Schillerschule (Frankfurt am Main)
Schiller School | |
---|---|
type of school | high school |
founding | 1908 |
address |
Morgensternstrasse 3 |
place | Frankfurt am Main |
country | Hesse |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 50 ° 6 '7 " N , 8 ° 40' 39" E |
carrier | town Frankfurt am Main |
student | around 1200 |
Teachers | about 105 (as of 2011) |
management | Claudia Wolff (since June 2016) |
Website | www.schillerschule.de |
The Schillerschule is a grammar school in Frankfurt am Main in the Sachsenhausen district . About 1200 students are taught. The college comprises around 100 teachers (as of 2019). This makes it one of the largest schools in Frankfurt.
history
The Schillerschule was founded in 1908 as the first girls' high school in Frankfurt under the director Klaudius Bojunga . The new building was designed by Hugo Eberhardt . At that time there were already two secondary daughter schools , the Elisabeth School and the Viktoriaschule , but these did not lead to the Abitur . In 1911 the first Abitur examination took place at the school.
During the Second World War , the school building was badly damaged in the air raids on Frankfurt am Main in 1944 and was rebuilt after the war. The current school building was built in 1959. The architects were Hanns-Alex and Käthe Harth. In 1968 the first boys were accepted and the Schillerschule thus became a mixed grammar school.
At the end of 2007 a newly built scientific wing was inaugurated. Shortly thereafter, the new school canteen and school library opened. In May 2008 the Schillerschule celebrated its 100th anniversary.
subjects
The main subjects are languages and music. The first foreign language is English . After the fifth grade you can choose between French and Latin as a second foreign language. In addition, in the can upper nor Spanish are learned. There are many different musical options such as choir or orchestra. Computer science is also offered from the eighth grade . The range of advanced courses in high school covers all important subjects except religion and ethics . There are also regular exchanges between France and Australia.
Well-known former students
- Elisabeth Schmitz (1893–1977), resistance fighter against National Socialism from the ranks of the Confessing Church
- Mile Braach (1898–1998), chronicler, entrepreneur
- Elisabeth Schwarzhaupt (1901–1986), Federal Minister for Health Care, first woman in the office of German Federal Minister
- Josefine Klee-Helmdach (1903–1994), radio editor and theater actress
- Helene Mayer (1910–1953), fencer, gold medalist at the 1928 Olympic Games
- Liselott Linsenhoff (1927–1999), dressage rider
- Stefanie Zweig (1932–2014), writer
- Hadumod Bußmann (* 1933), philologist
- Sibylle Schindler (* 1942), actress
- Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard (* 1942), biologist, awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1995
- Susanne Fröhlich (* 1962), writer and presenter
- Sabine Hock (* 1965), author, journalist and editor
- Alexander Siemon (* 1967), journalist and television presenter
- Radost Bokel (* 1975), actress
- Hadija Haruna-Oelker (* 1980), political scientist, moderator and journalist
Well-known teachers
- Paul Badde (German non-fiction author and journalist, former teacher)
- Boris Hillen (German writer from Neuwied)