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Arusha Secondary School is a secondary school in Arusha, Tanzania, the first school in Tanzania to be headed by a Tanzanian woman educated in the United States. [ 1 ] In 2018 the school had 800 female students.
Zappeion - Established in 1875, it was a school for girls catering to the Greek population. Ayşe Sıdıka Hanım [ tr ] , an ethnic Turk, attended this school. Johann Strauss, author of "Language and power in the late Ottoman Empire," described it as "prestigious".
Arusha Secondary School; E. Eastern and Southern African Management Institute This page was last edited on 11 February 2024, at 23:24 (UTC). ...
Turkey portal; List of schools in the Ottoman Empire; Istanbul Japanese School (not a high school) This page was last edited on 4 December 2024, at 16:49 (UTC). Text ...
Private schools in Turkey (1 C, 14 P) R. Religious schools in Turkey (1 C) S. Turkish schoolteachers (1 C, 89 P)
The School of St. Jude is a charity-funded school located in the city of Arusha, in the northern Arusha Region of Tanzania. With its three campuses, the school provides free primary and secondary education to children in the Arusha Region. It also provides board for over 1,000 students and employs over 270 local Tanzanian staff members.
Schools are open 5 days a week, but all children have a half day on Wednesdays (ending at noon). At the end of primary school, in group 8, schools advise on secondary school choice. Most schools use a national test to support this advice, for instance the 'Citotoets', a test developed by the Central Institute for Test development.
In 1923–24, there were in Turkey, slightly more than 7,000 secondary school students, almost 3,000 high school students, some 2,000 technical school students and officially 18,000 medrese students of whom 6,000 are claimed to be actual students and the rest who registered to be excluded from military service. [11]