If your child has just arrived in France and doesn’t speak French, you’ve probably already heard — or read on a letter from the school — the acronym “UPE2A.” Behind these somewhat obscure letters lies the main reception program for allophone students in France. Understanding it well means making sure your child receives the tailored support to which they are legally entitled.
This guide answers the practical questions families ask: what exactly is a UPE2A, how does a typical day work, how does the entry assessment unfold, and above all, what steps to take to enroll your child.
UPE2A stands for Unité Pédagogique pour Élèves Allophones Arrivants — Teaching Unit for Newly Arrived Allophone Students. It is a program of the French national education system intended for students newly arrived in France who do not yet master the French language. Its goal is twofold: to enable the child to learn French quickly, and to help them integrate into mainstream schooling.
Contrary to a widespread belief, UPE2A is not a separate class in which the child would be isolated. It’s a flexible arrangement: the student is enrolled in a mainstream class matching their age and leaves it for several hours a week to follow intensive French-as-a-second-language lessons in a small group, with a specially trained teacher.
This organization, called “inclusion,” rests on a simple principle: you learn a language better by being immersed in it, surrounded by classmates who speak it, while benefiting from targeted support to make up the linguistic gap.
The program exists at all levels, with some nuances:
– In primary school, the child is in their age-group class most of the time and joins the UPE2A group for daily or weekly French sessions.
– In lower secondary school, the setup is similar, often with a larger volume of French hours in the first months.
– In upper secondary school, UPE2A programs are rarer and concentrated in certain establishments. For a teenager aged 16 to 18, you sometimes have to request placement in a specific school that has the program.
A child generally stays in UPE2A between one and two years, the time needed to acquire enough French to follow mainstream schooling without intensive support. This duration isn’t fixed: it depends on age, language of origin, prior schooling, and each child’s pace. Leaving the program happens gradually, never abruptly.
To picture your child’s daily routine concretely, here is what a typical day can look like, bearing in mind that the organization varies from one school to another.
In the morning, your child may begin with two hours of French as a second language with the UPE2A teacher, in a small group (often 8 to 15 students of different origins). They work on everyday vocabulary, pronunciation, reading, writing, and then gradually on “academic French”: the words of math, science, and history.
The rest of the day, the child joins their mainstream class. At first, they mainly follow subjects where language is less central — physical education, art, music, mathematics — because they can take part even with limited French. Over the months, as their French progresses, they follow more and more subjects with their class.
This progression is designed so that the child never feels completely lost, while being constantly stimulated.
Before entering UPE2A, your child takes an assessment. Many parents worry about it, wrongly: it isn’t an exam you can “fail,” but a supportive review intended to identify the child’s existing knowledge in order to support them better.
The assessment is generally organized by the **CASNAV** (the academic center for the schooling of newly arrived allophone children), or by a designated teacher. It is entirely free.
The assessment covers several aspects:
– the child’s level of French (often very low, even nil — this is normal and expected);
– their academic skills in their mother tongue : reading, writing, math, reasoning;
– their prior schooling (have they been to school before, for how many years, under what conditions).
This last point is essential. A child who was an excellent student in their country of origin doesn’t have the same needs as a child with little or no prior schooling. By measuring knowledge in the language of origin, the assessment avoids confusing “doesn’t speak French” with “has academic difficulties.” These two things have nothing to do with each other.
You have nothing in particular to revise. The best preparation is to reassure your child: explain to them, in your language, that this is a meeting to get acquainted and understand what they already know, not a test that decides whether they’re “good” or “bad.” If you have them, bring the report cards or school documents from the country of origin: they are valuable for the assessment.
Here is the most concrete part: the steps to get your child into the program.
The first thing to do is to enroll your child in school, independently of the question of UPE2A.
– For primary school : contact the town hall of your municipality, which handles enrollment. Bring a proof of address (even an attestation of accommodation) and, if you have them, the family record book or the child’s birth certificate.
– For secondary school : contact the departmental education authority directly or the CASNAV, which will direct you to the establishment.
Important reminder: school enrollment is a right for every child, whatever the family’s administrative situation. A refusal on administrative grounds is not legal.
At the time of enrollment, clearly state that your child doesn’t speak French and has just arrived. It’s this reporting that triggers the referral to an assessment and then, if applicable, to a UPE2A. If the person you’re speaking to doesn’t seem to know the procedure, say the words “allophone student” and “CASNAV”: they’re understood by all education professionals.
The CASNAV or the establishment summons your child for the assessment described above. Afterward, a placement is proposed: entry into UPE2A if the program exists nearby, or another form of support.
If a UPE2A is recommended, your child is placed either in their local school (if it has the program) or in a nearby establishment that hosts it. In the latter case, transport solutions may exist — ask the town hall or the departmental council.
Not all municipalities have a UPE2A, especially in rural areas. This doesn’t mean your child will be left without help. Several solutions exist:
– The mainstream-class teacher puts adaptations in place (simplified materials, peer tutoring, visual aids).
– A traveling teacher can intervene occasionally in the school.
– Remote programs or occasional groupings in a nearby school are sometimes organized.
– Local associations and homework help usefully complete the support.
If you feel your child is receiving no linguistic support, contact the CASNAV of your education authority: it’s their role to find a solution.
As a parent, you have the right:
– to request an assessment for your allophone child;
– to be informed of the proposed placement and to understand it (an interpreter can be requested);
– to request a review if you feel the support is insufficient;
– to be assisted free of charge by an association in all these steps.
Remember that the professionals who welcome your child are, in the vast majority, caring and committed. Lack of familiarity with the procedure more often comes from a lack of information than from ill will. Asking questions, going back to the school, requesting clarification: all of this is not only allowed, but encouraged.
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UPE2A is not a “selective” program. If your child is allophone and newly arrived, they fall within the program. The only limiting factor is whether or not a UPE2A exists nearby. If there’s no space, the CASNAV must propose an alternative solution.
Generally between one and two years, depending on their age, prior journey, and pace. Exit is gradual: the child follows more and more classes in the mainstream class as they progress.
No, on the contrary. The program is designed to speed up access to mainstream schooling. Without tailored linguistic support, a child would take much longer to be able to keep up.
Explain that they’ll meet other children in the same situation, from all over the world, and that they won’t be the only one starting out in French. Many children make their first friends in UPE2A, precisely because everyone there shares the same experience.
No. Schooling is a right independent of administrative status. An attestation of accommodation and, if possible, the child’s birth certificate are enough to begin the process.
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– [Allophone Child Starting School in France: A Complete Parent’s Guide]
– [Newcomer: French School Procedures Step by Step]
– [10 Tips to Help Your Allophone Child Learn French]
– [How to Help with Homework When You Don’t Speak French Yourself]
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