Ida Honor School

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Ida Honor School
1749 bogenstr 34 ida honor school.jpg
A listed building at Bogenstrasse 34, the headquarters of the Ida-Ehre-Schule
type of school District school
founding 1934
address

Bogenstrasse 36
20144 Hamburg

place Hamburg
country Hamburg
Country Germany
Coordinates 53 ° 34 ′ 27 "  N , 9 ° 58 ′ 25"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 34 ′ 27 "  N , 9 ° 58 ′ 25"  E
student 1,299 (school year 2017/18)
management Nicole Boutez
Website idaehreschule.de

The Ida-Ehre-school (after his own letters and Ida Ehre School , 2001-2010 Ida-Ehre Comprehensive School ) is a nine-stage district school in Hamburg district Harvestehude . The upper level house for the years 11 to 13 is located on Lehmweg in the Hoheluft-Ost district. From its founding in 1934 until it was renamed to Ida Ehre in 2001, the school was called Jahnschule after Friedrich Ludwig Jahn , first as an elementary school , then as a primary, secondary and middle school and from 1979 as one of the first integrated comprehensive schools in Hamburg.

history

The elementary school in Bogenstraße was built from 1929 according to plans by Fritz Schumacher and was designed to implement ideas from reform pedagogy. Construction was interrupted in 1931 in the midst of global economic circles and emergency budgets. So it wasn't finished until 1934.

The first school director was Peter Jacobsgaard (1879–1961) in 1934. The school was named after Friedrich Ludwig Jahn (1778-1852) who introduced gymnastics to Germany. The National Socialists had used some of Jahn's ethnic-national ideas in their propaganda. At the time of National Socialism , the school yard was used for the gathering of the Hitler Youth . As of all state schools in Hamburg, Jewish children were no longer admitted from 1935. Turnwart Fehling was considered a special whip of the National Socialist ideology at the school.

After the war the Jahnschule became a primary, secondary and middle school. By ordinance, the school became a primary school, practical secondary school (previously secondary school) and technical secondary school (previously middle school) in the 1950s. The Jahnschule later became a primary, secondary and secondary school. In 1979 it was converted into an integrated comprehensive school.

In 1997, the school conference decided to rename the school because Friedrich Ludwig Jahn was a role model for the Nazis. Pupils, teachers and parents collected possible names for the school; in the 1999 vote, Ida's proposal won honor . The election had to be repeated in December 2000 due to procedural errors. In July 2001, the school was finally renamed Ida-Ehre-Gesamtschule.

As part of the school reform , the Ida-Ehre-Schule became a district school for the 2011/2012 school year.

architecture

The school location at Bogenstraße 34/36 is west of Gustav-Falke-Straße, northeast of Bogenstraße and southeast of Schlankreye. There are three school buildings on the school premises:

  • House 1 ( ) is the two-winged main house on Bogenstraße / corner of Schlankreye, the listed Schumacher ensemble consists of house 1 itself and an old schoolyard wall.
  • House 2 ( ) is a three-story building facing Schlankreye. The building was created later than the main building as a supplement and is not a listed building.
  • House 3 ( ) facing Gustav-Falke-Straße was formerly the upper level building. The building was erected in the early 1980s as a prefabricated construction and is also not listed. The four-story building accommodates classes, cabinet rooms with a focus on natural sciences and common rooms, and has almost 3,000 m² of usable space. House 3 was renovated in 2017.

Fritz Schumacher designed today's House 1 as a double school as part of the primary school building program of the 1920s. The five-storey building with a flat roof has two wings . The strictly axially symmetrical wing on Bogenstrasse was divided into a school for girls and a school for boys. This division can still be read today from the names above the entrances to the left and right of the main wing. The separation took place in the school building on each floor by a glass wall with an integrated glass door, through which teachers from the boys' department could get into the gym, the auditorium or the gymnastics room with their class.

In the wing of the building along the Schlankreye, the rooms for common use were set up: the gymnasium on the ground floor, a large auditorium with a stage above it and the gymnastics room on the third floor. In the school yard, a thick white line separated the girls' yard from that of the boys. The architecture, with its dark clinker brick facade and strictly rectangular shapes, is emphatically factual, but still appears “subliminally conservative”. The facade is decorated with terracotta elements by Richard Kuöhl , including twelve ceramic reliefs with the signs of the zodiac on the portals on the girls 'and boys' sides and a row of caryatids on the group of windows of the music hall on the fifth floor of the building along the Schlankreye.

The upper level of the school is located at the Lehmweg location. At the school site at Lehmweg 14 there is an old building ( ) and a new building ( ). The three-storey old building was built in 1898 according to plans by Carl Johann Christian Zimmermann and is a listed building. The building has been used by the Ida Ehre School since 1984.

Today's profile

The Ida-Ehre-Schule is an all-day school . In 2017/18, of the approximately 1,300 students, a good 900 attended secondary level I and almost 400 attended secondary level II . The catchment area of ​​the school is relatively wide compared to high schools in the immediate vicinity. The majority of the students at Ida-Ehre-Schule come from Eimsbüttel , Altona ( old town and north ), St. Pauli , Lokstedt , the Sternschanze and Hoheluft-West and -Ost . In spite of their proximity, comparatively few students come to the Ida-Ehre-Schule from the districts of Harvestehude , Rotherbaum and Eppendorf , which are directly adjacent to the west .

When the social index for Hamburg schools was surveyed in 2011, a social index of 3 was calculated for the Ida-Ehre-Schule. The scale ranges from 1 (disadvantageous requirements of the student body, highest need for support) to 6 (best conditions, no need for support). The neighboring grammar schools EWG , HLG and Kaifu were classified with the social index 5. In the 2016/17 school year, around 44% of Ida-Ehre students had a migration background , slightly less than the average of all Hamburg district schools.

The upper level of the Ida-Ehre-Schule has been part of a network with the Eppendorf district school since the 2018/2019 school year . A total of seven profiles are offered, four at the Ida-Ehre-Schule and three at the Eppendorf district school.

Well-known graduates

Web links

Commons : Ida-Ehre-Schule  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Education Atlas Hamburg , Authority for Schools and Vocational Training together with the Institute for Education Monitoring and Quality Development
  2. school management. In: www.idaehreschule.de. Retrieved March 16, 2020 .
  3. a b Hans-Peter de Lorent: Peter Jacobsgaard . In: State Center for Civic Education Hamburg: Nazi-been there .
  4. Hans-Peter de Lorent: Rudolf Fehling . In: State Center for Civic Education Hamburg: Nazi-been there .
  5. Heike Dierbach: “The main thing is that Jahn is gone” . In: taz of April 4, 2000.
  6. Matthias Schmoock: "Völkische Theses" - Jahn school wants different name . In: Hamburger Abendblatt , Volume 52, No. 99 (April 29, 1999), p. 15.
  7. Matthias Schmoock: (schmoo): Jahnschule now named after Ida Ehre . In: Hamburger Abendblatt from July 16, 2011.
  8. Refurbishment of house 3 of the Ida-Ehre-Schule at Bogenstrasse 34/36 in Hamburg, tender from 2014
  9. a b Ralf Lange : Architectural Guide Hamburg . Edition Menges, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 978-3-930698-58-5 , p. 115. (Entry "C 79 Jahnschule")
  10. Maike Bruhns: Building jewelry at Fritz Schumacher: a kaleidoscope of the arts . (= Series of publications by the Hamburg Architecture Archive , Volume 30), ed. by Hartmut Frank and Ullrich Schwarz, Dölling and Galitz Verlag, Munich - Hamburg 2013, ISBN 978-3-86218-038-7 .
  11. See list of cultural monuments in Hamburg-Hoheluft-Ost , entry 20247, Lehmweg 14.
  12. ^ Education Atlas Hamburg , pupils from the catchment areas of the Ida-Ehre-Schule in the school year 2017/18: Eimsbüttel (183), Altona-Altstadt and Altona-Nord (157), St. Pauli (129), Lokstedt (75), Sternschanze ( 61), Hoheluft-West and Hoheluft-Ost (49).
  13. Hamburg Education Atlas , pupils from the catchment areas of the Ida-Ehre-Schule in the school year 2017/18: Harvestehude (39), Rotherbaum (33), Eppendorf (19)
  14. Small written question from MP Robert Heinemann (CDU) of February 28, 2013 and answer from the Senate. Citizenship of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg - 20th electoral period, printed matter 20/7094 , Annex 4b: Old and new social indices of the state secondary schools, p. 27.
  15. Peter Ulrich Meyer: That's how high the proportion of migrants in Hamburg schools is . In: Hamburger Abendblatt from April 19, 2018 (at the Hamburg district schools, the average was 48%)
  16. Upper level profiles at the Ida-Ehre-Schule.