Children who have been in pre-school education are likely to  be much better readers when they are aged 15, reveals a study of  international test results.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)  has published an analysis of tests taken by pupils in developed  countries - looking at the long-term impact of pre-school education.  This showed that 15-year-olds who had attended pre-school were on  average a year ahead of those who had not. This advantage was  particularly strong for pupils in the UK.
The study is based on international tests taken by pupils in  industrialised countries known as the Programme for International  Student Assessment (PISA). The most recent results were published in  December, based on tests taken in 2009 by 15-year-old pupils in 65  school systems.
The latest study looks at the links between achievement in these  tests and pupils' first experiences of education. It found that in  almost all countries taking part in the tests, pupils who had attended  pre-school, such as nursery or children's centres from the age of three,  outperformed those who had not. This gap remained after different  social backgrounds had been taken into account.
Since pre-school education is more likely among better-off families, this can create an early social divide between pupils.
The research also suggests that disadvantaged and immigrant families can gain above-average benefits from early education.
There are considerable differences between countries in how much children are advantaged by pre-school education.
Denmark along with countries such as France, Israel, Italy,  Switzerland and the UK, is where there is the most marked advantage in  having attended pre-school.
At the other end of the scale, there are a group of countries in  which there is relatively little connection between attending pre-school  and later performance – including Estonia, Finland, Ireland and South  Korea.
The study shows there are substantial differences in the numbers of pupils in pre-school education.
In France, Japan and Belgium it is described as near-universal, while  in Canada, Ireland and Poland less than 50 per cent of children attend  pre-school.
source:http://www.ei-ie.org/en/news/show.php?id=1511&theme=educationforall&country=global 
 
 
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