Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium Schopfheim
Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium Schopfheim | |
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The new building completed in 2004 with the light sculpture speech bubbles | |
type of school | high school |
founding | 1770 |
address |
Schlierbachstrasse 19 |
place | Schopfheim |
country | Baden-Württemberg |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 47 ° 38 '50 " N , 7 ° 49' 45" E |
carrier | City of Schopfheim |
student | around 1100 |
Teachers | about 80 |
management | Claudia Tatsch |
Website | www.thg.pcom.de |
The Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium Schopfheim is a high school in Schopfheim . It is named after Theodor Heuss , the first Federal President of the Federal Republic of Germany.
history
On October 23, 1770, a Latin school was founded in Schopfheim , which is regarded as the forerunner of today's grammar school. In the early years, the poet Johann Peter Hebel attended school. Due to a lack of students, the city council requested the abolition of the school in 1796, but the government refused. At Easter 1838 the school was converted into a high school. In 1848 she moved into the converted Kornhaus on Torstrasse . In 1893 the school was officially called Realschule, five years later the lower classes were also opened for girls. Between 1906 and 1908 a new building was built in Roggenbachstrasse. In 1922 it became an upper secondary school . In the Third Reich , the school was named Albert-Leo-Schlageter School . After the Second World War , the school became a grammar school in 1948. Due to the steadily growing number of pupils, the school moved to a new building in Vicemoos in 1969. The school building was designed by the Stuttgart architects Behnisch & Partner , which also designed the Munich Olympic Stadium . With the move, the school was renamed Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium .
Buildings and furnishings
The Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium has:
- Daylight projectors and network connections (local network and internet) in all specialist rooms, work rooms and classrooms as well as in the library,
- three classrooms with 17 multimedia computers each,
- several classrooms with media corners (two or four computers, scanners, printers),
- two sports halls directly at the school,
- own sports facility with 100 m lane, jumping facility and small playing field,
- a work room for high school students,
- a library with a quiet study room for teachers and high school students,
- a library for lower and middle school students,
- a cafeteria / auditorium with a stage.
- a green classroom
The oldest part ( atrium ) of the school building was designed by Behnisch & Partner and moved into in 1969, expanded in 1978 and 2004. A light sculpture (" speech bubbles ") developed by Prof. Herbert Wentscher and the Schopfheim company durlum GmbH was attached to the facade of the new building .
classes
The school lessons last 45 minutes each. Classes take place in the morning between 7:45 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. and at noon from 1:45 p.m. to a maximum of 5:00 p.m.
Student co-responsibility (SMV)
Many different events were held in the 2010/2011 school year. This included lower school discos as well as a large football tournament followed by a party, a school barbecue and a summer ball. The St. Nicholas campaign is also traditionally part of it. On this day, chocolate Santa Clauses and associated small messages are sent from student to student across grade levels.
School partnerships
The Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium maintains school partnerships with the following schools:
- the Collège Jules Grévy in Poligny , France (since 1962)
- Broxbourne School in Broxbourne , Great Britain (since 1971)
- the Liceul teoretic Gheorghe Sincai in Cluj-Napoca , Romania (since 1993)
- the Instituto de Educación Secundaria " Ramón Llull " in Valencia , Spain (since 2005)
- of the German School Valparaíso in Viña del Mar , Chile (since 2005)
Exchange, AG
Furthermore, the Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium maintains regular student exchanges with England, France, Spain and Romania. The AGs include: Graphic Design AG, Streitschlichter AG, Sports AG, Chess AG, Chinese AG, Theater AG, Climbing AG, Computer AG, Spanish AG and in addition to choir and orchestral programs there are also a parent-teacher-student choir.
Well-known students and teachers
- Dietmar Dath , student
- Claus-Heinrich Daub , student
- Andreas Digeser , teacher
- Maurus Gerner-Beuerle , student
- Markus Götz (composer) , student and teacher
- Johann Peter Hebel , student
- Markus Manfred Jung , teacher
- Björn Kern , student
- Franz-Karl Klepp , teacher
- Ernst-Christoph Meier , student
- Max Josef Metzger , student
- Meret Oppenheim , student
- August Gottlieb Preuschen , teacher
- Rainer Schorm , student
- Herbert Wentscher , teacher
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ List of works (PDF; 638 kB), p. 334.