Hubert Sternberg School Wiesloch

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Hubert Sternberg School Wiesloch
The commercial Hubert-Sternberg-Schule in Wiesloch as seen from Parkstrasse, buildings C1 and D1, May 2017
type of school Trade school
founding 1878
address

Parkstrasse 7
69168 Wiesloch

place Wiesloch
country Baden-Württemberg
Country Germany
Coordinates 49 ° 17 '44 "  N , 8 ° 41' 13"  E Coordinates: 49 ° 17 '44 "  N , 8 ° 41' 13"  E
carrier Rhein-Neckar district
student 1200
Teachers 66
management Klaus Heeger
Website www.hss-wiesloch.de

The Hubert Sternberg School in Wiesloch is the largest trade school in the Rhein-Neckar district with around 1200 students and 66 teachers . The vocational school center in Wiesloch includes the commercial and technical Hubert Sternberg school, the commercial Johann Philipp Bronner school and the home economics and socio-pedagogical Louise Otto Peters school.

history

The Wiesloch trade school was founded on October 16, 1878, and a trade department was added to it in 1907. This previous school to the Hubert Sternberg School received its own school building for the first time in 1912, which today houses the Wiesloch Schiller School . From 1913 the school became a district trade school with the specialist department for bakers, butchers and hairdressers. Eight years later the trading department became independent. In 1925, technical school regulations with an emphasis on general education were introduced, and from that year workshop lessons were also offered to supplement the master craftsman's apprenticeship. Ten years later, a trade school association was set up by 15 communities in the Wiesloch district. However, sponsorship through the school association was already taken over by the district three years later. The offer was expanded to include a mining department in 1939.

post war period

Aerial view of the center of Wiesloch vocational schools in the 1960s, the picture shows today's buildings A1, B1, E1, F1, F5

On January 10, 1945, the school was closed and after the end of the Second World War, on January 7, 1946, initially resumed in the agricultural school. After moving into the Schillerschule in 1948, the commercial, commercial, agricultural and housekeeping school shared the building of the Schillerschule in 1953, before the district council with District Administrator Steinbrenner decided to build a new commercial and commercial school in 1954. In 1956, the city of Wiesloch made 4.5 hectares available for this new building. Three years later, the new district vocational school (today building A1) with new workshops (today building E1) could be moved into. With the school development plan II in 1968 the trade school lost the areas of construction, wood, plumbing, heating, sheet metal and food professions and became a specialist class for locksmiths. For the 1973/74 school year, the one-year vocational school for metal and automotive and three years later the one-year vocational school for hairdressing and textiles was added. In 1977 the Heidelberger Druckmaschinen training center was relocated to Wiesloch and brought new students to the Wiesloch trade school for its 100th anniversary in 1978.

The center of vocational schools in Wiesloch since 2013: F: Johann-Philipp-Bronner-Schule / B: Louise-Otto-Peters-Schule / A + C + D + E: Hubert-Sternberg-Schule / F5: Aula / S: Sports hall / P: cafeteria.

In 1979 the shell construction work began for the expansion of the workshops and the sports hall, which could be inaugurated in 1983 (today buildings D1 and S1). For the 1984/85 school year, the school's catchment area was expanded to include Leimen and Sandhausen . In 1986 the previous workshops were converted. In 1988 the one-year vocational college for technology was added and in the same year, on June 28, the school was renamed “Hubert Sternberg School” after Hubert Sternberg , one of the most important managers of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen .

In 1997 the offer of the two-year vocational college for electrical engineering was added and one year later the area of ​​IT specialist system integration / application development, and in 2001 the profile subject information technology at the technical high school. In 2002 the textile technology department was closed and a year later the chemistry and physics departments were expanded (building C1).

education

In dual training, 800 trainees are currently being trained in six different professional fields. They work with around 200 training companies. Part-time lessons usually take place in block lessons. The following professions are trained in the commercial-technical area:

In the field of information technology, the two dual training occupations

  • IT specialist application development and
  • IT specialist system integration offered.

Full time teaching

400 pupils are currently taught full-time in different types of schools:

  • In the vocational preparation year (BVJ), young people without a secondary school diploma have the opportunity to gain professional experience as part of a career orientation in metal technology, automotive engineering or electrical engineering, while at the same time they can catch up on their secondary school diploma.
  • The career entry year (BEJ) is aimed in particular at young people who want to prepare themselves specifically for entry into the professional world. There is also the opportunity to improve your secondary school leaving certificate.
  • The one-year vocational school provides basic vocational training in theory and practice in the vocational fields of metal technology (1BFMF), automotive technology (1BFR) and personal care / hairdressing (1BFK). Most of the practical lessons take place in the school's own workshops. Upon successful completion, it can be credited as the first year of training
  • The two-year commercial-technical vocational school (2BFS) offers technically interested and talented pupils with a secondary school certificate an educational qualification equivalent to the middle school leaving certificate (technical school qualification).
  • The one-year vocational college (1BKFHT) offers further training opportunities. It builds on the intermediate educational qualification and a completed vocational training and leads to the technical college entrance qualification in the main subject technology.
  • The technical high school provides the general higher education entrance qualification (Abitur) and prepares in three years for studies at universities, colleges and vocational academies. The focus is on the profile subject Information Technology (TGI), the profile subject Mechatronics (TGM), or the profile subject Environmental Technology (TGU).

further education

In addition, the Hubert-Sternberg-Schule offers further training opportunities within the framework of master preparation courses in the field of metal construction / construction technology. As a "regional welding training center", the HSS offers courses in the in-house course of the German Association for Welding and Allied Processes eV (DVS) in the welding processes of gas welding, manual arc and gas-shielded metal welding and tungsten inert gas welding. As a Cisco Networking Academy, you also have the opportunity to take part in the certification as a “Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA)”.

Schools in the Wiesloch school center

  • Albert Schweitzer School (special school, focus: learning)
  • Bertha Benz Realschule (Realschule)
  • Hubert-Sternberg-Schule (commercial-technical vocational school)
  • Johann-Philipp-Bronner-Schule (commercial vocational school)
  • Louise Otto Peters School (domestic and social vocational school)
  • Ottheinrich-Gymnasium Wiesloch (general high school)
  • Tom-Mutters-Schule (special school, focus: mental development, physical and motor development)

literature

  • Festschrift 100 Years of the Wiesloch Trade School , Wiesloch 1978

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