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Striking French teachers hold placards which read, “Equality Yes, Mediocrity Non” (L) and “Low-cost School, Future in Danger” as they attend a nation-wide protest against new measures aimed at revamping the country’s school system in Lyon, France, May 19, 2015. Image Credit: Reuters

Paris: Teachers in France went on strike on Tuesday to protest against a proposed reform of secondary education that has become a bitter battleground for one of the country’s rising political stars.

Education Minister Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, 37, has come under fire for the disputed reforms, which concern schools educating children aged 11 to 15.

Among the most disputed elements of the reform is a proposal to reduce the teaching of Latin and Ancient Greek, replacing these languages with a general class on classical culture.

Teachers are also furious at plans to give schools more autonomy in a system that has previously sought to ensure that all children at high school level receive exactly the same education.

Despite this attempt at egalitarianism, there are wide differences between schools in downtrodden areas and those in more prosperous parts of the country.

The high school drop-out rate among children of manual labourers is 32 per cent whereas only five per cent of children from white collar families drop out of school prematurely.

And the French education system has slipped down the rankings drawn up by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and, according to the OECD, is one of the least egalitarian in the world.

The reform aims to even up this balance but critics say it will result in a race to the bottom.

According to the SNES union that organised the industrial action, more than half of high schoolteachers were on strike whereas the ministry said only 27 per cent had walked off the job.

Tuesday’s strike called by unions opposed to the reform is seen as a first major test for Vallaud Belkacem, a rising star in the ruling Socialist party and a minister at only 37.

She has come under huge political pressure over the reforms, notably from opposition leader and former president Nicolas Sarkozy who said she was involved in a “fight to see who was most mediocre” with Justice Minister Christiane Taubira.

Sarkozy was accused in some quarters of xenophobia for attacking these two ministers — Vallaud Belkacem has Moroccan roots and Taubira French Guianese.

However, she has received staunch support from President Francois Hollande and Prime Minister Manuel Valls who has vowed to back his close ally to the hilt.

“I am confident. This reform will be put in place as it was originally drawn up and the legislation will be tabled as soon as possible,” said a combative Valls.

“This reform is essential,” added Valls, saying he wanted to pay “special tribute” to the teachers in France. “This reform is also for them, for their work,” he stressed.

Nevertheless, in France as in many Western countries, education policy raises huge passions and the debate promises to continue to rage.

Proof that education is a potentially explosive issue in France: two of the 10 biggest strikes in post-war France have been over education, in 1984 and 1986.

Sarkozy’s right-wing opposition UMP party has called for the reform to be scrapped entirely.