Prince George
Prince George may need aunt Meghan Markle's expertise in one of his subjects. Pictured: Prince George arrives for his first day of school at Thomas's school in Battersea, southwest London on Sept. 7, 2017. Getty Images/Richard Pohle

Prince George will have daily homework and may seek the help of aunt Meghan Markle in one of his subjects this school year.

Prince William and Kate Middleton's eldest son will be back to school next month. According to People, Prince George's year-long curriculum includes math, English, science, history, geography, and religious studies. The third-in-line to the throne have special subjects too that includes French, computing, art/design, technology, music, ballet, P.E., and drama.

Prince George will have to partake in a one 40-minute drama lesson each week and he will have to perform in a festival later in the year. The publication noted that the Duchess of Sussex can be Prince George's go-to person for his drama class. Markle graduated from Northwestern with a double major in theater and in international studies.

Meanwhile, Prince George will have daily homework. The 5-year-old tot is expected to complete 10 minutes of reading every night. The school will also send him a spelling rule or pattern weekly.

"Children in Year 1 become increasingly independent and confident and begin to relish the opportunity to tackle new challenges presented to them across the broad curriculum," said Helen Haslem, Head of Lower School on its website.

Prince William and Middleton will reportedly escort Prince George on his first day of school. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were expected to drop him to school together for the same occasion last year. Unfortunately, only Prince William did it because Middleton was in strict bed rest due to severe morning sickness. At that time, the duchess was still expecting Prince Louis.

Middleton is still on maternity leave and is not expected to return to her royal duties until October. So, she will likely accompany Prince William for Prince George's first day of school.

In related news, Princess Diana's former bodyguard Ken Wharfe blamed Prince William and Middleton for Prince George and Princess Charlotte's paparazzi shots in 2015. According to him, the family is privileged to live in a palace where the children can stroll in the grounds. So they should not have brought them to the public parks if they didn't want that type of intrusion.