French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Tuesday that school will soon be mandatory for children aged three years and up, instead of the current age of six.

While school is compulsory for French children from the age of six, since 1989 parents have had the legal right to a place in a pre-school center from the age of three.

The move to make preschool obligatory is intended to help children in French overseas territories and in poor communities on the mainland remain competitive in the education system, Macron said.

The move "reflects the president's desire to make school the place of real equality," the President's office said in a statement.

President Macron tweeted a list of what children believe is beneficial about more time at school, such as playing, learning to speak, painting and drawing:

This decision will mean that France has the lowest compulsory age for starting school in the European Union.

Macron said he wants to correct the "unacceptable differential" of children in Paris being far more likely than their peers in overseas territories, or even Corsica, to be enrolled in preschool.

While 97.6 percent of French school children are already enrolled at age three, according to education ministry figures from 2016, between 20,000 and 30,000 children do not start until later. The numbers are unevenly spread, with only 70 percent of three-year-olds attending school in France's overseas territories.

The new regulation is set to start in the school year from September 2019 and up to 800 new posts are to be created to meet the new demand.

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