Luisen-Gymnasium Bergedorf
Luisen-Gymnasium Bergedorf | |
---|---|
type of school | high school |
founding | 1888 |
address |
Reinbeker Weg 76, |
place | Hamburg |
country | Hamburg |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 53 ° 29 '33 " N , 10 ° 13' 40" E |
carrier | Hamburg |
student | 925 |
Teachers | 65 (as of December 2010) |
management | Werner Baum |
Website | www.halloluise.de |
The Luisen-Gymnasium Bergedorf is a school for boys and girls in the Hamburg-Bergedorf district that has existed since 1888 and was named after the Prussian Queen Luise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz . The school is characterized above all by the expanded musical branch.
history
Erna Martens and Mathilde Hipp founded the Luisen School on April 13, 1888 as a private school for girls. In 1921 the school was nationalized, later the levels were divided into an upper level leading to the Abitur and an intermediate level leading to a secondary school leaving certificate. On April 8, 1931, the school moved from its previous location on Am Baum 1 to Reinbeker Weg 76, where it can still be found today.
In 1937 the Reich Minister of Education decreed a "standardization of types" for the higher education system, which means that only two forms of the upper level remain possible for higher schools for girls: the linguistic and the domestic form. In 1939 the Luisenschule was given a housekeeping move, for which a school kitchen was set up. Second and third foreign languages were omitted for female students on this train. By 1939, the upper level was shortened by one year so that pupils could be drafted into the labor service or the armed forces more quickly .
After the beginning of the war in 1939, the ground floor of the school for air protection and as a rescue center was confiscated, the chemical company Rhenania used the chemical cabinets on the second floor . A former pupil recalls the influence of the National Socialists on everyday school life at the Luisenschule as follows: "The next few days, all of a sudden the whole class was decorated with flags, and we got the expression:" national kitsch "."
After the heavy air raids on Hamburg in 1943, bombed out people were housed in the school. Up to the summer holidays of 1944, school lessons still took place relatively according to plan. In January 1945 the classes at the Luisenschule practically stopped and the building was closed due to a lack of coal. In February 1945, an emergency hospital for 600 wounded people was set up in the school , and from March 26 to October 2, 1945, classes were canceled by order of the school authorities. The hospital remained in part of the school until April 1947. The building was also temporarily shared with the Hansa School and an elementary school until April 1, 1962, when the school was alone in its house.
In 1970 the school introduced a five-day week. In addition, from now on there was a course system in German and community studies . A year later, the start of school was changed; the school year began after the summer vacation. In 1973 the reformed upper school was introduced. The Luisen-Gymnasium cooperated from now on with the nearby Hansa-Gymnasium . In 2008 the Luisen-Gymnasium was one of the first high schools to be ready for the Hamburg school ranking and graduated with above-average results.
The school building designed by Fritz Schumacher is a listed building .
principal
Period | Surname |
---|---|
1888-1910 1888-1921 |
Mathilde Hipp and Erna Martens |
1921-1933 | Helene Popkes |
1933-1935 | Walther Machleidt |
1935-1939 | Otto Ludwig |
1939-1945 | August Wulff |
1945–1963 | Wilhelm Kunrede |
1963-1972 | Werner Specht |
1972-2000 | Hans Heinrich Henk |
2000-2004 | Rainer Ebers |
2004-2011 | Mechthild Uhle |
since 2011 | Werner Baum |
Branch of music
There are now a large number of musical subjects. These include, for example, the orchestras (A, B and C), the Luisiana jazz band as well as various choirs and the vocal ensemble. Concerts are held at the school several times a year, often in cooperation with the Hansa-Gymnasium. The A-Orchestra participated in the European-Chinese Youth Music Project in 2008. In addition, aptitude tests for the music classes are offered for school beginners.
Construction branch
The school has offered an advanced branch since 1975. This makes it easier for secondary school students to get started. Pupils with the secondary school leaving certificate attend a joint class and are thus prepared for the upper school level. For admission, the average of the final certificate must be at least 3.0 without a sports grade ( status: 2006 ) While in the past two entry-level classes were always set up at the beginning of the school year, the number will be reduced to one class from the 2010/2011 school year. The reason for this is the introduction of the Abitur after twelve years .
Upper school
The restructuring due to a reform school can be on Luisen-Gymnasium instead of the previous specialized courses now select these profiles:
- Scientific profile "Natural sciences and technology"
- Profile-giving subject: physics
- Additional subjects: chemistry, computer science, philosophy
- Seminar also with extracurricular learning partners such as Blohm Jung
- Musical profile "Arts and cultures in the past and present"
- Profile-giving subject: music or fine arts
- Profile-related subjects: history, music practice or art practice course
- Seminar on interdisciplinary learning
- Linguistic profile "'Speak Global!' Multilingualism in the globalized world "
- Social science profile "Earth-Human System"
- profiling subject: geography
- Profile-related subjects: biology, chemistry, computer science
- Seminar u. a. with extracurricular learning partners for interdisciplinary deepening of what has been learned
- Sport profile "Sport, Health and Society"
- profile-giving subject: sport (practice and theory)
- Profile-related subjects: Biology, PGW
- Seminar as the basis for acquiring the Trainer C license
deals
languages
At the Luisen-Gymnasium there is a wide range of foreign languages, including English, French, Latin and Spanish. There is also the option of learning Swedish in an afternoon class.
vintage | English | Latin | French | Spanish |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 | mandatory | |||
6th | Duty, one of the two languages | |||
7th | ||||
8th | optional, obligation for 3 years | |||
9 | ||||
10 | ||||
11 | optional | |||
12 |
Working groups and afternoon offer
- A, B, C orchestras
- Vocal ensemble
- Choir 5
- Choir 6
- Middle school choir
- Remedial courses for English, French, Latin, mathematics and physics divided into grade levels
- Homework assistance
- www-AG
- Climbing group
- chess
- Performing game
- Youth trains for Olympia AG
- Soccer
Media offer
- The so-called Luinet , an IServ web interface , has existed since 2007 . Every student and teacher has their own account and email address. Files can be uploaded at home or in class in order to be able to download them later for a presentation or the like or on your own computer.
- Almost all of the school's classrooms have been equipped with projectors , PCs and, in some cases, speakers in the past few years . Instead of projectors, many classrooms, including most of the specialist rooms, were given interactive whiteboards .
- As part of the modernization, the school has had a corporate design since October 2004 .
Competitions
- Numerous competitions and projects are offered to schoolchildren of all ages, such as MINT , Math Olympics , the kangaroo competition or the Intel Leibniz Challenge . The Luisen-Gymnasium also took part in the Comenius program and has been a MINT-EC school since 2009 . It also made its students repeatedly participate in the beaver computer science competition.
literature
- Hans-Heinrich Henk: 100 years of Luisenschule . In: Lichtwark No. 51. Ed. Lichtwark Committee, Bergedorf, 1987. See now: Verlag HB-Werbung, Hamburg-Bergedorf. ISSN 1862-3549 .
- Wilhelm Kunrede: Unforgotten women: 5. Erna Martens . In: Lichtwark No. 4, 2nd year. Ed. Lichtwark Committee, Bergedorf, 1950. See now: Verlag HB-Werbung, Hamburg-Bergedorf. ISSN 1862-3549 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Luisen-Gymnasium Bergedorf - Imprint. In: halloluise.de. Retrieved December 13, 2016 .
- ^ A b Hans-Peter de Lorent: Otto Ludwig . In: Offender Profiles , Volume 2. State Center for Political Education, Hamburg 2017.
- ↑ Kultur & Geschichtkontor: Bergedorf in step , Hamburg 1995, p. 126.
- ↑ a b Hans-Peter de Lorent: August Wulff . In: Offender Profiles , Volume 2. State Center for Political Education, Hamburg 2017.
- ↑ Directory of recognized monuments in Hamburg - Erk-denkmaeler-lr.pdf. In: hamburg.de. November 20, 2015, accessed February 22, 2016 .
- ^ History - The history of the Luisen-Gymnasium. In: halloluise.de. Retrieved February 22, 2016 .
- ↑ Upper level profile at Luisen-Gymnasium. In: halloluise.de. Retrieved February 22, 2016 .
- ↑ The foreign language offer of the Luisen-Gymnasium - overview. In: halloluise.de. Retrieved February 22, 2016 .