Swedens Educational System
Swedens Educational System
Swedens Educational System
Nursery school
Förskola (nursery school, or preschool) is provided by Swedish
municipalities for children ages one to five. The amount of municipal
subsidy for preschool depends on the child’s age and whether the
parents work, study, are unemployed or on parental leave for other
children.
Swedish preschool emphasises the importance of play in a child’s
development, with a curriculum aiming to ensure children’s individual
needs and interests. Gender-aware education is increasingly common,
striving to provide children with the same opportunities in life
regardless of gender.
COMPULSORY SCHOOLING
Swedish compulsory schooling consists of four stages: förskoleklass (‘preschool year’ or year
0), lågstadiet (years 1–3), mellanstadiet (years 4–6) and högstadiet (years 7–9). Children between ages six and
thirteen are also offered out-of-school care before and after school hours. Compulsory education also
includes sameskolor (Sami schools) for children of the indigenous Sami people.
UPPER SECONDARY SCHOOL
Gymnasium (upper secondary school, sixth form or high school, years 10–12) is optional. There are
eighteen regular national programmes of three years to choose from, six of which are preparatory for higher
education such as university, and twelve of which are vocational.
While entrance requirements vary between programmes, all of them demand students to have passing
grades in Swedish, English and mathematics from their final year of compulsory schooling.
In 2022, about 85 per cent of Swedish ninth-year students qualified for a vocational programme and 81–84
per cent for a national programme. Those whose grades don’t qualify have five so-called introductory programmes to
choose from. From these introductory programmes, students can then move on to a national programme.
There are also upper secondary schools for people with intellectual disabilities as well as programme
variations targeting for example athletes.
In total, around 69 per cent of upper secondary students received a leaving qualification in 2022 (diploma).
INDEPENDENT SCHOOLS
The Swedish school system includes a growing number of independent schools with public
funding, friskola in Swedish. Following a law change in the 1990s, parents and their children
can choose among tuition-free schools, whether municipal or private. Although private
schools have been in existence for as long as there has been compulsory education in
Sweden, they were not a wide-spread competitive alternative to municipal schools until the
1992 law provided them with public funding. These publicly funded non-municipal schools
are called friskola to differentiate them from tuition-based private schools (of which there are
only a handful left in Sweden).