German Milling School Braunschweig
German Milling School Braunschweig | |
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German Milling School | |
type of school | Technical school |
place | Braunschweig |
country | Lower Saxony |
Country | Germany |
management | Jürgen Beissner |
Website | www.deutsche-muellerschule-bs.de |
The German Milling School Braunschweig (DMSB) is a technical college for advanced training for state-certified technicians for milling process technology and mill construction in Braunschweig . The DMSB is the only school of its kind in the world.
history
In 1881 Gottlieb Friedrich Simon-Ackermann founded a "trade school for millers" in Halle / Saale . Two millers registered for the first course. In 1882 the school was relocated to Roßwein in Saxony , in 1887 with 45 students to Dippoldiswalde near Dresden . There it was given the name "Deutsche Müllerschule Dippoldiswalde (DMD)". The DMD had its own teaching mill.
On October 1, 1949, the "German Milling School Braunschweig" was launched. Braunschweig was chosen as a location because of its proximity to important industrial mills, such as B. the Rüningen mill (see Roggenmühle Lehndorf ), or important manufacturers such as the mill construction and industrial stock company (MIAG, today Bühler).
It was initially located at Bertramstrasse 7. A year later, she moved into the premises of the former National Socialist Academy for Youth Leadership , Wolfenbütteler Strasse 57, which she shared with the Braunschweig College until 2001 . Since then, the DMSB has been housed at the Heinrich-Büssing-Schule (formerly Vocational Schools II) on Salzdahlumer Straße. The current headmaster is Jürgen Beissner.
education
The prerequisite for studying at the DMSB is work experience as a miller or in another food processing profession . The training to become a milling or mill construction technician is full-time and lasts two years (four semesters). Depending on the subject, the basics of animal nutrition are also taught. The final diploma includes the advanced technical college entrance qualification .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b College. In: www.deutsche-muellerschule-bs.de. Retrieved March 28, 2020 .
- ^ Website of the DMSB
- ↑ Luitgard Camerer, Manfred R. Garzmann, Wolf-Dieter Schuegraf, Norman-Matthias Pingel (eds.): Braunschweiger Stadtlexikon, Hauptbd. Verlag Meyer, Braunschweig 1992, p. 59, ISBN 3-926701-14-5 .
Coordinates: 52 ° 14 '17.2 " N , 10 ° 32' 37.9" E