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Many of the Burmese entertainment industry's top stars are Dagon 1 alumni. Dagon 1 in recent year has lost some of its appeal as a top school as ultra-wealthy parents now send their children to expensive English language medium "international" private schools. [2] The school's main colonial era building is on the Yangon City Heritage List. [3]
The International School Yangon (ISY; Burmese: အပြည်ပြည်ဆိုင်ရာကလေးများကျောင်း၊ ရန်ကုန်မြို့) is a private, co-educational day school, which offers an educational program from Pre-Kindergarten through Grade 12 for students of all nationalities who desire a U ...
Practising High School Yangon University of Education (TTC Kamayut) BEHS 1 Kamayut; BEHS 2 Kamayut; BEHS 3 Kamayut; BEHS 4 Kamayut; BEHS 5 Kamayut; BEHS 1 Lanmadaw; BEHS 2 Lanmadaw; BEHS 1 Latha; BEHS 2 Latha; BEHS 1 Pabedan; BEHS 2 Pabedan; BEHS 2 Sanchaung; BEHS 1 Shwepyitha; BEHS 2 Shwepyitha; BEHS 3 Shwepyitha; BEHS 4 Shwepyitha; BEHS 3 ...
International Language & Business Centre (ILBC) is a private school established on May 2, 1995, in the Republic of the Union of Myanmar. It has established 26 schools in eight major cities of the country: Yangon, Mandalay, Naypyidaw, Myitkyina, Taunggyi, Monywa, Lashio, Taungoo, and Myeik.
Network International School is a British Curriculum International School in Yangon, Myanmar. When formed in 1996 by Carole and U. Kyaing, from England and Myanmar, respectively, it was the very first of its kind in Yangon, established as a response to an increased need for secondary schools within the Yangon area.
Myanmar International School. Myanmar International School (MIS) is an independent coeducational day school, (Nursery school to Year 13) located in Yangon, Myanmar.It is one of 18 international schools located in Yangon and should not be confused with other similarly named international schools in Myanmar, such as MISY.
St. Paul's High School in the early 1900s. The school was founded as St. Paul's English High School by the De La Salle Brothers, a Roman Catholic order in August 1860, [2] eight years after the British had annexed Yangon and all of Lower Myanmar.
(This led to the First Yangon University Strike in December 1920. The event is still celebrated annually as National Day.) Throughout the 1920s, the nationalist Burmese set up a parallel education system of national schools throughout the country. In 1929, Ba Lwin founded the school in Yangon. He would go on to guide the school until 1953.