State vocational college glass, ceramics, design of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia Rheinbach
State vocational college glass, ceramics, design of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia Rheinbach | |
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type of school | Vocational college |
School number | 175936 |
founding | 1948 |
address |
To the spruce 19 |
place | Rheinbach |
country | North Rhine-Westphalia |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 50 ° 37 '9 " N , 6 ° 57' 21" E |
Website | www.bkrheinbach.de |
The state vocational college for glass, ceramics, design of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia Rheinbach (formerly: Glasfachschule Rheinbach ) is a qualification center of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia for glass , ceramics , graphics and new media in Rheinbach . The vocational college (formerly: vocational school ) is an Argeus-certified European school and combines different training courses.
history
In 1869, in what was then the Kingdom of Bohemia (now the Czech Republic ), the glass technical school in Haida (today: Nový Bor ) was founded, which was merged in 1926 with the glass technical school in Steinschönau ( Kamenický Šenov ), which was established in 1856 . Both schools were instrumental in the development of Bohemian glass art .
After the Second World War, as part of the expulsion of the Sudeten Germans from Czechoslovakia, many skilled glass workers and a large part of the teaching staff of the Steinschönau-Haida Glass School moved to the area around Rheinbach in order to continue the tradition of glassmaking. Rheinbach, which was badly damaged by the war, had decided to build up the glass industry as a "chimney-free industry that should not disturb the character of the city" and from 1947 onwards it systematically settled glass specialists.
Founding of the glass school
On April 1, 1948, the State Glass College was opened in Rheinbach under the city director Victor Römer and with the support of Prime Minister Karl Arnold , the Ministry of Economic Affairs in Düsseldorf, the Bonn Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Cologne Chamber of Crafts . It can be seen as a successor to or a new establishment of the Glass School in Steinschönau. Rheinbach thus began to develop as the “City of Glass”.
Alfred Dorn, who had been in charge of the Steinschönau technical college since 1937, was appointed the first head of the school. The former mayor's office in front of Voigtstor , which was damaged during the war , was made available and repaired by the city as a school building. The glass school was initially to be run as a municipal facility, but was then taken over by the North Rhine-Westphalian state government as a state facility. On April 1, 1948, the school began with 30 students. In the following years, the school presented itself at glass trade fairs in Munich, Hanover, Frankfurt and Düsseldorf as well as in specialist magazines. At the beginning of the 1950s the school was recognized in the industry and in the following years developed into one of the leading special schools for glass and ceramics in Germany.
After the number of students had risen sharply, a larger school building became necessary. In September 1964, the school started operations in a new building on the street Zu den Fichten . The Rheinbach house was built in December 1996 . This youth hostel accepts students from the state vocational school in the vocational college for the time of vocational school lessons. Up to 78 students can be accommodated in an area of 2327 square meters.
Foundation of the friends' association
In 1953 the Association of Friends and Supporters of the State Glass College was founded. Members of the association are predominantly specialists from the glass industry, the glazier trade and the ceramics industry. The school receives ideal, technical and material support. The association runs the boarding school for glass technical students.
"Independent School" project
From April 2002 to August 2008, the college took part as an “independent school” in a project of the same name by the Ministry of Education, Science and Research of North Rhine-Westphalia and the Bertelsmann Foundation .
today
The vocational college is the oldest department and runs the vocational school for glass technology and glass design. There is also a vocational school for design (both graphics and media / communication), a year-long vocational school for media, a technical college for design, the FOS13 - Abitur class for designers and the state vocational school for glass and ceramics. In addition, students can complete a year of vocational primary school and live in the adjoining dormitory. Rheinbach was the fifth vocational college in the Rhein-Sieg district to offer the vocational high school branch and thus a double qualification (general higher education entrance qualification and qualification as a design assistant).
Well-known graduates
- Stephan Brenn
- Udo Edelmann
- Moritz Hellfritzsch
- Carsten Kehrein
- Knut Wolfgang Marron
- Bernhard Müller-Feyen
- Paul Reding
- Georg Sternbacher
- Josef Welzel
Known teachers
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ glass pavilion "Hans Schmitz-house" on the website of the city Rheinbach
- ^ European Schools Working Group in the Ministry for Schools and Further Education of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia
- ↑ Rheinbach celebrates its 100 year old glass school , in: Bonner Rundschau No. 254, October 30, 1956, based on: Arnold Lassotta, The Glass Industry: An Enrichment of the West German Economy ( Memento of the original from June 12, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was used automatically and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Website of the Regional Association of Westphalia-Lippe
- ↑ a b Marita Krauss (Ed.), Integrations: Displaced Persons in the German Lands after 1945 , ISBN 978-3-52536-757-5 , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht , 2008, p. 129
- ↑ Josef Schermaier, Technical Schools in Austria - Schools of skilled worker training: the technical schools for individual commercial branches. A contribution to the past and present of the vocational middle school system in Austria , ISBN 978-3-63158-651-8 , Peter Lang , 2009, p. 101
- ↑ Crystal clear anniversaries in Steinschönau's commemoration: In Rheinbach, the glass technical school is 60 and the glass museum founded by the "Friends of Noble Glass" is 40 years old , edition 1266, at: Kulturportal West-Ost, Foundation of German Culture in Eastern Europe - OKR
- ^ Verena Wasmuth, Czech Glass: Artistic Design in Socialism , ISBN 978-3-41250-170-9 , Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar, 2016, p. 175
- ↑ a b c Gerda Saxler-Schmidt, Rheinbach Glass Museum turns 40 , August 30, 2008, Bonner General-Anzeiger
- ^ Small chronicle of the city of Rheinbach , website of the city of Rheinbach
- ↑ Susanne Träupmann, Rheinbacher Glasfachschule Graduates should also be able to do their Abitur in the future , October 14, 2015, Bonner General-Anzeiger