The appropriate age to enroll children in schools has long been debated, with some favouring an earlier start to education while others advocate a later start. However, I believe that the concept of a universal age for schooling is flawed, and education should start when children are both emotionally and mentally ready to enter the education system.
On the one hand, earlier schooling indeed seems to give a head start to children. At around 4 or 5 years old, children typically possess better brain plasticity and flexibility, with a brain capable of absorbing various types of information such as languages, patterns, and social behaviors remarkably quickly. A structured educational system can further contribute to their skill acquisition, cultivating discipline, communication, and cooperation from an earlier age, which may ease the process of adaptation to social settings later in life. Enrolling children in schools at a young age can also facilitate earlier educational attainment and career growth, resulting in a more ‘productive’ life pathway in a world that moves at breakneck speed.
On the other hand, there is a darker side to consider as well. Not every child can catch up with the academic pressure placed on them from an early age, sometimes being forced to abandon their childhood for the sake of learning several languages or solving math problems. In the rush to produce high-scoring students, many adults forget a simple truth: childhood is also a separate stage of life when children should be given some freedom to explore the world on their own terms and develop curiosity before being subjected to strict educational settings. Some of the most innovative thinkers were not early prodigies either. Most of them credited carefree childhood years for their achievements, arguing that exposure to life beyond standartised settings helped nurture their creativity and curiosity.
From my view, societies should start normalizing the fact that there is no one-size-fits-all age to schooling. Every individual is unique in their development and therefore may have to enroll in school earlier or later depending on their needs. A child turning 7 years old may feel ready to handle academic life at this age while a 5-year-old is already studying in primary school with maturity and goals. In the grand scheme of life, starting school a year earlier rarely determines a person’s destiny; but losing the joy, confidence, and emotional stability that make learning meaningful can leave far deeper scars.
To conclude, although both perspectives hold merit, I contend that children should begin formal schooling only when they demonstrate emotional and cognitive readiness rather than simply reaching a particular birthday. Not only can this approach cultivate children’s spark for learning and help them develop without external pressure, but it can also cater to their individual needs, thereby avoiding some side effects of either early or late schooling
