Photorealistic illustration of a Swedish school with Aftonbladet newspaper featuring lists of school quality ratings, teacher stats, and complaint reports overlaid as data visualizations.
Photorealistic illustration of a Swedish school with Aftonbladet newspaper featuring lists of school quality ratings, teacher stats, and complaint reports overlaid as data visualizations.
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Aftonbladet publishes lists on school quality and complaints

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Aftonbladet has compiled comprehensive statistics on Swedish primary schools and preschools, including grades, teacher qualifications, and reports of misconduct. The lists cover thousands of units and highlight both strengths and issues in the education system.

On December 22, 2025, Aftonbladet published three interactive lists based on official statistics from Skolverket and Skolinspektionen. The first covers 3,241 primary schools in Sweden, showing average grades, proportion of qualified teachers, national test results, and students' grade development year by year. Mikaela Zelmerlööw, an education councilor at Skolverket, emphasizes: "It’s about feeling and trying the operations" to assess if a school suits a specific child.

The second list focuses on reports of misconduct from 2022 to 2024, with data from 8,583 schools. Of these, 4,220 have received at least one report, equating to half of the country's schools. Common issues include bullying, inappropriate teachers, and risks to students' health. Skolinspektionen notes that such reports are the most frequent.

For preschools, a list of 1,074 units in 197 municipalities that have been reported is presented, with hundreds of annual reports on violence, racism, and children running away. Examples include cases where staff encouraged racist expressions or let children remain in soiled diapers until pickup time. Despite this, few reports lead to concrete consequences.

These investigations allow parents to search for information on local schools and preschools, but experts warn that numbers do not capture the full picture of an institution's quality.

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Frustrated students and teachers in a Swedish classroom dealing with a crashed digital exam platform, illustrating technical failure and chaos.
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Digital platform for national tests crashes during trial

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Skolverket's digital platform for national exams failed during Thursday's test run, affecting thousands of students. Only about half of 17,000 students could complete the trial, and teachers describe the chaos as a disaster. The project, costing nearly 700 million kronor, has faced sharp criticism.

Today, 4,381 students in Uppsala municipality received school placement notices for the upcoming autumn term, with 86 percent securing their first-choice school. This represents a one percentage point increase from last year, and overall 95 percent get one of their preferred schools. Nearly all guardians made an active choice in the school selection process.

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Government investigator Joakim Stymne proposes that independent schools and preschools with deficiencies should not be allowed to expand for a certain period. The proposal includes a ban on expansion through acquisitions and mandatory statements from municipalities on long-term impacts. The aim is to ensure quality and regulatory compliance in the education system.

The work environment at Alice Lund educational center's introductory program is marked by division and insecurity, leading to the principal's resignation. School principal Christine Ripås has also chosen to leave, but stresses it is unrelated to the program. An action plan has been established to address the issues.

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Stockholm city has decided to intensively monitor children as young as six years old to counter future criminality. The initiative costs 55 million kronor over three years and targets families with social issues. The method aims to reverse negative patterns early.

Borlänge municipality has received extensive criticism from the Health and Social Care Inspectorate (IVO) for shortcomings in child and youth services. The child and family unit is now being reinforced with nine new positions.

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Migration Minister Johan Forssell (M) proposes that youths facing deportation at age 18 should be allowed to complete high school. Protests against teen deportations are growing in Sweden following the abolition of the 'spårbytet', despite warnings about impacts on children and youth. Politicians from various parties express concern over the effects on well-behaved young people.

 

 

 

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