Danube School Nendingen

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Danube School Nendingen
Schoolhouse Nendingen 1896.jpg
The school house in Nendingen in 1896
type of school primary school
founding ~ 1530
address

Bräunisbergstrasse 12-14

place Nendingen
country Baden-Württemberg
Country Germany
Coordinates 48 ° 0 '23 "  N , 8 ° 51' 37"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 0 '23 "  N , 8 ° 51' 37"  E
carrier City of Tuttlingen
student ~ 120
Teachers 15th
management Mrs. Buggle
Website ghs-nendingen.de

The Donauschule Nendingen is a primary school with a Montessori profile and the only school in Nendingen . Its history as a primary school goes back to the 16th century. The connected secondary school was given up in 2013. Today around 120 students are taught by 15 teachers. In recent years, the school has greatly expanded its range with the newly founded Montessori profile and the change to an all-day school . This takes place in a homework supervisor and an AG.

history

In the school regulations of 1559, also for the Tuttlingen office, a kind of compulsory schooling for children is prescribed for the first time. Around 1600 the Jesuit order then campaigned intensively for elementary schools for the common people in the course of the Counter Reformation . The Nendingen parishes from the 16th century also have an artist and schoolmaster . This first school was located in the Widum and already appears in Enzberg's forest boundary map from 1544 as a building complex consisting of a rectory , schoolhouse and poor house .

The mention of the first Nendingen teachers goes back to the 18th century with Peter Schilling (1725–1813) and Theodor Schilling (1789–1836). At that time, the location of the lessons changed between different houses, including in the former town hall, which, however, have now all been demolished due to the dilapidation .

The construction of the first pure school house dates from 1825 as house 134 of the land survey of 1838. It was designed by the building inspector Riester from Balingen and was generously designed for the conditions and the occupancy at the time, for example it had a bell tower. The building permit was issued by the Royal Catholic Church Council in Stuttgart on May 8, 1824. The construction finally began on April 20, 1825 with a budget of 8,088 guilders , whereby only 2,664 was exhausted, because a lot was done in-house and the timber was donated by the community. After all, the building had two floors and had two classrooms and a teacher's apartment. This building was used as a school until 1937 and has been the Nendingen town hall since the total renovation.

In 1819 the elementary school was expanded to include an industrial school for girls.

The brick building , which is still in use today, was erected in 1895 and '96 and thus provided a remedy for the great lack of space that the two classes in the meanwhile growing village caused. The Gränzbote of October 20, 1896 describes the “36,000 Mark” expensive school building as “massive”, which impresses with its “parquet floor” and “school desks from the company Ramminger & Stedler in Stuttgart”.

Due to the steady increase in population and the extension of schooling to eight years, the extension to the white schoolhouse followed in 1921. In addition to the GHS classrooms, there is also a branch of the Johann-Peter-Hebel-Schule in Tuttlingen for mentally handicapped children.

In 1933 the school was Adorf Hitler School renamed before 1935 the name Horst Wessel -Schule received. The renaming took place in 1945.

In 1969, as part of the educational reform , the Nendinger elementary school became a primary school and a secondary school. A new building should be built for the secondary school. However, the project was stopped after the planning was completed and the financing was confirmed because of the plan for a large Danube Valley secondary school. However, this failed due to the lack of willingness to compromise on the part of Mühlheim and Fridingen on the question of whose landmarks near Bergsteig the new school should be built. So the old plans were taken up again in 1971. However, the question now arose whether Nendingen, as a future district of Tuttlingen, needs its own secondary school. This was answered in the affirmative, but in 1977 the necessary funds for a construction were no longer available, so that the plans for the new building were discarded and the school was designated as a primary and secondary school in Nendingen . In order to adapt to the changed pedagogy , a conversion followed with an extension for a school kitchen as well as chemistry , biology and physics rooms , and the entrance was redesigned so that it is no longer through the old portal, but in the flat roof building . In 1977 the school also had the highest student level with 345 students. 1982 was followed by an extension to a technology room with machine room and a room for laundry . Until his retirement in 2010, Meinrad Gäkle was the deputy headmaster for more than two decades.

Concept since 2006

The school house (October 2009)

From 2004 to 2006 the sanitary facilities were adapted to current standards, the school was expanded to include a computer room and the school kitchen was made possible for the lunch canteen.

After the Prime Minister of Baden-Wuerttemberg Günther Oettinger called for the dissolution of the small secondary schools in 2006 and the Ministry of Education and Culture set a minimum size of 80 pupils, the GHS Nendingen changed its school profile. Since their secondary school classes sometimes had fewer than ten students, the Nendingen school would also have been included, so the decision was made to become more attractive and to bring students from the surrounding communities to the school. This happened on the one hand with the establishment of a Werkrealschule , so it should be the main students simpler the high school to get. In addition, the school concept was based on Montessori pedagogy . For this purpose, they cooperated with the municipal kindergarten, so that support for children from the age of three was made possible. With the Montessori profile, the Nendinger School was the second state school in the Tuttlingen district (after Irndorf ) to use this concept, which also made it known regionally. In addition, the school was converted into an all-day school with a cafeteria and all-day care.

Since the school belongs to the newly established Konstanz State Education Authority from January 2009, the problem arises that the educational orientation of a school is no longer recognized as a sufficient reason for changing school district and currently 25 of the 56 students from Tuttlingen, Möhringen , Fridingen , Mühlheim and Neuhausen come. The fifth and sixth grades each have the maximum number of students assumed by the school of 16, while for the 2009/2010 school year, as usual in recent years, only eight and therefore too few will come from Nendingen alone. For the school year 2010/2011, the school districts ceased to exist for the secondary schools, the school authority city ​​of Tuttlingen did not apply for an extension of the previous regulation.

On July 31, 2013 the secondary school was closed, from August 1, 2013 the school is a pure elementary school. It was also given the new name "Danube School", after the European river Danube , which is not far away . The headmistress is Helene Buggle.

statistics

Students (as of 2012): 143 (53 f / 90 m)

Classes: 10

  • of which are primary schools: 7
  • of which are Hauptschule: 2
  • of which is outside class: 1

Teacher supply: 17 teachers

  • 12 of them are state-owned
  • 3 of them are ecclesiastical
  • 2 of them in the outer class

Famous students