way as an adult or in the same way that people consider young children to spread cold and flu. Young children have small bodies, small lungs and small breath capacity which means even if they are infected with the virus they cannot spread it to others in the same way as an older young person or adult would.

The 7 days of LFD testing should start on the morning of the first day pupils return. Advice on further steps that can be taken to protect themselves and others is available.

If a member in their household has coronavirus symptoms or has tested positive for coronavirus, they should follow the updated guidance. If you are aged or 18 and over and fully vaccinated, and someone in your household has coronavirus symptoms or tests positive for coronavirus you will need to self-isolate, get a PCR test and, if the result is negative and you remain asymptomatic, then you can stop self-isolating.

If however you are scheduled to attend an exam or assessment while you are waiting for your PCR results, please inform your school, college or training provider and in these circumstances it should be acceptable for you to take an LFD test, if this is negative and you remain asymptomatic you can continue to attend your exam.

Schools, colleges and training providers will need to ensure rooms are well ventilated and there is adequate space between learners during any exam or assessment. If your test is positive please contact your school, college or training provider to make necessary arrangements. All staff working in education settings who work in close proximity to learners with increased clinical risks, can undertake return to work testing.

Criteria for staff to return will be set out in a checklist risk assessment tool which will be circulated to settings directly. Testing will consist of one PCR test followed by daily lateral flow tests until 10 days has passed since the individual was informed of their contact with the confirmed case or 10 days from when a household member was confirmed positive.

Yes, vaccinated people can still catch COVID and can transmit the virus in the same way an unvaccinated people. Skip to main content. About cookies.

Changes to learning and teaching in schools. Part of:. Schools: coronavirus. School operations. What measures are in place to ensure schools are safe for learners and staff? Can my child attend school if they have a cold? The three main symptoms of COVID to be aware of are: a new continuous cough fever or high temperature loss of, or change in, sense of smell or taste If your child develops one of these symptoms they should follow the self-isolation guidance and you should apply for a coronavirus test.

Maintaining distancing is very difficult for younger children and those with learning difficulties - how can we expect to keep them from mixing with their peers and teaching staff?

Is there any support available for the education workforce? Where staff are providing individual or group support for pupils with special educational needs SEN , can schools reconfigure the schedule of support to minimise close interactions between individuals? What are the arrangements for free school meals? Can supervised childrens activities take place? Can practical PE lessons take place? Can inter school sports fixtures take place? I am a private tutor. Tutors may also wish to consider distance learning options for students.

Children are not required to provide evidence of any negative test on return to school. Yes, your child can still attend school or childcare. Children five and over will be advised to take a PCR test on days 2 and 8. My child is under five years old and has symptoms, what do I do?

Will teachers and other staff who need to self-isolate still be paid and able to work from home? Are supply staff agencies obliged to provide LFD test results for their staff? Students in the UK will usually commence their final year, Year 13, at the age of 17 or 18 years old.

At the end of the school year most students are 18 years when they graduate. Use the tool above to calculate what the year of high school graduation, noting students will finish the year after they commence their final year. Across all countries in the UK children may attend preschool prior to entry into the public schooling system, known as nursery or kindergarten.

These are run independently and are not part of the formal Government education system. All countries in the UK have some form of government funding or subsidy available for pre-school and early learning. Pre-school is not mandatory but is taken up by the majority of students. In England, any child who has turned 3 by September 1st is provided free childcare or preschool for 15 hours per week, up to 38 weeks a year, paid for by the government.

Data suggests that by age of 4, 99 percent of children in Great Britian have started reception. The first year in primary school is reception, with children commencing in September in the year after the child has turn four. This means that the child must have turned four by the 1st of September to commence in that year. If the child is born between September to Dec they will start the following year.

Following reception year, primary school then runs from Year 1 through to Year 6. There are several variations to the standard entry age, exclusively for England as outlined below. The rules around delaying the year of entry are somewhat ambiguous as the child can either start in reception or move straight into Grade 1, and this is usually determined by the local admissions board.

The legislation around this is currently under review by the government but no outcome has been finalised at this stage. The latest point at which the child can start is the start of the school term following their fifth birthday.



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