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Namib High School (1913–1918: Städtische Realschule mit Grundschule, 1919–1929: Swakopmund Primary School, 1930–1945: Reformrealgymnasium, 1946–1975: Swakopmund High School, 1976–1980: Deutsche Schule Swakopmund, 1981–1997: Deutsche Oberschule Swakopmund), Swakopmund, Erongo Region [46]
Secondary School Swakopmund is a school in Swakopmund in the Erongo Region of central Namibia.Established in 1967 It is one of the oldest schools in Erongo Region. [1]The school taught in German and Afrikaans before Namibian Independence but has since changed to English as the medium of instruction.
Marja Ilmatar Väisälä (9 May 1916, Helsinki, Finland [1] – 21 December 2011, Turku) was a Finnish teacher of mathematics and natural sciences, who in 1950 founded a private school in Swakopmund in what is now Namibia, where she taught the children of Finnish missionaries.
Aerial view of Namib High School (2017) Namib High School is a secondary government school in Swakopmund, Namibia.It has 640 learners and 28 teachers. [1] Founded as Städtische Realschule mit Grundschule (Municipal High School with Primary School) during the colonial time of German South-West Africa in 1913 it is one of the oldest schools in Namibia.
She presently works at Private School Swakopmund where she teaches English to Grade 9 & 10 Students. De Voss is the director of Sister Namibia, a feminist organisation and publisher of an eponymous magazine (first published in 1989), based in Windhoek. [4] [5] De Voss has also been a guest speaker at the University of Namibia in Windhoek. [6]
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Finnish missionary children went to school in Swakopmund since 1945. As soon as the construction of the Vineta neighbourhood began, a school building for the Finnish Private School was built in Vineta. The school operated there from 1950 to 1989 excluding the school year 1986–87. The school had grades 1–9.
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