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I live in France. One thing that comes to mind is hesitancy to report it due to parents not taking their children to hospital.
The other thing is that there is a lot of pressure put on children starting in middle school.
I teach at a business school and the students tell it like this:
Basically, students are told again and again that everything they do is the most important thing.
Some of my students are still so traumatized that they cry if they get below 75% (15/20). To underline how things have changed, in 2006 (when I moved to France) students used to applaud each other for getting higher than 60% (12/20) but now everything is ranked. Add in hormones and social media and anxiety... Lots of burn out and depression.
That sounds like a similar system to what the UK introduced after WW2. It was scrapped in most of the country in the 1970s for the downsides you've mentioned.
I never had to do it, but instead had to study why it was scrapped. I'm surprised it's still a common system in highly developed countries such as France!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleven-plus#Controversy
@Zombie @pasdechance of course it wasn't *entirely* scrapped - two of my friends (both also teachers) have children in the Wirral and Bucks, both of which still have grammars. They hate it for the psychological pressure, the financial burden (it rewards rich kids who get tutors) and the difficulty for local non-grammars to meet targets without a normal mix of students.
Anecdotally: my mum passed and my uncle didn't, and I suspect it's affected their sibling dynamic ever since.
That hypothesis should be easy to verify by comparing against Belgian French speakers. We have largely the same culture and media intake, but our school system is much less focused on tests.
If anything we have the opposite problem, for budgetary reasons it has become nearly impossible to fail the standardized tests and as long as you get 10/20 it literally does not matter what the score was. I was in the first year when tests were introduced and they were so easy we did not even study for them.
The system as you describe it sounds a lot like the Italian one. That said, I just started studying French at the local Institut Francais and I must say that in general French people seem to take A LOT of things more seriously than the Italians do, for no good reason in my first instance opinion.