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This Statutory Instrument supersedes S.I. 1989/825 and is being issued free of charge to all known recipients of that Statutory Instrument.

Statutory Instruments

1991 No. 2567

EDUCATION, ENGLAND AND WALES

The Education (National Curriculum) (Modern Foreign Languages) Order 1991

Made

11th November 1991

Laid before Parliament

18th November 1991

Coming into force

1st January 1992

In exercise of the powers conferred on the Secretary of State by sections 3(2)(b) and 232(5) of the Education Reform Act 1988(1), the Secretary of State for Education and Science, as respects England, and the Secretary of State for Wales, as respects Wales, hereby make the following Order:

1.—(1) This Order may be cited as the Education (National Curriculum) (Modern Foreign Languages) Order 1991 and shall come into force on 1st January 1992.

(2) In this order—

2.  The Education (National Curriculum) (Modern Foreign Languages) Order 1989(3) is hereby revoked.

3.—(1) Subject to paragraph (2), the modern foreign languages listed in the Schedule to this Order are hereby specified as foundation subjects in relation to the third and fourth key stages.

(2) Any language listed in the Schedule which is not an official language of the European Community is not a foundation subject unless the condition set out in paragraph (3) is satisfied.

(3) The condition referred to in paragraph (2) is that the school at which the language is taught also offers all relevant pupils the opportunity of studying one or more of the official languages of the European Community listed in the Schedule for the purposes of the National Curriculum.

Article 3

SCHEDULE

Kenneth Clarke

Secretary of State for Education and Science

11th November 1991

David Hunt

Secretary of State for Wales

11th November 1991

Explanatory Note

(This note is not part of the Order)

Section 3(2)(b) of the Education Reform Act 1988 provides that a modern language specified in an Order made by the Secretary of State shall be one of the foundation subjects which comprise the National Curriculum. Such a language is to be studied by pupils in the third and fourth key stages, that is to say from the beginning of the school year when the majority of pupils in the class reach the age of twelve until the majority of those pupils cease to be of compulsory school age.

This Order specifies those languages. Those in the Schedule which are one of the official languages of the European Community are foundation subjects in any circumstances. Those other languages listed will only be foundation subjects if the school concerned also offers pupils who are required to study a modern foreign language as part of the National Curriculum the alternative of studying at least one of the official languages of the European Community as a foundation subject.

This Order replaces the Education (National Curriculum) (Modern Foreign Languages) Order 1989. There are no changes of substance only changes of format.

(2)

J.O. 1958, 385; O.J. 1952-58, 59. Article 1 was amended by successive Acts of Accession, most recently by that of the Kingdom of Spain and the Portugese Republic.