Federal high school for Slovenes
Slovenian high school | |
---|---|
type of school | Bundesgymnasium and Bundesrealgymnasium |
School number | 201066 |
founding | 1957 |
address |
Prof. Janežič Place 1 |
place | Klagenfurt am Wörthersee |
state | Carinthia |
Country | Austria |
Coordinates | 46 ° 37 '26 " N , 14 ° 19' 24" E |
carrier | Republic of Austria |
management | Zalka Kuchling |
Website | www.slog.at |
The BG and BRG for Slovenes ( Slovenian : ZG in ZRG za Slovence ) is a multilingual high school in Klagenfurt .
profile
The core task of the BG and BRG for Slovenes (colloquially the Slovenian grammar school ) is to offer the Carinthian Slovenes a mother tongue grammar school education. It offers lessons in Slovenian, German and English for both Slovenes and non-Slovenians. Slovenian and German are taught as subjects with the same number of hours. In addition, since 1999 there have been four-language Kugy classes (after Julius Kugy ) in Slovenian, German, English and Italian.
The school participates in the UNESCO Schools project .
history
The school was founded in 1957 and was initially housed as an afternoon school in the premises of the Lerchenfeldstrasse grammar school.
In 1975 they moved into today's listed building on Ebenthaler Straße (today's address: Prof. Janežič-Platz, after Anton Janežič ). Valentin Oman was responsible for the artistic interior design . The building has been shared with the bilingual Federal Trade Academy in Klagenfurt since 1990 . In 1995 a renovation took place. In 1999 the first "Kugy classes" were started. In 2004 the school was awarded the EUROPTIMUS Prize and in 2005 the Spring Day Europe certificate .
By 2011, around 1,800 students were able to take the Matura .
student
- Maja Haderlap (* 1961), writer
- Ana Blatnik (* 1957), politician (SPÖ)
- Katja Gasser (* 1975), literary critic and editor
- Valentin Inzko (* 1949), diplomat
- Franc Kattnig (* 1945), publisher, author and journalist
- Zalka Kuchling (* 1961), politician (Greens)
- Cvetka Lipuš (* 1966), poet
- Tomaž Ogris (* 1946), editor
- Monika Matschnig (* 1974), athlete
- Angelika Mlinar (* 1970), politician (NEOS, SAB)
- Helena Verdel (* 1961), publicist
- Cornelia Vospernik (* 1969), television journalist
- Rudolf Vouk (* 1965), former politician
- Sabina Zwitter-Grilc (* 1967), journalist and documentary filmmaker
Teacher
- Zalka Kuchling (* 1961), politician (The Greens)
- Joško Tischler (1902–1967), politician
- Reginald Vospernik (* 1937)
- Pavle Zablatnik (1912–1993), clergyman and ethnologist
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ The Slovenian Gymnasium. In: slog.at. Retrieved March 14, 2020 .
- ↑ Lesson tables. In: slog.at. Retrieved March 14, 2020 .
- ↑ Julius Kugy Classes as a model of the future - oesterreich.ORF.at. In: orf.at . February 8, 2006, accessed March 14, 2020 .
- ↑ On the history of the school. In: slog.at. Retrieved March 14, 2020 .
- ^ Austrian UNESCO schools in the network - Austrian UNESCO Commission. In: unesco.at. Retrieved March 14, 2020 .
- ^ Valentin Oman: Slovenian grammar school Klagenfurt / Celovec. Retrieved August 29, 2020 .
- ^ BG / BRG for Slovenes - Federal Real Estate Company. In: Federal Real Estate Company . Retrieved March 14, 2020 .
- ^ Arno Wiedergut: Carinthian Slovenes: From the slow disappearance of an ethnic group. Slovenian high school is booming. In: DiePresse.com . March 11, 2011, accessed March 14, 2020 .