For many internationally mobile families, relocating to Switzerland brings with it a long list of educational considerations. Chief among them — often surfacing quietly over a dinner table or during a school tour — is a deceptively simple question: When should my child start learning to read?
In English-speaking countries, literacy instruction often begins early, sometimes astonishingly so. By the age of five, children in the United Kingdom or United States are typically expected to recognise letters, decode phonics, and read short texts with increasing independence. Early readers are praised, tracked, and — at times — quietly measured against their peers.
By contrast, the Swiss approach is strikingly different. In many cantons, formal reading instruction in the local language does not begin until a child reaches first class — usually around six or seven years old. The philosophy is rooted in a deep respect for developmental readiness: not every child is cognitively or emotionally prepared to read at five, and the system does not demand that they should be.
By contrast, the Swiss approach is strikingly different.




