Schools tailored for pupils who typically go on to university have until the school year 2022-23 to introduce the compulsory lessons under a regulation change that came in on August 1, the Swiss national day, reports Xinhua news agency.
Previously, IT had the status of a non-obligatory supplementary subject, Swiss public television RTS reported.
Pupils will learn programming basics as well as about computer networks and digital communication security issues.
They should also develop a "well-versed understanding of developments in the information society", according to an Education Ministry statement.
The change was made due to the "rising importance in society" of information and communication technologies (ICT), said the Ministry.
There is currently a strong demand for IT specialists, but those in the field say there are not enough skilled workers to fill these positions, reported Swissinfo, the website of the national broadcaster.
"We don't have any problem finding people for the helpdesk, which is quite easy in IT terms, but it's much more complicated to find developers," Lionel Rieder, co-founder of website developer Raccoon in Neuch?tel, told RTS.
According to statistics shown in the RTS report, some 90,000 people were employed in Swiss IT professions in 1991.
This had risen to 210,800 by 2015. By 2024, there is expected to be a shortfall of almost 25,000 IT specialists.
(This story has not been edited by Social News XYZ staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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