Christburg Campus Berlin

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Christburg Campus Berlin e. V.
Christburg Campus - Logo.jpg
purpose Promotion of a comprehensive personality development of children, adolescents and young adults through education and training. based on the Bible by running day-care centers and schools
Chair: Pastor Jonathan Scheer (chairman), Thorsten Alsleben (vice chairman)
Establishment date: 1988
Number of employees: 165
Seat : Christburger Str. 14, 10405 Berlin
Website: www.Christburg-Campus.de

The Christburg Campus Berlin e. V. is a sponsoring association under whose roof Christian daycare centers and state-approved substitute schools work. The members of the non-profit association come from various Protestant parishes of the regional church, free churches and from Christian communities in Berlin.

history

In 1987 (at that time still in the singular "school") the Freie Evangelische Schule Berlin e. V. , FESB for short , was founded under the chairmanship of Wolfgang Boguslawski and entered in the register of associations.

The current Elisabeth-Abegg-Grundschule for grades 1 to 6 was founded as the first elementary school in 1988 in the rooms of the former Lazarus hospital in Weddingen. With 20 students it was Berlin's smallest school at the time. In 1989 she moved to the neighboring Paul-Gerhardt-Stift. In 1991 the school had to move from Wedding to Karlshorst into the building of today's Catholic University for Social Work.

On August 1, 1993, the school was officially recognized as a substitute school. In the same year she joined the Working Group of Protestant Confession Schools (AEBS), now the Association of Protestant Confession Schools (VEBS). In 1994 the school moved to Niederschönhausen in today's Boris-Pasternak-Weg. The former pastor Friedrich Eckert took over the chairmanship and Clemens Volber became the first full-time managing director. In 1996, the school was a school club added.

In 1998 the Corrie-ten-Boom-Schule was founded as a secondary school with 18 students (since June 1, 2002, a state-approved substitute school), today more than 100 students.

In 1999, elementary and secondary schools moved to their current location in the listed Wilhelmine school ensemble at Christburger Strasse 14 to 14B in Prenzlauer Berg . The building ensemble has been the property of the sponsoring association since 2005. After Friedrich Eckert's death, Clemens Volber became the new chairman and co-founded VEBS.

In 2006, with the help of Bernd Siggelkow and Kai-Uwe Lindloff, the “Arche Primary School” at Naumburger Ring 25, Hellersdorf (in collaboration with Die Arche - Christian Children's and Young People's Work ) and the Immanuel School in Spandauer Falkenhagener Feld took place under the Sponsorship of the FESB to run the school. In 2008, the Immanulel primary school moved there into its current school building and also started daycare. The first elementary school was renamed Christburg-Grundschule in 2008 and the Realschule was renamed Corrie-ten-Boom-Schule .

In 2009 the FESB celebrated its 20th anniversary with 550 students and 140 employees. The school was accepted into the Association of German Private School Associations.

In 2010, due to the Berlin school reform, the Realschule was converted into an integrated secondary school and realigned.

In 2011 the businessman Heinz Kiock took over the chairmanship. The Arche primary school moved to its current home at Lichtenhainer Straße 2.

From 2012 Wolfgang Stock became managing director (until 2017). The school had 120 employees. In the following year, Pastor Erhart Zeiser took over the chairmanship.

Due to legal constraints, the FESB founded the Free Evangelical Schools Berlin (FESB) non-profit GmbH as a wholly owned subsidiary and new school authority. In August 2013 there were 720 students in four schools, 400 of which were supported and looked after in the after-school care center. In addition, two daycare centers with more than 70 children were opened in 2013, one of them in the school building in Hellersdorf with 55 places and 9 employees. In 2013 a total of 165 people were employed.

The operating company and the association were renamed in 2014. The association is now called Christburg Campus Berlin e. V. , the school and daycare provider Christburg Campus non-profit GmbH

In 2016 the association and Christburg Campus gGmbH were restructured. The association now has three benches with members each from parents, employees and spiritual leaders from Berlin. Each of these banks has a chairman who also sits on the supervisory board of the gGmbH. The supervisory board is supplemented by a manager, Ines Bachnik, and two external experts, Rahel Dreyer and Bernhard Schreiber.

In 2018, Wolfgang Stock moved to VEBS as Secretary General, and the new Managing Director Dirk Noack took his place and the Christburg Campus celebrated its 30th anniversary

At the beginning of 2019, around 700 students attended the primary schools and 200 the ISS. The Christburg Campus had around 900 students.

Mission statement

The Christburg Campus has had a new mission statement since 2019.

mission

“We enrich Berlin's educational offer with our day-care centers and schools. Jesus is the focus for us. Professionally, competently and on a biblical basis, we help children and young people grow into strong personalities in the sense of the divine image of man and discover their vocations. It is particularly important to us to create places of security, where Christian values ​​are communicated and lived. Young people are accompanied lovingly and with respect and individually supported. We support them in developing their gifts and strengthen their relationship skills. "

vision

“We create and design safe places of learning and experience for young people in Berlin, where Jesus can be experienced. We are guided by the Holy Spirit. We inspire young people to discover the world and deal with social and technical developments together. We enable the children and young people entrusted to us to live meaningfully and consciously. For this we offer them an environment with a variety of opportunities to get to know God's love. We maintain a fruitful cooperation with our partners that complements our work. "

schools

The teachers teach around 900 students at the three locations.

As a recognized substitute school authority, the Christburg Campus is subject to state school supervision. His independent schools in Berlin are only reimbursed around two thirds of their costs. The rest have to be provided by parents and donors. Schools charge between 11 and 328 euros, depending on the number of children, income and type of school (as of 2015). At the ISS Corrie-ten-Boom, the school fee is capped at € 150.00 (2017). From the fourth child onwards, school attendance is free of charge. In 2014, the school was awarded the “Fair Family seal of approval” for its commitment to the families of the school children and employees.

The schools are members of the Association of Protestant Confession Schools. The Christburg Campus is one of the "Independent Works of Category II" of the German Evangelical Alliance . He is also part of “Together for Berlin”.

Elementary schools

Elisabeth Abegg Primary School

Elisabeth Abegg Primary School
Logo Elisabeth-Abegg-Grundschule.png
type of school primary school
founding 1988
address

Christburger Str.14A

place Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg
country Berlin
Country Germany
Coordinates 52 ° 32 ′ 5 "  N , 13 ° 25 ′ 40"  E
carrier Christburg Campus non-profit GmbH
student 300 (2017)
Teachers more than 25
management Joke Henninger
Website www.Elisabeth-Abegg-Grundschule.de

The Elisabeth Abegg Primary School is the oldest school on the Christburg Campus. It was opened on August 13, 1988 with Sigrid-Marianne Popendicker as the only teacher / headmistress and 20 children in the Lazarus Hospital in Weddingen as the Free Evangelical School in Berlin and has since moved four times. In 1989 she moved to the Paul Gerhardt Foundation, Wedding, and in 1991 to Karlshorst. The school was officially recognized on August 1, 1993. Since the last move in 1999, it has been located on Christburger Straße, in the Wins-Kiez, in a listed Wilhelmine ensemble consisting of a large school building with four staircases and two gyms. She shares the schoolhouse with the secondary school and the after-school care center. In 2008 it was renamed the Christburg Elementary School.

Administration of the Christburg Campus, former teachers' residence

The Berlin pedagogue and resistance fighter Elisabeth Abegg , Righteous Among the Nations , has been her namesake since August 2014 .

The all-day school in open form is a state substitute school with a school station and a sport-oriented profile. It is the official cooperation partner of “Klasse in Sport e. V. “and therefore offers breaks in class as well as a wide range of sports activities during the breaks. It cooperates with sports clubs and music schools. Smartboards (electronic boards) are installed in each classroom .

The listed school building was built in 1895/96 as a community dual school Hans-Janocha-Oberschule and Erich-Franz-Oberschule with a teacher's house, gymnasium and surrounding wall according to a design by architect Lieb. International artists such as Martin Helmchen and Marie-Elisabeth Hecker or Culcha Candela support the school .

Immanuel Elementary School

Immanuel Elementary School
Immanuel-Grundschule.png
type of school primary school
founding 2006
address

Stadtrandstrasse 465

place Berlin-Falkenhagener Feld (Spandau)
country Berlin
Country Germany
Coordinates 52 ° 33 ′ 0 ″  N , 13 ° 9 ′ 9 ″  E
carrier Christburg Campus non-profit GmbH
student 133 (as of 2014)
Teachers 28 (August 1, 2013, including after-school care center)
management Esther Dichristin (Headmaster)
Website https://www.immanuel-grundschule.de/

The single-tier Immanuel primary school is located in Falkenhagener Feld in Spandau. It opened in August 2006 with seven girls, three boys and a teacher. In 2007 20 children started school and the after-school care center opened. At first the school used the rooms of the Josua Congregation on Bismarckstrasse. In July 2008 she moved to today's premises at Stadtrandstrasse 465. The school has a particularly high proportion of children from low-income families (more than 50%).

The school is named after Immanuel (Immanuel = Hebrew עִמָּנוּ אֵל: "God (is / be) with us"), a nickname for the Jew Jesus Christ , the first son of Mary and his adoptive father Joseph. The school describes him as follows: As a toddler he had to flee to Egypt in the face of a genocide, as an adult he was an itinerant preacher who turned to the outcasts. His claim to be God's Son accumulated in a murder plot and he was crucified. Many witnesses saw him after his resurrection. After his death, his message of love led to the largest religious community, but his followers sometimes suffer severe persecution and death to this day.

The school is based on the guidelines of the Bible and teaches students to implement biblical models in everyday behavior. This includes treating each other with respect, practicing critical skills and a calm atmosphere during lunch breaks and during breaks in the school corridors.

State-of-the-art technology is used in the classrooms, such as B. new smartboards (electronic boards) to replace conventional chalk boards. The school pursues the concept of “discovery learning”, in which pupils also benefit from extra-curricular learning locations such as open lessons, projects and experiments. Christian traditions such as devotions at the beginning of the day, morning circles, festivals and church services have their regular place.

Sabine Ball Elementary School

Sabine Ball Elementary School
Sabine-Ball-Primary School.png
type of school primary school
founding 2006
address

Lichtenhainer Str. 2

place Berlin-Hellersdorf
country Berlin
Country Germany
Coordinates 52 ° 31 ′ 57 "  N , 13 ° 36 ′ 58"  E
carrier Christburg Campus non-profit GmbH
student 260 (as of 2019)
Teachers 39 (as of August 1, 2013, including after-school care center)
management René Schlüter (Headmaster)
Website www.Sabine-Ball-Grundschule.de

The Sabine Ball elementary school is located in a modern prefabricated building school in Marzahn-Hellersdorf, with the after-school care center and - in a separate part - the day care center “Helles Nest” (see day-care centers ).

The school started in 2006 with 14 children in cooperation with the Arche in Hellersdorf as an Arche primary school . In the beginning, the Arche Association financed € 120,000 a year, as only 40 percent of the students in the Marzahn-Hellersdorf district were able to pay school fees, which at that time were 39 to 280 euros a month. In the meantime, the school fee has been reduced thanks to the state recognition as a substitute school. In 2007, 20 new students were added. Nina Hagen is an ambassador for the Arche primary school in Hellersdorf.

In 2014, in connection with the renaming of the sponsor, the Dresden social reformers Sabine Ball became the new namesake. The school is now two-class and has 180 students . Her motto is:

"WE are WE - and WE are different!"

The school explains the new name sponsorship as follows:

“Sabine Ball was a founder of social projects for young people. During the Second World War, she witnessed the bombing of Dresden, but then emigrated to the USA and married a millionaire. After founding a hippie commune, she became a Christian in 1971. After the fall of the Wall in 1989, she gave everything away and moved back to Dresden, where she did the metabolism. V. founded for young people. She refused the Federal Cross of Merit that she was offered because 'honor belongs to God alone'. Her special gift was to encourage people and put their lives under God's guidance. Her motto was 'God is love'. "

Many volunteers and donors work and contribute to the school. In 2012 the primary school was beautified with the help of volunteers from Berliner Bank . It is supported by the Foundation for Education Values ​​Life, for example through a flute program.

In 2014, Social Councilor Juliane Witt (Die Linke) opened the renewed library of the Sabine-Ball elementary school as the first official “reading place” in the Marzahn-Hellersdorf district.

Corrie ten Boom School (ISS)

Corrie ten boom school
Corrie-ten-Boom-Schule.png
type of school Integrated secondary school
founding 1998
address

Christburger Str. 14 B

place Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg
country Berlin
Country Germany
Coordinates 52 ° 32 ′ 5 "  N , 13 ° 25 ′ 40"  E
carrier Christburg Campus non-profit GmbH
student 200
Teachers 13
management Samuel Adler (Headmaster)
Website www.Corrie-ten-Boom-Schule.de

The Corrie-ten-Boom-Schule is a single-class integrated secondary school (formerly: Realschule ) from grade 7 to grade 13. In 2017, the first 11th grade opened, which is to take the first Abitur in 2020. It shares the listed school building in Prenzlauer Berg with the Elisabeth Abegg primary school . It started in 1998 with 18 students, today it has more than 100 students and 13 teachers.

The classes usually have 25 students, all of whom achieved the secondary school leaving certificate (MSA) between 2010 and 2013, half of whom even had a high school recommendation (in comparison, Berlin average: approx. 80% achieve MSA). In 2014, 92% achieved intermediate maturity.

The school's motto is:

  • Promote individual strengths - prepare for high school graduation and work
  • Communicate values ​​- strengthen personality
  • Our school - more than just buffalo and drums

In addition to the usual skills, Christian values ​​such as honesty, reliability, charity, forgiveness and peacefulness should be conveyed. Students should learn appreciation and teamwork.

The school is named after the Dutch Christian Corrie ten Boom (1892 to 1983), who put her life to the rescue to protect Jews from the National Socialists and for this was honored as “Righteous Among the Nations”. After the war she campaigned for the reconciliation of perpetrators and victims. The school also invited Vera Friedländer to deepen this topic .

The school would like to maintain the joy of learning with the help of inner differentiation and thus prepare for the MSA and the professional career. Cooperation agreements with the Kurt-Schwitters-Oberschule (former Käthe Niederkirchner -Oberschule), for example, ensure that pupils get a place at a grammar school afterwards. Thanks to the cooperation with “Young Life”, there is even free tutoring as individual lessons. Together with the Foundation for Education Values ​​Life, there is special coaching for students for whom the transition to vocational training is a particular challenge. In 2012 the foundation also donated a new “green schoolyard”.

In class 10 it is encouraged to form the internship as a social internship. With additional commitment, the pupils can receive the “Berlin Volunteer Pass” from the school. There is a cooperation with the secondary school "Schulzentrum Edith Stein" , where social professions can be learned. There is an annual school ball and a compulsory trip to England in ninth grade. There is cooking as an elective course. In 2014, students on this course won the Berlin state decision for the student chef's cup.

In September 2017, the upper school started with the first eleventh grade. In an “atmosphere of trust and confidence”, “real personal and academic maturity should develop”. Other special features are inner differentiation and intensive coaching.

Day care centers

The Christburg Campus has been operating the daycare centers “Helles Nest” (59 places) in Hellersdorf and “Bunte Burg” (30 places) in Prenzlauer Berg since 2013. Even the little ones are introduced to healthy sport together with Alba Berlin . In 2014, the Bunte Burg day care center was expanded by 12 places.

organization

Pastor Jonathan Scheer is the chairman of the association and the supervisory board of the wholly owned subsidiary Christburg Campus gGmbH. Its managing directors are Dirk Noack and Annedore Piasetzki.

As a sponsoring association, the Christburg Campus Berlin is recognized as a non-profit organization, as is its subsidiary, the Christburg Campus non-profit GmbH . They are denominational and politically independent. One of the members of the Supervisory Board is Rahel Dreyer , who specializes in early childhood education.

Goals and educational concept

The aim of the Christburg Campus is to promote comprehensive personal development of children, adolescents and young adults through education and training based on the Bible through the operation of day-care centers and schools.

As denominational schools, the schools align themselves with the message of the Bible on the basis of the faith of the Evangelical Alliance .

Educational concept

The educational concept includes:

  • Joint upbringing at home and at school
  • Teachers, students and parents should talk, work and celebrate with one another. In the children the communication awareness with parents, school and society should be awakened and strengthened.
  • Parents' participation
  • Mutual respect and consideration as well as mutual complementation and encouragement
  • Treat each other with respect
  • Shared learning and living space for students and teachers, characterized by an atmosphere of joy and trust
  • Education for properly understood self-acceptance
  • Opportunity to find out and develop talents according to head, heart and hand as well as to affirm limitations
  • Development of self-confidence as well as self-confidence, independence, initiative and a sense of responsibility
  • Conveyance of basic Christian values ​​and education for tolerance and understanding, for non-violent communication and conflict management.

Schoolchildren should be encouraged to live charity and to get involved in social interaction - at the school location and in society. A special expression of this commitment is the student volunteer pass , which the Corrie-ten-Boom School has been able to issue since 2011 as one of the first seven Berlin schools.

Ulrike Häusler, research assistant in religious education at the Humboldt University Berlin , criticized in 2007 that the FESB at that time did not yet offer religious instruction from a specialist teacher trained in religious education according to the general curriculum of the EKBO , but rather a " biblical lesson " from the class teacher is granted. The subject “Biblical Lessons” was an integral part of the curriculum at that time.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c statutes of the Christburg Campus Berlin eV association (PDF) November 20, 2014, archived from the original on April 12, 2017 ; accessed on July 8, 2019 .
  2. Brochure of the Christburg Campus. (PDF) April 27, 2017, accessed July 8, 2019 .
  3. a b c d e f g h i j Hello! The information magazine of the Free Evangelical Schools in Berlin. Free Evangelical Schools Berlin (FESB) GGmbH , Berlin 2013, p. 14.
  4. Berlin's smallest school on Bernauer Strasse has only 20 students. In: Berliner Zeitung , September 5, 1988.
  5. a b Hello! The information magazine of the Free Evangelical Schools in Berlin. FESB, Berlin 2013, p. 11.
  6. ^ Huberta von Voss: Poor children, rich country: a report from Germany. Rowohlt, 2008, ISBN 978-3-498-07064-9 , p. 175.
  7. Ingo Rößling: "Arche" is building a new elementary school. In: Berliner Morgenpost . September 20, 2007, accessed July 8, 2019 .
  8. fesb.de - Who we are ( Memento from December 4, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
  9. Online query at the commercial register for the register numbers VR 9317 and HRB 151518. The association was renamed in December 2014, the GGmbH in July 2014.
  10. Articles of Association and entries in the Commercial Register Berlin (Charlottenburg) HRB 151518 of December 23, 2016 and March 1, 2017.
  11. Articles of Association and entries in the register of associations.
  12. Change at the top of the association. In: Medienmagazin pro . September 24, 2017. Retrieved June 16, 2018 .
  13. Bernd Wähner: Change in management in Berliner Woche on November 21, 2017.
  14. 30 Years Christburg Campus on YouTube , October 7, 2018, accessed on July 8, 2019.
  15. a b c d Christburg Campus: Image brochure Corrie-ten-Boom. dated January 6, 2019, page 20.
  16. ^ Christburg Campus: News. ( Memento of July 6, 2019 in the Internet Archive ).
  17. a b c Christburg Campus: Mission statement from March 15, 2019.
  18. No help for free schools in focus. In: tagesspiegel.de. December 23, 2014, archived from the original on August 25, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  19. ^ Christburg Campus: Tuition Fee ( Memento from January 8, 2017 in the Internet Archive ).
  20. ^ Table of school fees for the Elisabeth Abegg primary school. In: christburg-campus.de. Christburg Campus, December 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  21. ^ Association of large families in Germany V.
  22. Christburg Campus: Easter Reception 2014. ( Memento from April 17, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  23. Works associated with the Evangelical Alliance - German Evangelical Alliance. In: ead.de. July 6, 2019, archived from the original on June 6, 2014 ; accessed on July 6, 2019 .
  24. gfberlin.de
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  26. a b elisabeth-abegg-grundschule.de - About us
  27. elisabeth-abegg-grundschule.de - contact
  28. elisabeth-abegg-grundschule.de
  29. ^ Berlin: school portrait. Free Evangelical Schools Berlin - 03P03
  30. ^ Berlin: Monuments in Berlin. Hans Janocha High School and Erich Franz High School.
  31. Concert of the international top class. October 2008, archived from the original on November 18, 2012 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  32. Culcha Candela, the FESB and environmental protection - a school out of hand. November 18, 2012, archived from the original on November 18, 2012 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  33. a b c Christburg Campus. In: christburg-campus.de. December 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  34. Hello! The information magazine of the Free Evangelical Schools in Berlin. FESB, Berlin 2013, p. 10.
  35. christburg-campus.de ( Memento from March 26, 2019 in the Internet Archive )
  36. No help for free schools in focus. In: tagesspiegel.de. December 23, 2014, archived from the original on August 25, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  37. a b District Mayor Kleebank visits Immanuel School. In: www.unterwegs-in-spandau.de. October 1, 2012, accessed November 12, 2019 .
  38. a b Reports from the Spandau Town Hall. In: be Zirk-spandau.de. December 28, 2012, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  39. ^ Christburg Campus: Contact .
  40. a b c d Christburg campus location. In: christburg-campus.de. December 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  41. ^ BerlinRadar: Marzahn-Hellersdorf: New Arche primary school opened with 120 students. In: morgenpost.de. Berliner Morgenpost , December 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  42. Children's and youth organization: “Arche” is building a new elementary school. In: welt.de . September 20, 2007, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  43. ^ The inauguration ceremony of the Arche elementary school with Nina Hagen. In: Ideafernsehn from September 8, 2011.
  44. School is fun - drkschwesternschaftberlin.de ( Memento from April 17, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  45. wir-berlin.org
  46. berliner-bank.de (PDF)
  47. Project funding. In: bildung-werte-leben.de. Foundation for Education.Werte.Life., December 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
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  49. a b corrie-ten-boom-schule.de - About us. Retrieved July 8, 2019 .
  50. a b About us. Christburg Campus, June 6, 2014, archived from the original on April 12, 2017 ; accessed on April 12, 2017 (currently offline).
  51. corrie-ten-boom-schule.de - contact
  52. a b c d e f Christburg Campus location, history u. Profile. In: christburg-campus.de. December 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  53. www.Corrie-ten-Boom-Schule.de. In: corrie-ten-boom-schule.de. Retrieved July 8, 2019 .
  54. Nathalie Kroh: "You cannot be half Jewish". In: Berliner Morgenpost . December 14, 2010, accessed July 8, 2019 .
  55. ↑ Handover to the courtyard. In: bildung-werte-leben.de. Foundation for Education.Werte.Life., October 17, 2012, archived from the original on January 11, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  56. ↑ Schoolchildren's Cup. In: schuelerkochpokal.org. May 24, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  57. Christburg Campus: Our daycare centers and schools ( Memento from April 4, 2019 in the Internet Archive )
  58. Christburg Campus: Corrie ten Boom School with upper secondary school since summer 2017. In: Youtube from February 10, 2017.
  59. Abitur: Our upper school level will be different.
  60. kita-helles-nest.de - About us. Retrieved July 8, 2019 .
  61. gh-ai.de ( Memento from April 17, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  62. kita-bunte-burg.de - About us. Retrieved July 8, 2019 .
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  64. KITA-Sport: Alba Berlin basketball team. In: albaberlin.de. December 23, 2014, archived from the original on December 23, 2014 ; accessed on December 23, 2014 .
  65. gessner-ai.de
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  67. FESB e. V. in the transparency database. Berlin
  68. FESB GGmbH in the transparency database. Berlin
  69. ^ Farewell & beginning: New chairman of the FESB. Christburg Campus, archived from the original on April 17, 2015 ; Retrieved June 3, 2015 .
  70. a b Ulrike Häusler: Teaching religion in Berlin. In: Theo-Web. Journal for Religious Education. 6 (2007), Issue 1, pp. 25-49, on the FESB: p. 35; theo-web.de (PDF) p. 11.
  71. FESB Volunteer Pass. In: fesb.de. June 6, 2014, archived from the original on June 6, 2014 ; Retrieved June 6, 2014 .
  72. Awarded volunteer passes. In: berlin.de. June 6, 2014, archived from the original on June 6, 2014 ; Retrieved June 6, 2014 .
  73. Video of the activity within the scope of the volunteer pass. FESB