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Secondary education in France

In France, secondary education is in two stages:

  • Collèges (French pronunciation: [kɔlɛʒ]) cater for the first four years of secondary education from the ages of 11 to 15.
  • Lycées (French pronunciation: [lise]) provide a three-year course of further secondary education for children between the ages of 15 and 18. Pupils are prepared for the baccalauréat (French pronunciation: [bakaloʁea]; baccalaureate, colloquially known as bac, previously bachot), which can lead to higher education studies or directly to professional life. There are three main types of baccalauréat: the baccalauréat général, baccalauréat technologique and baccalauréat professionnel.
Lycée Henri-IV in Paris

School year edit

The school year starts in early September and ends in early July. Metropolitan French school holidays are scheduled by the Ministry of Education by dividing the country into three zones (A, B, and C) to prevent overcrowding by family holidaymakers of tourist destinations, such as the Mediterranean coast and ski resorts. Lyon, for example, is in zone A, Marseille is in zone B and Paris and Bordeaux are in zone C.

In contrast to the practice in most other education systems, the school years in France are numbered on a decreasing scale. Thus, pupils begin their secondary education in the sixième (6th class) and transfer to a lycée in the seconde (2nd class). The final year is the terminale.

In French, the word étudiant(e) is usually reserved for university-level students, and collège and lycée students are referred to as élèves (pupils or students in English).

The curriculum (programme officiel) is standardized for all French public institutions. Changes to the programme are made every year by the French Ministry of Education and are published in the Ministry's Bulletin officiel de l'Éducation nationale (BO), the official reference bulletin for educators.

Collège edit

Collège
Age Name Abbreviation
11–12 Sixième 6e
12–13 Cinquième 5e
13–14 Quatrième 4e
14–15 Troisième 3e

The collège is the first level of secondary education in the French educational system. A pupil attending collège is called collégien (boy) or collégienne (girl). Men and women teachers at the collège- and lycée-level are called professeur (no official feminine professional form exists in France although the feminine form "professeure" has appeared and seems to be gaining some ground in usage). The City of Paris refers to a collège in English as a "high school".[1]

Entry in sixième occurs directly after the last year of primary school, called Cours moyen deuxième année (CM2). There is no entrance examination into collège, but administrators have established a comprehensive academic examination of students starting in sixième. The purpose of the examination is evaluating pupils' level on being graduated from primary school.

Curriculum edit

Subject Remarks Starting in
Humanities and languages
French Language and Literature Features French and translated foreign works; concentrates on grammar and spelling 6e
History and Geography French-based, but includes foreign history and geography 6e
A first foreign language1 Known as Première langue vivante (LV1) 6e
A second foreign language1 or a French regional language Deuxième langue vivante (LV2) 6e or 5e
Arts and crafts 6e
Musical education 6e
Civics Éducation civique 6e
1Available foreign languages include: English, German, Arabic, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Russian; other languages available per locale. Most pupils study English as first foreign language, and Spanish, Italian or German as second foreign language.
Natural and applied sciences
Mathematics 6e
Biology and Geology Sciences de la vie et de la Terre (SVT) 6e
Technology 6e
Physics and Chemistry 6e
Compulsory courses
Physical Education 6 e
Optional courses
Latin 5e
Ancient Greek 3e

The table at the right details the French curriculum. Along with 3-4 weekly hours of physical education, a typical school week consists of some 26 hours of schooling. French language and literature occupy the most time, 4-5 hours per week, followed by 4 hours per week of mathematics; other subjects occupy 1-3.5 hours per week.

The curriculum is devised by the French Ministry of National Education and applies to all collèges in France and also for AEFE-dependent institutions. Académies and individual schools have little margin for curriculum customisation. Teachers compose syllabi per precise government educational regulations and choose textbooks accordingly, and every major French publishing house has a textbook branch.

Process and purpose edit

Usually a different professeur or teacher teaches each subject; most teachers teach several different age groups. Collège pupils stay in the same class throughout the school year and in every subject (except for optional courses such as foreign languages, where students from several classes mix), so each year-group is divided into as many classes as necessary. The strong belief in teaching in mixed-ability classes means that streaming occurs only rarely.

Class sizes vary from school to school, but usually range from 20 to 35 pupils. Each class has a professeur principal (main teacher or class tutor) who acts as the link between the teaching staff, administration and pupils.[2]

Ultimately, the collège has the task of preparing students for the advanced subjects of the lycée. At the end of the troisième class, students sit for le diplôme national du brevet, an end-of-collège examination. The brevet is not required for entrance to the lycée, and passing it does not guarantee that a pupil will progress to the higher-level school.

During the last conseil de classe of the year, held in June, teachers and administrators decide whether or not a pupil can progress to the next grade. In deciding, they evaluate the student's skills, participation, and behaviour. One of three outcomes is possible:

  1. The student progresses to the next grade.
  2. His or her redoublement (repeating the year) can be required.
  3. He or she can, in specific cases, be offered to skip a grade and be promoted two grades.

A student asked to repeat a grade can appeal said decision. The decision of the appeals council is final.

Lycée edit

The lycée (pronounced [lise]) is the second and last stage of secondary education in the French educational system. The City of Paris refers to a lycée in English as a "sixth form college".[1] A pupil attending a lycée is a lycéen (masculine) or a lycéenne (feminine).

Until 1959, the term lycée designated a secondary school with a full curriculum (seven years, the present college + lycée) directly under the supervision of the State, then from 1959 to 1963 any secondary school with a full curriculum.[3] Older lycées still include a collège section,[4] so a pupil attending a lycée may actually be a collégien.

At the end of the final year of schooling, most students take the baccalauréat diploma. There are three main types of baccalauréat, which are completely different from each other: the baccalauréat général (general baccalaureate), the baccalauréat technologique (technological baccalaureate), and the baccalauréat professionnel (professional baccalaureate).

Lycée
Age Name Abbreviation
15–16 Seconde 2de
16–17 Première 1re
17–18 Terminale Tle

Lycées are divided into (i) the lycée général, leading to two or more years of post–baccalauréat studies, (ii) the lycée technologique, leading to short-term studies, and (iii) the lycée professionnel, a vocational qualification leading directly to a particular career. General and technological education courses are provided in "standard" lycées, while vocational courses are provided in separate professional lycées.

In practice, competent pupils at a vocational lycée professionnel can also apply to take short-term, post–baccalauréat studies leading to the Brevet de technicien supérieur (BTS), a vocational qualification. That option is available also to pupils at a lycée général.

Lycée général and lycée technologique edit

General streams (baccalauréat général) edit

In France, the lycée général is the usual stepping stone to university degrees.

Before 2021, the students of the general baccalaureate chose one of three streams (termed séries) in the penultimate lycée year (S for Sciences; ES for Economics and Social sciences; and L for Literature). During the seconde, students mostly take the same courses, despite having different academic skills and interests, so it is usually thought to be an easier year than either the première or the terminale.

The baccalauréat général examination is different for all three séries, and subjects are weighted according to the course taken.

Stream Description
S
scientifique
(sciences)
The science stream (bac S – bac scientifique) requires a high level in mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, geology and, if available, engineering sciences and computer science.
ES
économique et social
(economics and social sciences)
The bac ES (bac économique et social) requires a high level in economics and social courses of studies; also in mathematics, history and geography.
L
littéraire
(literature)
The bac L (bac littéraire) weighs French literature, philosophy, foreign languages and arts heavily. Students in première littéraire (1re L or 1L) have no maths and only a small amount of sciences unless they choose the 'maths' option. Students in Terminale Littéraire (Tle L or TL) have no maths, physics and chemistry or biology unless they chose the 'maths' option in 1L.

According to the official statistics, for the 2003–2004 school year, 33 percent of all students chose série S; 19 percent chose série ES; and 11 percent chose série L.[5]

All students take philosophy courses in terminale, while French language classes end in the première, excepting the série L, where they become French literature classes, where pupils are to study two books during the year, from French writers, or foreign books translated into French (e.g. Romeo and Juliet during the school year 2007–2008, or The Leopard from Italian author Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa).

There also is a required option for further specialisation in all séries, although it is restricted to the chosen course. For example, a student in série S can choose to specialise in mathematics, physics, "SVT" (biology and geology) or "engineering sciences" but not in philosophy.

A student in série L can choose to specialise in one of his or her foreign languages (English being the most popular), a third foreign language or a dead language such as Latin, or one of the following arts: music, theatre, circus, "plastiques". Specialisation adds a separate, weekly two-hour class in the chosen discipline; also, it increases the weight of the chosen subject at the baccalauréat. The syllabus in the specialisation class is unrelated to the material learned in the common class. Specialisation plays no role in the choice of a post–secondary career or subject at university, except for a few courses aimed for students from a given série that can also accept students from other séries if they have taken a given specialisation.

Starting from the 2020-21 academic year, the S, ES and L streams of the general baccalaureate are deleted. Students of the general baccalaureate now choose three specialty courses, then keep two in the final year. There are 12 specialties (that vary in their availability depending on the school): arts, ecology, history & geography, humanities, languages, literature, mathematics, computer science, physics & chemistry, economic and social sciences, engineering sciences, biology & geology. These specialties are added to a part common to all : French, philosophy, history & geography, languages, sciences, sport. A large part of the examinations are now done over the school year but the students also have final exams in their 2 specialties as well as in philosophy, added to a general oral examination.

Technical streams (baccalauréat technologique) edit

After the seconde, students can also go on the lycée technologique to obtain the baccalaureat technologique. It includes eight other streams, called séries technologiques:

  • sciences et technologies de la gestion (Management Sciences and Technologies, STG) (replaced sciences et technologies tertiaires (Service Sciences and Technologies, STT) for the June 2007 Bac Exam)
  • sciences et technologies de l'industrie et du développement durable (Industrial Science and Technologies and sustainable development, STI2D)
  • sciences et technologies de laboratoire (Laboratory Science and Technologies, STL)
  • sciences médico-sociales (Health and Social Sciences, SMS): The name was changed in 2007 and became: Sciences et technologies de la santé et du social (Sciences and Technologies in Health and Social, ST2S)
  • sciences et technologies du produit agroalimentaire (Food Science and Technologies, STPA)
  • sciences et technologies de l'agronomie et de l'environnement (Agronomy and Environment Science and Technologies, STAE)
  • techniques de la musique et de la danse (Music and Dance Techniques, TMD)
  • hôtellerie (Hotel and restaurants management)

The STPA and STAE stream are available only in lycées agricoles, speciality schools for agricultural sciences.

The teaching of the lessons is based on inductive reasoning and experimentation. It allows you to work or to pursue short and technical studies (laboratory, design and applied arts, hotel and restaurant, management etc.).

Lycée professionnel edit

The lycée professionnel leads to the baccalauréat professionnel. The courses are designed for students who do not plan to continue into higher education. The vocational training is for craftspeople and involves internships in commercial enterprises. The courses are suitable for students who are more interested in a hands-on educational approach than in academic schooling. There are nearly 100 specialties, including: Leather crafts; Building technician; Maintenance of industrial equipment; Cooking; Road freight transport driver; Butcher, etc and others.

Carte scolaire edit

 
A lycée in Rennes, from the 19th century.

French parents are not free to choose the state school that their children will attend; unless the children have special learning needs, they will attend the school allocated to them by the carte scolaire (school map). Reasons for attending a state school that is not their nearest include studying an option unavailable in the school to which they were originally assigned (e.g. a rare foreign language).

For many reasons, many parents consider the allocated school standards inadequate, the teaching poor, and particularly if they do not like the idea of their children mixing with some of the other pupils at the school. In any city, there are "better" lycées and collèges, which parents would prefer their children attend. The two main methods used in such circumstances to get children into a school other than their assigned school are :

  • paying for private schooling;
  • having the child choose an unusual option (e.g. Ancient Greek or Latin) available only in the preferred school.

A similar trick is used if some classes in a school are seen as "better" than others. For organisational reasons, students taking certain options are grouped into special classes, which may be academically attractive. They typically include classes taking German as a first foreign language, or Latin or Ancient Greek as options.

Outside France edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Children & families 2010-10-09 at the Wayback Machine." () City of Paris. Retrieved on 20 July 2010.
  2. ^ H. D. Lewis (1985). The French Education System. Routledge. p. 58. ISBN 0-7099-1683-3.
  3. ^ Jean-Michel Chapoulie. Les professeurs de l'enseignement secondaire : Un métier de classe moyenne. 01/01/87. Maison des Sciences de l'Homme. p3. ISBN 2-7351-0203-3.
  4. ^ Perhaps the best known example is Paris's Lycée Henri-IV.
  5. ^ official statistics[permanent dead link]

External links edit

  • French Ministry of Education (in French)
  • Bulletin Officiel (in French)
  • Centre national de documentation pédagogique website (in French)
  • The school system and education in France (in English)

secondary, education, france, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jsto. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Secondary education in France news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In France secondary education is in two stages Colleges French pronunciation kɔlɛʒ cater for the first four years of secondary education from the ages of 11 to 15 Lycees French pronunciation lise provide a three year course of further secondary education for children between the ages of 15 and 18 Pupils are prepared for the baccalaureat French pronunciation bakaloʁea baccalaureate colloquially known as bac previously bachot which can lead to higher education studies or directly to professional life There are three main types of baccalaureat the baccalaureat general baccalaureat technologique and baccalaureat professionnel Lycee Henri IV in Paris Contents 1 School year 2 College 2 1 Curriculum 2 2 Process and purpose 3 Lycee 3 1 Lycee general and lycee technologique 3 1 1 General streams baccalaureat general 3 1 2 Technical streams baccalaureat technologique 3 2 Lycee professionnel 4 Carte scolaire 5 Outside France 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksSchool year editThe school year starts in early September and ends in early July Metropolitan French school holidays are scheduled by the Ministry of Education by dividing the country into three zones A B and C to prevent overcrowding by family holidaymakers of tourist destinations such as the Mediterranean coast and ski resorts Lyon for example is in zone A Marseille is in zone B and Paris and Bordeaux are in zone C In contrast to the practice in most other education systems the school years in France are numbered on a decreasing scale Thus pupils begin their secondary education in the sixieme 6th class and transfer to a lycee in the seconde 2nd class The final year is the terminale In French the word etudiant e is usually reserved for university level students and college and lycee students are referred to as eleves pupils or students in English The curriculum programme officiel is standardized for all French public institutions Changes to the programme are made every year by the French Ministry of Education and are published in the Ministry s Bulletin officiel de l Education nationale BO the official reference bulletin for educators College editCollege Age Name Abbreviation11 12 Sixieme 6e12 13 Cinquieme 5e13 14 Quatrieme 4e14 15 Troisieme 3eThe college is the first level of secondary education in the French educational system A pupil attending college is called collegien boy or collegienne girl Men and women teachers at the college and lycee level are called professeur no official feminine professional form exists in France although the feminine form professeure has appeared and seems to be gaining some ground in usage The City of Paris refers to a college in English as a high school 1 Entry in sixieme occurs directly after the last year of primary school called Cours moyen deuxieme annee CM2 There is no entrance examination into college but administrators have established a comprehensive academic examination of students starting in sixieme The purpose of the examination is evaluating pupils level on being graduated from primary school Curriculum edit Subject Remarks Starting inHumanities and languagesFrench Language and Literature Features French and translated foreign works concentrates on grammar and spelling 6eHistory and Geography French based but includes foreign history and geography 6eA first foreign language1 Known as Premiere langue vivante LV1 6eA second foreign language1 or a French regional language Deuxieme langue vivante LV2 6e or 5eArts and crafts 6eMusical education 6eCivics Education civique 6e1Available foreign languages include English German Arabic Spanish Italian Portuguese and Russian other languages available per locale Most pupils study English as first foreign language and Spanish Italian or German as second foreign language Natural and applied sciencesMathematics 6eBiology and Geology Sciences de la vie et de la Terre SVT 6eTechnology 6ePhysics and Chemistry 6eCompulsory coursesPhysical Education 6 eOptional coursesLatin 5eAncient Greek 3eThe table at the right details the French curriculum Along with 3 4 weekly hours of physical education a typical school week consists of some 26 hours of schooling French language and literature occupy the most time 4 5 hours per week followed by 4 hours per week of mathematics other subjects occupy 1 3 5 hours per week The curriculum is devised by the French Ministry of National Education and applies to all colleges in France and also for AEFE dependent institutions Academies and individual schools have little margin for curriculum customisation Teachers compose syllabi per precise government educational regulations and choose textbooks accordingly and every major French publishing house has a textbook branch Process and purpose edit Usually a different professeur or teacher teaches each subject most teachers teach several different age groups College pupils stay in the same class throughout the school year and in every subject except for optional courses such as foreign languages where students from several classes mix so each year group is divided into as many classes as necessary The strong belief in teaching in mixed ability classes means that streaming occurs only rarely Class sizes vary from school to school but usually range from 20 to 35 pupils Each class has a professeur principal main teacher or class tutor who acts as the link between the teaching staff administration and pupils 2 Ultimately the college has the task of preparing students for the advanced subjects of the lycee At the end of the troisieme class students sit for le diplome national du brevet an end of college examination The brevet is not required for entrance to the lycee and passing it does not guarantee that a pupil will progress to the higher level school During the last conseil de classe of the year held in June teachers and administrators decide whether or not a pupil can progress to the next grade In deciding they evaluate the student s skills participation and behaviour One of three outcomes is possible The student progresses to the next grade His or her redoublement repeating the year can be required He or she can in specific cases be offered to skip a grade and be promoted two grades A student asked to repeat a grade can appeal said decision The decision of the appeals council is final Lycee edit Lycee redirects here For other uses see Lycee disambiguation and Lyceum disambiguation The lycee pronounced lise is the second and last stage of secondary education in the French educational system The City of Paris refers to a lycee in English as a sixth form college 1 A pupil attending a lycee is a lyceen masculine or a lyceenne feminine Until 1959 the term lycee designated a secondary school with a full curriculum seven years the present college lycee directly under the supervision of the State then from 1959 to 1963 any secondary school with a full curriculum 3 Older lycees still include a college section 4 so a pupil attending a lycee may actually be a collegien At the end of the final year of schooling most students take the baccalaureat diploma There are three main types of baccalaureat which are completely different from each other the baccalaureat general general baccalaureate the baccalaureat technologique technological baccalaureate and the baccalaureat professionnel professional baccalaureate Lycee Age Name Abbreviation15 16 Seconde 2de16 17 Premiere 1re17 18 Terminale TleLycees are divided into i the lycee general leading to two or more years of post baccalaureat studies ii the lycee technologique leading to short term studies and iii the lycee professionnel a vocational qualification leading directly to a particular career General and technological education courses are provided in standard lycees while vocational courses are provided in separate professional lycees In practice competent pupils at a vocational lycee professionnel can also apply to take short term post baccalaureat studies leading to the Brevet de technicien superieur BTS a vocational qualification That option is available also to pupils at a lycee general Lycee general and lycee technologique edit General streams baccalaureat general edit In France the lycee general is the usual stepping stone to university degrees Before 2021 the students of the general baccalaureate chose one of three streams termed series in the penultimate lycee year S for Sciences ES for Economics and Social sciences and L for Literature During the seconde students mostly take the same courses despite having different academic skills and interests so it is usually thought to be an easier year than either the premiere or the terminale The baccalaureat general examination is different for all three series and subjects are weighted according to the course taken Stream DescriptionSscientifique sciences The science stream bac S bac scientifique requires a high level in mathematics physics chemistry biology geology and if available engineering sciences and computer science ESeconomique et social economics and social sciences The bac ES bac economique et social requires a high level in economics and social courses of studies also in mathematics history and geography Llitteraire literature The bac L bac litteraire weighs French literature philosophy foreign languages and arts heavily Students in premiere litteraire 1re L or 1L have no maths and only a small amount of sciences unless they choose the maths option Students in Terminale Litteraire Tle L or TL have no maths physics and chemistry or biology unless they chose the maths option in 1L According to the official statistics for the 2003 2004 school year 33 percent of all students chose serie S 19 percent chose serie ES and 11 percent chose serie L 5 All students take philosophy courses in terminale while French language classes end in the premiere excepting the serie L where they become French literature classes where pupils are to study two books during the year from French writers or foreign books translated into French e g Romeo and Juliet during the school year 2007 2008 or The Leopard from Italian author Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa There also is a required option for further specialisation in all series although it is restricted to the chosen course For example a student in serie S can choose to specialise in mathematics physics SVT biology and geology or engineering sciences but not in philosophy A student in serie L can choose to specialise in one of his or her foreign languages English being the most popular a third foreign language or a dead language such as Latin or one of the following arts music theatre circus plastiques Specialisation adds a separate weekly two hour class in the chosen discipline also it increases the weight of the chosen subject at the baccalaureat The syllabus in the specialisation class is unrelated to the material learned in the common class Specialisation plays no role in the choice of a post secondary career or subject at university except for a few courses aimed for students from a given serie that can also accept students from other series if they have taken a given specialisation Starting from the 2020 21 academic year the S ES and L streams of the general baccalaureate are deleted Students of the general baccalaureate now choose three specialty courses then keep two in the final year There are 12 specialties that vary in their availability depending on the school arts ecology history amp geography humanities languages literature mathematics computer science physics amp chemistry economic and social sciences engineering sciences biology amp geology These specialties are added to a part common to all French philosophy history amp geography languages sciences sport A large part of the examinations are now done over the school year but the students also have final exams in their 2 specialties as well as in philosophy added to a general oral examination Technical streams baccalaureat technologique edit After the seconde students can also go on the lycee technologique to obtain the baccalaureat technologique It includes eight other streams called series technologiques sciences et technologies de la gestion Management Sciences and Technologies STG replaced sciences et technologies tertiaires Service Sciences and Technologies STT for the June 2007 Bac Exam sciences et technologies de l industrie et du developpement durable Industrial Science and Technologies and sustainable development STI2D sciences et technologies de laboratoire Laboratory Science and Technologies STL sciences medico sociales Health and Social Sciences SMS The name was changed in 2007 and became Sciences et technologies de la sante et du social Sciences and Technologies in Health and Social ST2S sciences et technologies du produit agroalimentaire Food Science and Technologies STPA sciences et technologies de l agronomie et de l environnement Agronomy and Environment Science and Technologies STAE techniques de la musique et de la danse Music and Dance Techniques TMD hotellerie Hotel and restaurants management The STPA and STAE stream are available only in lycees agricoles speciality schools for agricultural sciences The teaching of the lessons is based on inductive reasoning and experimentation It allows you to work or to pursue short and technical studies laboratory design and applied arts hotel and restaurant management etc Lycee professionnel edit The lycee professionnel leads to the baccalaureat professionnel The courses are designed for students who do not plan to continue into higher education The vocational training is for craftspeople and involves internships in commercial enterprises The courses are suitable for students who are more interested in a hands on educational approach than in academic schooling There are nearly 100 specialties including Leather crafts Building technician Maintenance of industrial equipment Cooking Road freight transport driver Butcher etc and others Carte scolaire editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A lycee in Rennes from the 19th century French parents are not free to choose the state school that their children will attend unless the children have special learning needs they will attend the school allocated to them by the carte scolaire school map Reasons for attending a state school that is not their nearest include studying an option unavailable in the school to which they were originally assigned e g a rare foreign language For many reasons many parents consider the allocated school standards inadequate the teaching poor and particularly if they do not like the idea of their children mixing with some of the other pupils at the school In any city there are better lycees and colleges which parents would prefer their children attend The two main methods used in such circumstances to get children into a school other than their assigned school are paying for private schooling having the child choose an unusual option e g Ancient Greek or Latin available only in the preferred school A similar trick is used if some classes in a school are seen as better than others For organisational reasons students taking certain options are grouped into special classes which may be academically attractive They typically include classes taking German as a first foreign language or Latin or Ancient Greek as options Outside France editMain article Agence pour l enseignement francais a l etrangerSee also edit nbsp France portal nbsp Education portalBaccalaureat Grandes ecoles Education in France Agency for French Education Abroad French language education in EgyptReferences edit a b Children amp families Archived 2010 10 09 at the Wayback Machine Archive City of Paris Retrieved on 20 July 2010 H D Lewis 1985 The French Education System Routledge p 58 ISBN 0 7099 1683 3 Jean Michel Chapoulie Les professeurs de l enseignement secondaire Un metier de classe moyenne 01 01 87 Maison des Sciences de l Homme p3 ISBN 2 7351 0203 3 Perhaps the best known example is Paris s Lycee Henri IV official statistics permanent dead link External links editFrench Ministry of Education in French Bulletin Officiel in French Centre national de documentation pedagogique website in French The school system and education in France in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Secondary education in France amp oldid 1183435473 Lycee, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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