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Green Land Pré Vert International School (GPIS) (English: Greenland International Schools), (French: Écoles Internationales du Pré Vert) is a school in Egypt offering International Baccalaureate (IB) programs in both English and French for students from kindergarten through 12th grade. The school was founded in 1994.
The little Danes experiment, also known simply as the experiment (Danish: eksperimentet), was a 1951 Danish operation where 22 Greenlandic Inuit children (known as "experiment children"; Danish: eksperimentbørn) were sent to Danish foster families in an attempt to re-educate them as "little Danes". [1]
Education in Greenland is controlled by the Greenlandic Department of Education. [1] Danish is taught as a second language starting in the first grade. [2] Following primary school, Greenlanders can choose to go to a secondary education, either in a gymnasium (a Nordic type of school similar to high school), or a vocational education. [3]
TIL Greenland is portrayed about 14x larger than its actual size on most maps. ... TIL the average high-school graduate will earn about $1 million less over their lifetime than the average four ...
The public school system in Greenland is, as in Denmark, under the jurisdiction of the municipalities: they are therefore municipal schools. The legislature specifies the standards allowed for the content in schools, but the municipal governments decide how the schools under their responsibility are run.
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -Greenland Prime Minister Mute Egede said on Monday the country is looking to strengthen its defence and mining ties with the United States, albeit on its own terms, following ...
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - U.S. President-elect Donald Trump says he wants to make Greenland a part of the United States and does not rule out using military or economic power to get Denmark to hand ...
Aasiaat saw much growth in the first half of the 20th century. In 1932, the town opened the first school in the country which allowed women to obtain secondary education. One of its first graduates was the first woman novelist of Greenland, Mâliâraq Vebæk, who was valedictorian of her graduating class in 1934. [4] [5]