Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The International School of San Francisco (San Francisco) Media in category "French international schools in the United States" This category contains only the following file.
The Société Honoraire de Français (French National Honor Society) is an organization whose intent is to recognize high school students in the United States who have maintained excellent grades in at least three semesters of French language courses; this is done by induction into the organization.
French-American School, or a variation in English or French, may refer to one of several schools in the United States that provide a French and American education: L'École Française du Maine, Freeport, Maine; The French American International School (Portland, Oregon) in Portland, Oregon
San Diego Unified School District is the school district that serves the majority of San Diego. The district includes 121 elementary schools, 24 middle schools, 21 high schools, and 2 atypical schools. In the northern part of the city, Poway Unified School District and San Dieguito Union High School District are districts outside city limits ...
The International School of San Francisco (formerly known as French American International School) is an independent co-educational PK2–Grade 12 school in San Francisco, California, U.S. The lower and middle schools both follow a bilingual curriculum in French and English.
The school is home to one of thirty FIRST Robotics Competition teams in San Diego County. The school's team is named The Holy Cows. [3] Starting in 2011, High Tech High's The Holy Cows and Francis Parker School's W.A.R. Lords (We Are Robot Lords) began hosting an off-season FIRST Robotics Competition.
The school was founded in 1967 by Claude Lambert and Claude Reboul [3] as Lycée Français la Pérouse and was originally a satellite campus of the French American International School. The French School of Marin merged with the LFSF in 1986. [2] LFSF alumni include children of musicians, artists and actors, children of the ambassadorial and ...
In July 1996 the school district's board of directors formally accepted the donation, totaling $10,000. [6] School offices were located in a separate area. [7] Several students, as of 1997, had parents who worked for the San Diego area Sony offices and other Japanese companies. [8] In 2015 the school began holding its classes at Madison High. [2]