Seminar for learned schools (Berlin)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The seminar for learned schools was an educational institution in Berlin where prospective high school teachers received their practical professional training. It existed from 1787 as the first secular study seminar and was initially connected to the city high schools and later to the university . The initiative for the establishment (based on the model of the philological seminar in Halle ) came from Friedrich Gedike , the director of the Friedrichswerder high school . Five examined school authority candidates were each planned as members, their training provided for independent lessons in addition to observation . Seminar sessions were held regularly to provide a pedagogical and didactic foundation. The seminar became the model for numerous other training centers in Prussia .

Directors

  1. 1787–1803: Friedrich Gedike (1754–1803), as director of the Friedrichswerder high school , from 1793 of the gray monastery high school
  2. 1803–1804: Ernst Gottfried Fischer (1754–1831), interim, as administrator of the board of directors of the grammar school of the gray monastery
  3. 1804–1812: Johann Joachim Bellermann (1754–1842), as director of the grammar school for the gray monastery
  4. 1812–1819: Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand Solger (1780–1819), as professor of philosophy at the Friedrich Wilhelms University
  5. 1819–1867: August Boeckh (1785–1867), as professor of “eloquence and classical literature” at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität
  6. 1867–1875: Hermann Bonitz (1814–1888), as director of the grammar school at the Gray Monastery
  7. 1875–1879: Gustav Kießling (1809–1884), as retired director of the Joachimsthal Gymnasium
  8. 1879–1894: Gustav Adolf Klix (1822–1894), as provincial school councilor in Berlin

literature