School Tieloh

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School Tieloh
School Tieloh backside2.jpg
type of school District school
founding 1917 (1914)
place Barmbek-North
country Hamburg
Country Germany
Coordinates 53 ° 35 '34 "  N , 10 ° 3' 6"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 35 '34 "  N , 10 ° 3' 6"  E
student about 400
Teachers 15 teachers and 12 teachers
Website www.tieloh.de

The Tieloh school in the street of the same name in the Hamburg district of Barmbek-Nord is one of the locations of the Emil Krause School . Before the Hamburg school reform, it was a Hamburg primary , secondary and secondary school under one roof.

history

Founding years

November 16, 1914 is the first day of school in the new building. However, the Tieloh initially houses the Rübenkamp School (Genslerstrasse) because a 300-bed hospital will be set up there.

  • Division:
southern half of the building: girls' school with 15 classes;
northern half of the building: boys' school with 15 classes;
The gym, drawing and singing room are shared.
  • In 1917 the return to Rübenkamp is prepared: a Rübenkamp and a Tieloh train are built on each of the Tieloh.
  • 1920 The parents of the girls 'school (Tieloh-Süd) decided on the initiative of Rector Wolgast to convert the girls' school into the experimental school for Barmbek. On April 7, 1920, the fourth and last experimental school in Hamburg begins work:
No sitting down; no certificates, just a report at the end of school; no flogging or other means of coercion; in addition to normal lessons, elective courses; one excursion day a week; at least one class trip a year; Coeducation ; Exemption from curriculum obligations and learning objectives of the primary school and the primary school as a whole.
The college of the boys' school refuses to convert Tieloh-Nord into an experimental school (“special school”).
The traditional pedagogical principles are retained: Certificates every six months, staying seated, being beaten as a means of education (but only with simultaneous entry in the official “punishment protocol”).
  • In 1924, a third of the students in the boys' school classes remained seated.
  • 1927 Headmaster of the boys' school, Louis Naumann is attacked as a whipping teacher in the “Hamburger Lehrerzeitung”. The college elected him again as headmaster in 1929 and 1932.
  • 1933: According to the new School Act of June 23, 1933, the headmasters are no longer elected by the college. The headmaster of the girls' school, Gustav Tode , hands over his office to Heinrich Mellmann on July 11, 1933 and remains as a teacher at the school. In 1945 he was unable to become deputy headmaster because of his party membership.

National Socialism

  • In 1934 the Hitler salute is mandatory. At the boys' school, Bertha Blankenstein is dismissed from school as a Jewish teacher. " Schlageter celebrations" are to be held in schools on May 26th . On the State Youth Day , 2 hours are to be devoted to National Socialist ideas. In 1937, Louis Naumann (Stahlhelmer and German national) is replaced by Rector Hoffmann at the boys' school . From now on Naumann works as a teacher in a neighboring school.
  • In 1938, coeducation is abolished in both schools.
  • In 1943 the school was closed. Although the school building remained undamaged after the devastating air raids , the population - provided it is not needed for armaments production - has been evacuated.

See also

After the Second World War

  • In 1945 the school building was confiscated to accommodate British soldiers. From September 1st, school operations will continue in the Langenfort school , and from December 8th in Genslerstrasse.
  • 1949 return to the Tieloh building
  • In 1953, shift lessons are introduced due to the increased number of pupils. The student body is divided into Tieloh A and Tieloh B schools .
  • In 1959 Tieloh-B moves into the new school building on Heinrich-Helbing-Straße.
  • In 1965, six honeycomb classrooms, a school garden and a spacious new sports facility were built on a 17,000 square meter site on Dieselstrasse.
  • In 1967 the main building was completely overhauled and renovated. The celebration of the 50th anniversary, postponed in 1964, will be rescheduled. From May 1979 to June 1981 a further thorough renovation is necessary due to the installation of a new heating system.

Modern times

  • 1985: The school authorities plan to close the Tieloh, because in Hamburg-Barmbek-Nord, due to the general decline in the number of pupils, there is supposedly one secondary and secondary school too many. The danger could be averted, but it hit other schools in Barmbek.
  • 1986: The Tieloh is the first Hamburg secondary school to introduce a whole day as a “workshop day” in grades 8.
  • 1989 The “workshop day” at Tieloh served as a model for the development of a Hamburg technology concept (according to the coalition agreement of the SPD and FDP from 1987). Six experimental schools are to work according to the new concept.

With the introduction of the district school as part of the school reform for the 2010/11 school year, the Tieloh school with the Fraenkelstraße school (also in Barmbek-Nord) and the Emil-Krause-Gymnasium (on the Dulsberg ) became the Barmbek district school (since August 2019 Emil- Krause School ). Grades 8-10 as well as ESA and MSA classes are taught at the Tieloh location. Grades 5 to 7 as well as the upper school level are located at the location of the former Emil-Krause-Gymnasium. The primary school branch is no longer continued at the district school. The primary school students from the catchment area of ​​the school visit neighboring pure primary schools.

building

Gym
Access building to the tubular bunker

The school building was designed in 1912 by the architect Fritz Schumacher .

The figures above the entrance are by Richard Kuöhl .

The access is to a from the school yard WWII derived tube bunker . The bunker itself is flooded by groundwater that has penetrated.

Tieloh bike

With the support of the Zeit Foundation , students run their own company. Students in the seventh to ninth grades get to know accounting, sales and the operation of a company in seminars. An insight into these areas should prepare for later professional life. The students try to recoup the money that the Tieloh School received from the Zeit Foundation by selling bicycles.

Tieloh Post

The Tieloh Post is the school's school newspaper , which is produced in a compulsory elective course with three issues per school year.

Web links

Commons : Tieloh location of the Barmbek district school  - collection of images, videos and audio files