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The American International School of Cape Town (AISCT) is a private, non-profit, co-educational institution founded in 1997. The school educates 500 students from 50 countries, ranging in age between 2 and 18 years and instructed by teachers from around the world.
School children in Cape Town. Education in South Africa is governed by two national departments, namely the Department of Basic Education (DBE), which is responsible for primary and secondary schools, and the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET), which is responsible for tertiary education and vocational training.
Sans Souci Girls' High School is a Public English medium high school for girls situated in the suburb of Newlands in Cape Town in the Western Cape province of South Africa. The school was established in 1960 [ 1 ] and was decreed by the apartheid -era South African government as whites only school.
The band is an important part of the traditional life of the school, the pipe band leads the cadet corps during parades. St Andrew's College is one of the few schools in South Africa that still trains a cadet corps. The cadet corps is attached to the First City Regiment. The school has three cultural societies whose membership is by invitation:
Bloemhof High School; Drostdy Technical High School; Hex Valley High School; Makupula Secondary School; Labori High School; La Rochelle Girls' High School; Paarl Gimnasium; Paarl Boys' High School; Kayamandi High School; Paul Roos Gymnasium; Rhenish Girls' High School; Stellenbosch High School; Klein Nederburg Secondary School
The United Herzlia Schools is an organisation that manages the delivery of separate Jewish education in Cape Town in South Africa. The most prominent school is Herzlia High School, which has over 2, 000 students. [1] The school caters to Jewish students across the religious spectrum, from Orthodox to Reform and unaffiliated. The school also ...
Tafelberg School is an English medium Grade 1–12 public school in Bothasig, Cape Town, South Africa which offers remedial activities for children with special learning needs. [2] [3] [A] The school was located in Sea Point before mid–2010. [5] As of 2014, the school accommodates its full capacity of 400 students. [6] [7]
The school moved to what is now known as the Egyptian Building in the Gardens district of Cape Town in 1841. It was decided in 1874 that the younger students should be separated from their older counterparts. The South African College was separated into the College which became the University of Cape Town and the College School. [4]