Aloisius College

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Aloisius College
logo
type of school high school
School number 166390
founding 1921
address

Elisabethstrasse 18

place Bonn
country North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
Coordinates 50 ° 40 '39 "  N , 7 ° 9' 2"  E Coordinates: 50 ° 40 '39 "  N , 7 ° 9' 2"  E
carrier Jesuit order
student 730
Teachers 62
management Martin Löwenstein SJ (Rector), Walter Odekerken (Headmaster), Torsten Liebscher (Boarding School Head)
Website www.aloisiuskolleg.de

The Aloisiuskolleg ( AKO for short ) is a co-educational , old-language , private and catholic high school with boarding school for high school students in Bonn - Bad Godesberg , sponsored by the Jesuit Order . Patron saint is Saint Aloisius of Gonzaga .

Sponsorship

Carrier and founder of the 1921 founded Jesuit school , the Jesuit order . This maintains a non-profit GmbH as the sponsor of the school, and a foundation through which the operation of the educational work is supported.

As part of the North Rhine-Westphalian School Act , 94% of the school costs recognized under budget law are refinanced by the state; the remaining 6% personal contribution for these school costs are provided by grants from the Archdiocese of Cologne . All additional costs for facilities and activities are financed from donations and other grants; for this purpose, a fixed donation is requested from the families, which around half contribute. Donations from old school students are also important for the college. There is no school fee.

For the day school and free leisure activities, fees are charged. The contributions for children and young people from socially disadvantaged families are financed by various grants (around 10%).

history

Founding in exile as a result of the Kulturkampf

As a result of the Kulturkampf , the state of Prussia took over the supervision of all Jesuit schools by law in 1872. On August 12, 1900, the German Province of the Society of Jesus took over the Aloisius College in Sittard , the Netherlands, as an all-boys school with boarding school. The education was of German priests with 43 internal and 38 external students on 29 September 1900 a preparatory class, a sexta and Quinta opened class (5th and 6th grade). This was the actual start of the Aloisius College.

Educational orientation in the pre-war period

While the boarding school system of the Weimar Republic partly tended towards the ideal of the reform school , the educational concept was also extremely conservative from the point of view of the time . Former students at the college tell of the fact that leather loincloths had to be worn for the weekly bathtub - to protect the body from looking. Corporal punishment was the order of the day (not unlike in many other schools). The vast majority of students came from wealthy families, but did not show the desired performance and discipline in their home schools and were sent to strict boarding schools for educational purposes. There were severe punishments for escaping, and at the request of their parents there were no school free for many students in the event of important events such as death or illness within the family. The sending of gifts and allowances (food, money) to schoolchildren was prevented by postal controls, letters to parents and siblings had to be written under supervision on specially reserved afternoons. Shielding from external influences, including one's own family, was considered very important at the time for the consistent implementation of educational goals.

Relocation to Bad Godesberg and National Socialism

The Jesuit law was not repealed until 1917 and so the Jesuits were free to found and run schools in Germany again. The Aloisiuskolleg moved to Bad Godesberg (now part of the city of Bonn). On May 15, 1921, Father Arnold Rump, the rector at the time, wrote to Cologne: "I humbly inform the Prussian government that the Collegium Hubertinum changed its name to Aloisiuskolleg at Easter 1921." The school consisted of a humanistic grammar school and one Realgymnasium . This was the beginning of the Aloisius College in Bad Godesberg. After an attempt to acquire Schloss Bensberg for the college failed, the villa "Stella Rheni" of the banker Karl von der Heydt , acquired in March, served as a boarding school building from May 1927 .

On August 5, 1928, construction of the school (a horseshoe-shaped building for the school and the five-story cubic “tower” for the boarding school) began. Bernhard Wielers and Theodor Menken were responsible as architects . On July 28, 1929, the new school was inaugurated; In September 1932 the gym was opened ("old gym").

The college cemetery was probably laid out in the 1930s; the oldest tombstone dates back to 1933. The private cemetery was primarily used as a burial place for members of the Jesuit order and was approved as such by the district president in 1947. The cemetery has not been re-occupied since 2010.

After the seizure of power of the Nazis the college line was made life increasingly difficult: more and more restrictions for high school graduates who are not only at a different school a high school (the college was approved only not recognized by the state), but had to take in their home area, endangered the existence of the college as early as the mid-1930s. At the beginning of the school year at Easter 1933, the upper secondary school was converted into a reform secondary school (with Latin as an obligatory subject from grade 10). In 1937 the AKO became the German High School . On January 30, 1939, the National Socialists closed the school because the Jesuit educational tradition could not be reconciled with the model propagated by the National Socialist state. In the internal administrative justification, reference was made to an “upbringing hostile to National Socialism”. For example, crucifixes were secretly hung at the Aloisius College, despite the threat of punishment .

Active resistance by Jesuit fathers and students also plays an important role in the present day self-image of the college. Well-known persons of the resistance are Georg Freiherr von Boeselager and his brother Philipp .

Reopening after World War II

Immediately after the Second World War , the Jesuits reopened the school on October 22, 1945 (in the building of the Burgstrasse elementary school and the Lyceum in Lessingstrasse). On March 22, 1946, the expropriated building of the Aloisius College was returned to them; in August the boarding school was reopened. On June 24, 1956, the foundation stone for the new college church (architect Alois Möhring , Cologne) was laid on the site of today's church, which was inaugurated on September 8, 1957; it replaced the emergency church ("barrack") built in 1929 at the northern entrance.

In 1956 the boarding school was extended to the south by an L-shaped extension. In 1967/1968 the college buildings were extensively renovated and the old boarding wing ("tower") was extended by a floor for the Jesuit community. At the same time, the “new gym” was built, which was put into operation in 1969. On June 18, 1985, almost three decades after its construction, the college church was demolished again due to its dilapidation. The laying of the foundation stone for the new church with crypt (architect: Winfried Landsberg , Euskirchen) was inaugurated on December 13, 1986.

From the 1950s onwards, as before the war, theater and music performances were part of the program of the college. In 1964 the first student co-administration was installed, which was not a matter of course for the rather strict school at the time. The first mass celebration in German on February 23, 1965 shows that people were slowly opening up to social and church innovations. In February 1972, there was even a strike by the teaching staff in order to participate in the general reduction in working hours. 1973 opened a language laboratory; In 2016, this area was transformed into a self-learning center with computer workstations as part of the renovation of the library.

coeducation

From 1965 there was a joint dance course with a prom with the students of the Sankt-Adelheid-Gymnasium in Bonn-Pützchen. At the end of the 1970s, the Aloisiuskolleg and the Clara-Fey-Gymnasium for girls in Bad Godesberg began co-education within the upper school. The girls in the upper level were able to attend some basic and advanced courses at the Aloisiuskolleg and vice versa. From 2002 the school accepted girls in the 5th grade; The boarding school for girls was opened in 2006.

Cases of abuse

In February 2010, former students of the Aloisius College stated that they had been victims of sexual abuse or had known about it. Teachers and educators, mostly members of the Jesuit order, were named as perpetrators. Already in 2004, Miguel Abrantes Ostrowski , a former student of the college, gave evidence of sexual abuse in his book Sacro Pop . On February 8, 2010 the rector of the Aloisius College, Father Theo Schneider SJ, resigned with immediate effect. Some abuse victims organized themselves together with the victims of other Jesuit institutions in the forum "Angular Table"; later a separate association was established: "Eckiger Tisch Bonn".

After two preliminary reports (by Ursula Raue, Julia Zinsmeister and others), a final report on the investigations into cases of abuse was submitted on February 15, 2011. According to this, a total of 23 people were burdened by statements from those affected in various ways (border violations, attacks, sexual and psychological violence ), including 18 members of the order and 5 employees. Most of these people - 14 fathers and 3 teachers - worked at the Aloisius College in the 1950s and 1960s. A priest who has been working at the Aloisius College since 1968 was particularly heavily burdened because, as boarding school director, he had had a lasting impact on the college, the prevailing educational culture and the structures. According to statements from 36 people, there were sexual border violations or physical assault. In 1985 this father changed to the office of headmaster, which he held until 1992. After his retirement he was responsible as an educator for the intermediate level and for remedial teaching until 2006. He died shortly after the allegations became known in 2010.

Under the name "AKO-Pro", an independent registered association for a range of leisure activities was closely linked to the Aloisiuskolleg in terms of personnel and organization until 2011. In the course of 2011, the club came under fire. A report by Arnfried Bintig ( border violations in AKO Pro Scouting at the Aloisiuskolleg Bonn - Bad Godesberg ) commissioned by the AKO compiled and assessed serious allegations against the pedagogical director. A criminal case against the head of AKO-Pro for wrongly paid municipal grants ended in 2016 with an acquittal. At the same time, the process exposed considerable deficiencies in administration and opaque structures. In a declaration unanimously adopted by the college conference in 2016, the institution committed itself to responsibility “for the institution and its handling of attacks and acts of abuse”.

Consequences of abuse cases

In December 2010 the Aloisiuskolleg presented for the first time a guideline for the prevention of sexual violence against children and adolescents in order to implement the experiences with cases of abuse. After one and a half years of internal preparation, in which the students, parents, employees and external specialists were included, the second edition of the prevention guide was introduced at the college in March 2019. This formulates the applicable standards (e.g. definitions, perpetrator strategies, complaint channels, etc.) and calls for implementation in everyday life. It also contains a catalog of "pupil rights and obligations" formulated by the pupils, a code of conduct for adults towards those who are wards and a voluntary commitment by the management.

New pedagogical approaches after 2010

P. Johannes Siebner, previously director of the St. Blasien college , took over the office of rector on July 17, 2011. Together with headmaster Manfred Sieburg and boarding school director (until 2016) Christopher Haep and (from 2016) Torsten Liebscher, he drove the development of new educational standards and structures. In 2014, after a lengthy consultation process, new rules for the college were issued, which regulate the relationship between the management and representative bodies in a binding manner. A college conference serves as a regular gathering of officials and elected representatives from the college community, where an account is given of the educational, organizational and economic conditions. The order also aims to ensure binding and transparent cooperation and control of all college areas.

In cooperation with z. At present, nine other schools in the German-speaking area and the Center for Ignatian Education at Heinrich-Pesch-Haus in Ludwigshafen have been developing educational standards since 2012 and teaching them to employees in training courses. The principle of "Cura Personalis" (care for the individual) from Ignatian pedagogy is represented by special functional units. In addition to the counseling teachers and the school psychologist, a full-time college chaplain was appointed, a pedagogue was entrusted with child protection, an anti-bullying team was created, and students were trained in dispute resolution . These initiatives were bundled in a weekly help conference in which the above-mentioned pedagogues, each with a representative from the management of the college areas, discreetly deals with individual pedagogical questions, exchanges observations and initiates assistance and support measures.

Realignment from 2018

The year 2018 represented a turning point for the college. The new school program came into effect in spring. For the first time it is described in detail and in the various dimensions of pedagogical action by which standards the school wants to be measured, what its focus is and how this is and should be implemented in everyday life. The basis was a school development process over several years with an in-house evaluation in 2015 and an external evaluation by a research institute in 2016/2017.

From summer 2018, the AKO will for the first time be offering the International Baccalaureate (IB) as an internationally recognized qualification as a supplement to the Abitur .

At the end of the 2017/2018 school year, the boarding school closed in its previous form. In doing so, the AKO took account of the lower demand, which the opening of the girls' boarding school in 2006 was unable to permanently improve. Up until the summer of 2020, high school students could still stay in a smaller boarding school to take their Abitur at the college; after that the boarding school of the AKO was closed. There are efforts by a new sponsor to open a small, new international boarding school locally.

Language sequences and subject canon

The same subjects are offered as in state schools. The foreign languages ​​available in the entrance class (5th grade) are English and Latin (5a) or only English (5b / 5c). In the 6th grade, the next foreign language (Latin) is added in the B and C classes. Ancient Greek or French can be chosen as a third foreign language, whereby one can also opt for non-linguistically oriented differentiation lessons (computer science). At the beginning of the upper level, Italian and again French are available as new foreign languages. Mathematics, biology, physics and chemistry as well as computer science are taught in the mathematics and natural sciences, while geography, history and social sciences are taught in the social sciences.

School competitions

At Jugend forscht and Freestyle Physics , students at the college regularly come out on top. AKO students can also be found among the first places every year at regional and national championships such as the Mathematics Olympiad, chemistry or physics competitions. In the PISA study (4th place) and various OECD studies, the school also came out on top in Europe. In the student competition founded Youth Top-10 finishes were also achieved.

In sporting areas, the AKO has been the city and North Rhine-Westphalia champions several times, as well as regional champions at the intermediate level in badminton, basketball and soccer.

Religious Education and Church Profile

Attending religious instruction is compulsory. Catholic and Protestant students attend classes appropriate to their denomination, while other students attend Catholic classes. It is also possible to switch to other religious instruction. De-registering from religious instruction brings the end of the school contract and thus the end of school education at the college.

The principles of the Catholic Church and the Order are practiced in a variety of ways in everyday life at school and boarding school (church services, days of reflection, retreats , morning prayers, etc.). The pedagogical profile is shaped by Ignatian spirituality. A social internship lasting several weeks in the 10th school year is mandatory for all students.

The school education and the curricula of the subjects are subject to the School Act for the State of North Rhine-Westphalia . The professional independence of the natural sciences, for example, is taken for granted at Catholic schools in Germany. About a third of the student body does not belong to the Catholic Church.

Faith and social engagement

Education is understood as a commitment to faith and justice. In addition to solid support and a religiously based upbringing, this means doing justice to the individual and strengthening his or her ability to believe and trust. The assumption of responsibility for others should be promoted in a targeted manner. In the first half of year 10, the students do a five-week social assignment in hospitals, old people's or children's homes, or in psychiatric institutions. Students become mediators or get involved in anti-bullying teams. Recreation days for the lower classes are organized by participants from older years together with the college chaplain and the teachers.

Boarding school - GONZAGAprep

Since the 2018/2019 school year, the Aloisiuskolleg has only (still) offered its boarding school for the upper school. Under the name "GONZAGAprep", it specifically prepares students for the Abitur. The house is named after Aloisius von Gonzaga , the school's patron; Many of the "preparatory schools" in which young people at Jesuit schools around the world are prepared for university are called "prep" (cf. the high school "Gonzaga Prep" in Spokane / USA). The boarding school GONZAGAprep offers space for up to 10 girls and 20 boys. You live in your own house on the college campus. GONZAGAprep sees itself academically as a study house with individualized learning advice . The aim is full independence at the end of the course. Learning after school is done individually, but there is a fixed amount of time to prepare for the Abitur or IB at your own learning rhythm. The teachers of GONZAGAprep work together with the college's school and are integrated into the structure of the college. The concept of the boarding school is geared towards the upper school level. "The development of a judgmental personality, the willingness to deal with the Christian faith, the openness to the diversity of world views and cultures as well as social responsibility are core concerns of the Ignatian pedagogy of the Jesuit order" (program of the house). The boarding school is open all year round except for the school holidays in North Rhine-Westphalia and a few bridging days; however, the students can go home almost every weekend.

Day school

External students also have the opportunity to do their homework in the afternoon at the college. These are looked after and supervised by educators and usually take place in the association and in the rooms of their own school coffers. In addition to their homework, the children and young people can spend their free time in common rooms or on the school premises, or they can take part in leisure activities at the AKO Forum. The day school is attended by around 180 students, mainly from the lower grades. It ends at 5 p.m. at the latest on school days.

Leisure activities - "AKO Forum"

Since 2013, extensive leisure activities in the arts and sports fields have been organized as an integrated facility of the college. Under the name AKO-Forum, courses are offered for students at the college, but also to a large extent for other schools (including many primary schools). The AKO forum is part of the educational responsibility of the college and is committed to the guidelines of the AKO's pedagogy.

Vocational preparation

The Aloisiuskolleg offers a number of themed evenings for its students as part of the “Working Group School and Work”. These theme evenings are made up of numerous lectures on a wide range of professions (e.g. theme evening "helping people" = doctor, development worker, pastor, social worker, etc.). The speakers are largely acquired by parents and old school students. The forerunner of this project was the “AKO-Berufsbörse”, a school initiative, the aim of which was to bring top-class speakers to the Aloisiuskolleg for individual lectures in order to present their profession. These included: Kai-Uwe Ricke (former CEO of Telekom AG), Norman Rentrop (founder of the publishing house), Stefan Raab (entertainer), Jörg Grabosch (Brainpool AG) and Christian Bungenstock (CTcon). Today the students of the former job exchange are actively involved in the planning and implementation of the lectures of the “Working Group School and Work”.

International cooperation

The college places great value on international contacts and promotes cultural exchange and encounters with people from other countries. Since 1997 it has been participating in the “ Erasmus + program ” (formerly: “ Comenius program ”) of the European Union, which promotes cooperation between European schools. In addition, the active participation of smaller groups of students in projects is encouraged. Partnerships for individual exchanges exist with, among others, Clongowes Wood College (Ireland) and Eton College (England).

A special focus of the Aloisius College is the exchange with Jesuit schools in Lithuania ( Kaunas and Vilnius ), Hungary ( Miskolc ) and Croatia ( Osijek ). By choosing these partner schools, tourism aspects should take a back seat and instead the encounter with other languages ​​and cultures in Europe and thus intercultural learning should be promoted. The common language in the exchange programs in which all grade 9 students participate is English.

View from the schoolyard to the Aloisiuskolleg school building
Football field
Tennis courts

Facilities, buildings and facilities

school

The school building is a U-shaped, three-story building from the 1920s. In addition to the classrooms, it houses two chemistry rooms, two physics rooms, two music rooms and a library with a self-study center that was completely redesigned in 2016. The “work rooms” are located under the gymnasiums and are equipped with welding machines, a joinery, printing machines and much more. There have also been newly designed rooms for art classes since 2014. The structural transition from the school building to the newer boarding school is formed by the “tower”, a five-story, almost square building, on the top floor of which the Jesuit community at the Aloisius College lives.

Sports facilities

The sports facilities include two gyms next to the school building. There is a basketball court in front of the gyms. There are also basketball hoops and table tennis tables in the schoolyard. Above the school yard on the northwestern edge of the park there is an artificial turf soccer field, a tartan court , five tennis courts and a half court (wall court).

Stella Rheni

The Elberfeld banker Karl Freiherr von der Heydt had the "Castle on the Wacholder" built by the architect Heinrich Plange in neoclassical style from 1891 to 1893 and named it "Stella Rheni" (Latin for "Star of the Rhine"). The strictly geometric building in yellow sandstone offers a view of the Rhine Valley and the Siebengebirge . The Charlottenburg garden director Walther planned the extensive park. The villa has been used by the Jesuit order since 1927 and served as a boarding school for boys in the lower and middle grades until 2015. Today the villa is the location for high-profile events at the college and is also rented out to outsiders for this purpose.

Hunter's House

Hunter's House

The "Jägerhaus" belonging to the former possession of von der Heydts. The heavily romanticized "miniature version" of a hunting lodge is about 200 m below the Stella. The house was originally a coach house and was expanded for boarding school use in 1974 when the middle section became a large lounge. Today it is used as the college's guest house.

New building

This boarding school building was built in the 1960s and attached to the tower. It was originally L-shaped and was renovated in 2006. Part of the new building was demolished and replaced by a newly built "rotunda", a spacious event and leisure room (with a fireplace and outdoor area). Since August 2018, the rooms in the building have been rented to the University Hospital Bonn and the DRK Sisterhood for student nurses from all over the world; the administration of the college is on the ground floor. The rotunda is used by the school; in the mornings the rotunda serves as a lounge for the upper level.

GONZAGAprep - upper school boarding school

The building was originally completed as a boarding school for girls in September 2005 after a year of construction on the former orchards opposite the school by the architects Pilhatsch & Partner. Until the summer of 2020 it served as the college's boarding school, most recently for boys and girls only at the upper level.

church

Church of the Aloisius College

The octagon-shaped church was built in the early 1980s. A dilapidated church from the 1960s stood on the same spot. The showpiece of the church is a bronze sculpture of an angel by Ewald Mataré .

Old school students

Even after school, many of the alumni remain connected. An annual meeting in the summer is the “AKO-Fest”, according to a long tradition a party and a Sunday summer festival, to which old school students come as well as the current college community.

Alumni Association

The old school students have decided to join the “Aloisiuskolleg Alumni e. V. “, which maintains round tables in German-speaking old school students at various locations and supports the college in many ways, especially in the area of ​​career advice for current students. In addition, there is an association, mainly of older former Jesuit students in Germany: Old colleagues from the Aloisius College, the St. Blasien College and the Canisius College are involved in the Stellaner Association .

Square table Bonn

In the "Eckiger Tisch Bonn" people have come together who experience themselves as victims of the Aloisius College and AKO-Pro.

Well-known former students

The former students of the Aloisiuskolleg include:

Yearbook From the Aloisiuskolleg (AKO booklet)

The AKO booklet is an annual exercise book. In addition to the farewells to previous employees and introductions to new employees, it primarily contains reports from college life and religious-educational articles. Changes of address, information such as marriage, death or birth and the class photos of each class are also displayed here. The AKO booklet is sent free of charge to all parents and also to the old school students.

literature

  • Aloisiuskolleg (Ed.): From the Aloisiuskolleg / yearbook 1900- , self-published by Aloisiuskolleg (German National Library idn = 013640127)
  • Ebba Hagenberg-Miliu: Unheiliger Berg - The Bonn Aloisius College of the Jesuits and the coming to terms with the abuse scandal , 2014, Kohlhammer Verlag
  • Klaus Mertes and Johannes Siebner: School is there for pupils: Why parents are not customers and teachers are not parents. 2010, Herder-Verlag

Web links

Commons : Aloisiuskolleg  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ministerial decree of December 6, 1921. Quoted in: Jahrbuch Aus dem Aloisiuskolleg 1900–2000 , p. 31.
  2. Max Morsches : Religious War in the Rhineland - On the history of the Bensberger Schloßverein 1924 . In: “Heimat between Sülz and Dhünn”, journal of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein Rhein-Berg e. V. issue 12, 2005, p. 44-47 .
  3. ^ Letter from the Office for Urban Greenery of the City of Bonn dated December 7, 2012 (68-0 / Ho) to a law firm after the press reported that the cemetery was being operated without a permit.
  4. Aloisiuskolleg (Ed.): From the Aloisiuskolleg 1900-2000 . Bonn 2000, p. 58 f .
  5. A good 40 years later. In: General-Anzeiger Bonn , February 5, 2010
  6. ^ Miguel Abrantes Ostrowski: Sacro Pop: a school boy report. Essen: Klartext, 2004, ISBN 3-89861-311-9 .
  7. ^ Rector of Bonn Jesuit School resigns. In: Spiegel Online , February 8, 2010
  8. site of the Forum Square table , accessed on 2 June 2018th
  9. ^ Website of the Association of Damaged Persons of the Aloisius College in Bonn-Bad Godesberg eV Eckiger Tisch Bonn , accessed on November 22, 2019.
  10. Ebba Hagenberg-Miliu: Abuse at the Aloisius College: Two priests are particularly targeted. In: General-Anzeiger Bonn , March 4, 2010
  11. Ebba Hagenberg-Miliu: Abuse: More perpetrators and victims than previously known. In: General-Anzeiger , 1./2. November 2010
  12. Final report: “Serious border violations to the detriment of children and adolescents in the Aloisiuskolleg Bonn - Bad Godesberg”. ( Memento from September 27, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) In: aloisiuskolleg.de (PDF file; 1.91 MB)
  13. ^ Peter Rector (pseudonym): Affected person reports rape by several Jesuit fathers at the Aloisius College. June 23, 2017. Retrieved December 9, 2017 .
  14. ^ Britta Mersch: Cases of abuse at the Aloisius College: Silence for the good reputation. In: Spiegel Online . February 15, 2011, accessed June 9, 2018 .
  15. ^ Arnfried Bintig: Border violations in the AKO Pro Scouting at the Aloisiuskolleg Bonn - Bad Godesberg . Published by Aloisiuskolleg Bonn gGmbH, March 2013. Quote p. 125: “From a scientific perspective, the concept of AKO Pro Scouting in no way corresponded to the standards of contemporary“ experiential education ”. (...) The head of AKO Pro Scouting established a non-democratic, authoritarian «power system» with an emphasis on «masculinity» and misogynist and sexist components. ”( Online , accessed on June 2, 2018).
  16. Ebba Hagenberg-Miliu: City rejects allegations of the court . In: Bonner General-Anzeiger . December 8, 2016, p. 21 .
  17. ^ Declaration by the Aloisiuskolleg on the status of dealing with sexualised violence , adopted on November 10, 2015 , accessed on November 22, 2019.
  18. Ebba Hagenberg-Miliu: guidelines revised again - Aloisiuskolleg stands up against sexual violence. February 27, 2019, accessed March 28, 2019 .
  19. Strengthening personality - respecting boundaries - not tolerating violence. Guide to the prevention and intervention of sexual violence against children and adolescents aloisiuskolleg, Bonn - Bad Godesberg. (PDF) Martin Löwenstein SJ, Rector Aloisiuskolleg, March 1, 2019, accessed on March 28, 2019 .
  20. College of procedure of Aloisiuskolleg in Bonn - Bad Godesberg of 21 June, 2014.
  21. ^ Center for Ignatian Education. Retrieved December 8, 2017 .
  22. Johann Spermann, Ulrike Gentner, Tobis Zimmermann (eds.): Growing on the other. How Ignatian pedagogy makes young people satrk . Herder, Freiburg / Basel / Vienna 2015, ISBN 978-3-451-34278-3 .
  23. Advice and help. Important information for schoolchildren - but also for parents: contact persons, advice and help. Retrieved December 9, 2017 .
  24. ^ Minutes of the 8th college conference of November 4, 2014
  25. ako-school program_2018_web.pdf PDF file, 2 MB
  26. ^ Sinus Institute. Retrieved May 14, 2018 .
  27. 2018-05-15_presseerklaerung_ako.pdf PDF file, 216 kB
  28. ^ Message from the Rector in a circular on June 13, 2020
  29. ^ Mathematics Olympiad. Retrieved June 26, 2018 .
  30. Competitions ( Memento from December 9, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  31. Jesuits - Everything you always wanted to know about us ... Archived from the original on December 10, 2017 ; Retrieved December 9, 2017 .
  32. Social internship in grade 10 (EPh). Retrieved December 9, 2017 .
  33. ^ Gonzaga Preparatory School. Retrieved October 18, 2018 (us).
  34. Boarding school - GONZAGAprep. Retrieved October 18, 2018 .
  35. AKO forum. Retrieved December 9, 2017 .
  36. ^ The architect Heinrich Plange (cf. for example BS 458). Retrieved May 22, 2014 .
  37. ^ Message from the Rector in a circular to the Kollegsgemeinschaft on September 27, 2018
  38. Aloisiuskolleg Alumni. Retrieved June 26, 2018 .
  39. ^ Stellaner-Vereinigung Deutschlands eV , accessed on June 2, 2018.
  40. ANGULAR TISCH BONN - Association of Victims of the Aloisius College in Bonn-Bad Godesberg eV Accessed on December 9, 2017 .
  41. A portrait of the Hoeness defender - the top dog Hanns W. Feigen. In: FAZ , March 11, 2014