Bundesrealgymnasium Salzburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bundesrealgymnasium Salzburg
type of school General secondary school
School number 501046
founding 1851
address

Akademiestrasse 19

place Salzburg
state Salzburg
Country Austria
Coordinates 47 ° 47 '30 "  N , 13 ° 3' 28"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 47 '30 "  N , 13 ° 3' 28"  E
carrier Republic of Austria
student 730
Teachers 90
management Johannes Schiendorfer
Website www.brg.salzburg.at

The Bundesrealgymnasium Salzburg is an Austrian high school in Salzburg with a focus on natural sciences .

history

secondary school

On November 15, 1851, the kk Unterrealschule in Salzburg was founded in the college building. The school was attended by boys from the middle class, whereby the classes are based on level of knowledge and thus there were large age differences between the students. The aim was to teach middle school . In 1863 it was expanded to create a six-class upper secondary school and in 1870 to a seven-year secondary school . In 1927 the school - located on Hanuschplatz since 1873 - became an eight-year secondary school with four-year lower and upper grades through a new school law. In 1951 a branch office was set up in St. Johann im Pongau (today BG / BRG / BORG St. Johann im Pongau), three years later in Hallein (today Bundesgymnasium and Bundesrealgymnasium Hallein ).

Bundesrealgymnasium

In the school year 1962/63, the Federal High School Ordinance came into force for the first grades. The school thus became the Bundesrealgymnasium Salzburg . Girls were admitted to lessons from the 1968/69 school year. In 1970 the school moved to Akademiestrasse, where it can still be found today. With the 1997/98 school year, the newly set priorities in natural sciences and computer science were implemented with project lessons, and laboratory lessons were added later. The school building on Akademiestraße was renovated and expanded between 2003 and 2005, including the addition of specialist rooms, a cafeteria with a terrace and an open-air class.

School mission statement

The aim of the focus is to enable students in an increasingly complex world to help shape the future in a competent and well-founded manner. You concentrate on

  • scientific understanding
  • mathematical analyzing
  • information technology mediation

In order to match the individual talents and inclinations of the students, various approaches are available:

  • Natural sciences - ever closer networking of specialized contents of the sub-areas through interdisciplinary working methods
  • Mathematics and Descriptive Geometry - Teaching the requirements for analyzing and solving problems such as formalization, modeling, abstraction and spatial imagination
  • Information and communication technologies - use, critical questioning and evaluation for orientation in a rapidly changing society

management

  • Friedrich Franz, 1851-1853
  • Franz Schleindl, 1853–1854 (interim)
  • Franz Nikisch, 1854-1860
  • Josef Mayburger, 1860–1860 (interim)
  • Josef Woegerbauer, 1860–1895
  • Eduard Kunz, 1895–1907
  • Josef Adametz, 1908–1919
  • Eduard Stummer, 1919–1920
  • Franz Schrempf, 1921–1921 (interim)
  • Franz Rathschüler, 1921–1928
  • Emil Nowak, 1928–1936
  • Josef Villgrattner, 1935–1937
  • Hans Gumpoltsberger, 1937–1938
  • Alfred Kulnigg, 1938–1944
  • Karl Friedrich, 1944–1945 (provisional)
  • Otto Haunstein, 1945–1950
  • Karl Kullich, 1950–1950 (interim)
  • Otto Haunstein, 1950–1951
  • Erich Zadra, 1952–1974 (since 1955 only federal secondary school)
  • Erich Kaforka, 1955–1955 (at the Bundesrealgymnasium)
  • Herbert Hartl, 1975–1975 (interim)
  • Franz Kaserer, 1975–1980
  • Georg Aschauer, 1980–1981 (provisional)
  • Friedrich Unterberger, 1981-1993
  • Willibald Wegenkittl, 1993–1997
  • Gunter Bittner, 1997-2014
  • Johannes Schiendorfer, since 2014

Web links

Web presence of the Bundesrealgymnasium Salzburg

Bundesrealgymnasium Salzburg on Salzburgwiki

Individual evidence

  1. School profile. The BRG Salzburg. In: brg.salzburg.at. Retrieved May 10, 2020 .
  2. teachers. In: brg.salzburg.at. Retrieved May 10, 2020 .
  3. a b History. The history of the BRG. In: brg.salzburg.at. Retrieved May 10, 2020 .
  4. Mission statement. In: brg.salzburg.at. Retrieved May 10, 2020 .
  5. a b Change of leadership at the BRG. In: brg.salzburg.at. Retrieved May 10, 2020 .