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As of March 2007, the school had more than 1,075 students, about 50%–60% of them being French citizens and the remainder Americans or incoming students from over 54 nations. [ 1 ] It is composed of the following campuses:
Despite this, a survey conducted on the French immersion program shows that a majority of the teachers in the immersion program support integration of Cajun culture and Louisiana French into the curriculum, with 69% saying yes to teaching Cajun or Louisiana French into the curriculum, and 72% for Franco-Louisianan cultural aspect relating to ...
Lycée Français de la Nouvelle-Orléans (LFNO) is a type II charter school, [1] and French international school in New Orleans, Louisiana. As of 2021 [update] (2020-2021 school year) it serves Pre-Kindergarten through grade 10 and will add a new grade level each school year until it is a full PK-12 school. [ 2 ]
Louisiana students this year achieved the highest scores under the current 150-point system. The 2024 school performance score of 80.2 improved by nearly two points from the previous year, a 78.5 ...
Louisiana could begin paying for any student, rich or poor, to attend private schools as momentum for legislation creating education savings accounts builds in both the state House and Senate to ...
The International School of Los Angeles (French: Lycée International de Los Angeles, LILA) is a private, international school for students aged 4 to 18. [1] The International School of Los Angeles holds accreditation by the French Ministry of Education, the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, and the International Baccalaureate.
Los Angeles with a French touch Council for the Development of French in Louisiana – a state agency. Oral History of French Canadians in Franklin County, New York and of a small sawmill and logging community in the Northern New York State populated by French Canadians
The approach to revitalization is somewhat controversial as many French Louisianians argue the prioritization of Standard French education deprioritizes Louisianisms. [ 20 ] For many, being a descendant of the Gens de couleur libres is an identity marker specific to Creoles of color. [ 18 ]