Baa-bete: Sheep join primary school to stop a class from closing

The move came after the school in Crêts en Belledonne, a village at the foot of the French Alps, was told one of its 11 classes would be closed after numbers fell from 266 to 261. 
Shepherd walks with their sheep's on the dried agricultural field due to insufficient water during scorching summer at Mahabubnagar one of the drought effected districts in Telangana State. File photo for representational purpose only | (Suresh Kumar/EPS)
Shepherd walks with their sheep's on the dried agricultural field due to insufficient water during scorching summer at Mahabubnagar one of the drought effected districts in Telangana State. File photo for representational purpose only | (Suresh Kumar/EPS)

GRENOBLE, FRANCE: Fifteen sheep were signed up as the latest recruits at a primary school in the French Alps on Tuesday after parents feared falling pupil numbers would see some classes closed. 

The move came after the school in Crêts en Belledonne, a village at the foot of the Alps, was told one of its 11 classes would be closed after numbers fell from 266 to 261. 

On Tuesday morning, a local herder and his dog came to school with some 50 sheep in tow, 15 of whom were "officially" registered after showing their birth certificates. 

Added to register was a pupil called "Baa-bete" and another called "Saute-Mouton" - the sheepish equivalent of 'leapfrog' - in a comic ceremony watched by children, parents and teachers. 

"Now we won't have to close any classes," smiled Gaelle Laval, one of the parents behind the initiative, who accused the national education authority of being more concerned about numbers than about the children's welfare. 

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