"No kid left behind": Macron tries to fix France's education system

* Macron has set out to reform France from its core

* Education reforms aim to reduce inequality in system

* Aims to prepare students better for jobs

* Opponents question whether aims can be achieved

By Ingrid Melander

MONTEREAU-FAULT-YONNE, France, July 5 (Reuters) - In a primary school in a run-down neighbourhood south of Paris, a teacher asks his first-year class how to spell words in a text on dinosaurs.

The enthusiastic six- and seven-year-olds eagerly raise their hands and answer correctly. All 10 are brimming with confidence after a full year with about half as many pupils in their class as in most French primary schools.

"No kid is left behind," teacher Sebastien Ducoroy said after the lesson at Les Ormeaux school in the town of Montereau-Fault-Yonne, about 70 km (43 miles) south of the French capital.

The school is one of about 4,000 in deprived areas where the size of classes has been cut under reforms intended by President Emmanuel Macron to reduce inequality in education and prepare students better for the job market.

Education is the latest battleground in a campaign by Macron to remake France from its core, shaking up politics and revitalising the economy to make it more competitive globally.

As in many other reform areas, the centrist president has encountered resistance from unions, protests and ideological divides but is managing to push through changes in education which he believe will help business as well as job seekers.

The reforms range from directives such as making school compulsory from the age of three instead of six and banning mobile phones in class, to encouraging the study of Latin and Greek and foreign languages.

But public attention has focused mainly on the smaller primary school classes, and on plans to overhaul the baccalaureat, the school-leaving exam introduced by Napoleon in 1808, and introduce an element of selection for universities. More scope to specialise is promised in areas such as computer science and coding, to match the needs of the digital world.

"From kindergarten to university, we're changing everything," Macron, 40, said in a television interview in April.

The plans have angered some French people. They see the reforms as an assault on a system that has long offered a nationally standardised curriculum under which every French citizen would be taught the same things wherever he or she was.

But Macron, who is married to his former teacher, wants to update the system to meet the needs of modern France better.

Pupils' chances of escaping their socio-economic background are smaller in France than in any of the other 71 countries surveyed, according to an analysis by policy think-tank OECD in a global education study.