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Medical fees, eco-grants, gas prices: 5 changes this May in France
We also include the French income tax declaration deadlines for residents and second-home owners and other dates coming up
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Storms on way for much of France. Will the cold spell continue?
We also share videos and photos of last weekend's dramatic weather in the south-west and east
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Paris hospital dog trial goes from strength to strength
An English setter rescue dog at one of the world’s top cancer hospitals in Paris has been described as “a bubble of oxygen”
U-turn on collège Latin teaching
New secondary school curriculum will still include some ancient languages, after campaign by teachers and historians
PROPOSALS to scrap teaching of ancient languages and culture from France's secondary school curriculum appear to have been overturned, after a fierce campaign by academics.
Education minister Najat Vallaud-Belkacemm, who is overseeing a wide-ranging reform of secondary (collège) education, has asked the body drawing up the new curriculum to factor in Ancient Greek and Latin teaching as part of the French-language programme for pupils aged 12-15 (5ème to 3ème).
Classics teaching did not feature in the first draft of the plan - leading to protests from some teachers and academics, as well as prominent politicians including François Bayrou and Jack Lang.
The education minister then offered a compromise, adding an hour a week back into the timetable for pupils in 5ème and two hours in 4ème and 3ème, but critics said this did not go far enough.
The president of the Conseil Supérieur des Programmes, which will decide on the new curriculum changes, has spoken of an "over-reaction by some intellectuals who haven't read the whole project".
Michel Lussault said: "I've been called all sorts of names. The education minister will meet historians and we will organise a forum at the Sorbonne. We will listen to everything that's said when we draw up our final plan."
That plan is due for September, and would come into force from the following rentrée, 2016.