Yes, but only if they have money. School is not free in Mexico as in the US. Parents need to have enough money to send the kids to school.
Yes, they do. Depending on specific schools, even some give homework to their students since preschool/kindergarten, all the way up to college/university.
No they are not reqiured to go to skool
Yes.
It means Children's Garden.
Actually, the possessors here are the children, not the coats. In English, a possessive refers to who owns it. The coats are what the children own. So, the apostrophe, showing posession, would go with the plural noun "children." It would look like this: The kindergarten children's coats...
Education is free in Mexico; from pre-school / kindergarten to college. However, many private schools exist and many parents send their children to such schools.
Preschool is 'la crèche' (for children too young to go to kindergarten), or 'la maternelle / l'école maternelle' (kindergarten)
Typically, at the age of 5 years, children start with Kindergarten.
"kindergarten" is German, means "children's garden"
Kindergarten is a German word that means "garden of children." It refers to the first year of formal schooling for young children, typically around the age of five or six. Kindergarten programs are designed to provide a strong foundation for learning and development through play-based activities and socialization.
From kindergarten to university/college, there are public as well as private institutions in Mexico.
The difference is Preschool teach children there numbers , colors & shapes. basically getting children ready for kindergarten. Kindergarten is a little more advance than preschool because it teach children how to write there name read etc. * sending your child to preschool will help them less likely to repeat kindergarten.
SCHOOL FOR children
It is a children's nursery school.
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