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The Maria-Ward-Schule (abbreviation: MWS; English: Maria Ward School) is a private school for girls in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe, Hesse, Germany. The eponym is Mary Ward (1585–1645). The school has approximate 28 teachers and 400 students.
Pages in category "Girls' schools in Germany" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Pupils of the Gymnasium Nonnenwerth, an all-girls Catholic school in 1960. After World War II, ... In 2006, six percent of German children attended private schools.
The new building is the Schmidt's Girls College Plaque commemorating opening of the College. Schmidt's Girls College [1] (SGC; German: Schmidt-Schule Ost-Jerusalem; Arabic: كلية شميدت) is an international German school for Christian and Muslim girls, [2] located in East Jerusalem. [3]
As the German schoolsystem differs slightly from the anglosaxon system, these highschools are Gymnasiums. This corresponds more likely between high school and college . The university exam, the " abitur " is often compared to a High school diploma in the United States, it is academically closer to the associate degree of a US college, as it ...
Höhere Mädchenschule or Höhere Töchterschule were names of historic schools for the higher education of girls in German-speaking countries between the beginning of the 19th century and 1908. The names may mean higher education, but also education of girls (or daughters) of the upper classes.
Aloisiuskolleg - Jesuit boarding school in Bad Godesberg; Amos-Comenius-Gymnasium Bonn (external link) Collegium Josephinum Bonn (external link) Helmholtz-Gymnasium, Bonn (external link) Hardtberg-Gymnasium (external link) Kardinal-Frings-Gymnasium website (external link) - Catholic mixed school; Liebfrauenschule Bonn - Catholic Girls school
H. W. Patterson. A Ladies' Class at The German Gymnasium. 1872. The gymnasium arose out of the humanistic movement of the sixteenth century. The first general school system to incorporate the gymnasium emerged in Saxony in 1528, with the study of Greek and Latin added to the curriculum later; these languages became the foundation of teaching and study in the gymnasium, which then offered a ...