Louise Schroeder School (Berlin)
Louise Schroeder School (OSZ Office Management and Administration) | |
---|---|
type of school | Vocational high school |
School number | 06B02 |
founding | 1982 |
address |
Lippstädter Str. 9-11 |
place | Berlin-Lichterfelde |
country | Berlin |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 52 ° 24 ′ 41 ″ N , 13 ° 18 ′ 21 ″ E |
carrier | State of Berlin |
student | 2,561 (2018/2019) |
Teachers | 142 + 3 trainees + 1 ped. Employee (2018/2019) |
management | Ralph Buss |
Website | www.osz-louise-schroeder.de |
The Louise Schroeder School is a public upper school center for office management and administration in Berlin-Lichterfelde Süd. The Upper School Center for Office Economics and Administration was founded in 1982 and has been called Louise Schroeder School since May 2012. Various courses of study form a unit at the school: with around 150 teachers, everything is covered, from vocational training to vocational high school. A special profile of the school is that the professions of clerk for office management and specialist for media and information services are organized in learning fields.
History and namesake
The upper level center for office management and administration was founded in 1981 and was unique in West Berlin with the training professions offered there until German reunification . After reunification, four upper-level centers for office management and administration were gradually created. The traditional Friedrich List School in Berlin-Lichtenberg , which was at times a branch school of the Louise Schroeder School, which was then known as the “Upper School Center for Office Economics, Social Insurance and Administration Berlin-Steglitz”, and the Upper School Center for Office Economics I , also in Steglitz and the Elinor Ostrom School in Berlin-Pankow .
In order to distinguish the school from other high school centers with a similar profile, it was given an honorary name. Since May 31, 2012 the school bears the name of the former acting mayor of Berlin and honorary citizen Louise Schroeder . The decisive factor for the naming was that Louise Schroeder was a trained office worker herself. The then Governing Mayor of Berlin , Klaus Wowereit , also took part in the ceremony.
Courses
professional school
Standard training duration 3 years 12 hours a week, 8 of which are job-related
- Administrative clerk
- Administrative clerk (double qualification)
- Office management clerks
- Specialist for media and information services
The job-related lessons in the vocational school are organized in learning fields. The learning fields are based on operational fields of action. The central goal is to promote the development of comprehensive action skills. Competence to act is understood as the willingness and ability of the trainee to behave in professional, social and private situations properly and in an individually and socially responsible manner. The school has participated in the KaBueNet development project for the learning fields in the profession of office manager. In the project, seven schools have developed a common learning field curriculum, which in this form is unique in Berlin.
Technical college for economics
- FOS annual
- FOS biennial
- FOS 13
Vocational high school
The vocational high school combines general education with vocational training and leads to the general university entrance qualification, with which any subject can be studied at any university. The main focus is on economics and law, which can be chosen as advanced courses. Additional courses can be sports management and psychology. Every student is offered coaching to improve learning strategies and successfully pass the Abitur. The grammar school cooperates with universities and takes part in business start-up projects.
Web links
- School homepage
- School portrait on the website of the Senate Department for Education, Youth and Family Berlin
- Website of all upper school centers in Berlin
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c school directory. In: berlin.de. January 18, 2017, accessed January 21, 2019 .
- ^ History on the website of the Friedrich List School