Pedagogical Academy Szczecin

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Pedagogical Academy Stettin was a pedagogical academy of the Free State of Prussia , which existed from 1930 to 1932 in Stettin , the capital of the Prussian province of Pomerania .

history

Pedagogical academies have been founded in Prussia since 1925 to train school teachers through four semesters of study. They replaced the previous 191 Prussian teachers' seminars . In this context, the Stettin Pedagogical Academy began its work on April 1, 1930 . The first 50 students were selected from several hundred applicants. The temporary seat of the Pedagogical Academy was the building of the Arndt Girls' Middle School at Barnimstrasse 6.

In the course of austerity measures by the Prussian state, several educational academies were closed in 1932, including the Stettin educational academy on February 28, 1932 by order of the Prussian Ministry of Education and Cultural Affairs on February 28, 1932. The students who began their studies on April 1, 1930, could still finish it. The remaining students had to switch to one of the remaining Prussian Pedagogical Academies. The professors and lecturers were partly distributed to other academies, several to the Pedagogical Academy Elbing and Kiel.

In the spring of 1931, the construction of an extensive building complex for the Pedagogical Academy in Mühlenstrasse in the Nemitz district began, but construction was discontinued in February 1932.

In Landesarchiv Greifswald has retained the files of the Pedagogical Academy of Szczecin.

Professors and lecturers

Academy directors

Professors

Lecturers

literature

  • W. Neuhoff: 80 years ago - Stettin in the crisis year 1932 . In: Stettiner Bürgerbrief. No. 38, 2012, ISSN  1619-6201 , pp. 6-19.
  • Alexander Hesse: The professors and lecturers of the Prussian educational academies (1926-1933) and colleges for teacher training (1933-1941) . Deutscher Studien-Verlag, Weinheim 1995, ISBN 3-89271-588-2 ( limited preview in Google book search).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Arndt Girls' Middle School. sedina.pl, accessed on September 17, 2017 .
  2. ^ Heiko Wartenberg: Archive Guide to the History of Pomerania up to 1945 . Oldenbourg Verlag, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-486-58540-7 , p. 94.