The
Education Reform Act 1988 introduced a standardised National Curriculum in England and Wales. The curriculum specified what subjects should be taught and what standard children were expected to reach by different ages. It grouped school years between the ages of five and sixteen into four "key stages". According to one summary of the act: In Wales, Welsh language lessons became a universal part of the curriculum for children up to the age of fourteen in 1990. In 1993, the Developing a Curriculum Cymreig, Advisory Paper was published with the intention of adding more of an emphasis on the cultural life and society of Wales into the curriculum. However, a report produced by
Estyn in 2001 suggested that the success of this endeavour had been quite limited and varied significantly between subjects, schools and regions. Devolution created the potential for further divergence between England and Wales. Changes in the years immediately following devolution included compulsory study of the Welsh language for students up to the age of 16 and the removal of statutory testing for children in the middle years of their schooling (though it was later reintroduced). Though in general, the basic structure of the education system remained the same. The Foundation Phase, a new play-based curriculum was introduced for children aged three to seven from 2008 onwards. Curriculum materials more broadly were also updated that year. The 2008 curriculum is still being used by some learners in Wales until the
Curriculum for Wales (2022–present) is fully implemented by the 2026-2027 academic year. ==Structure==