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  2. Frederik II Upper Secondary School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederik_II_Upper...

    Frederik II Videregående skole is the name of an upper secondary school located in the Norwegian city of Fredrikstad. The school is named after the Danish-Norwegian king Frederik II (1534-1588). The school is, with more than 1,200 students, one of the largest schools of its kind in Norway.

  3. List of schools in Norway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_schools_in_Norway

    Schools in Norway are usually divided into the following categories: elementary schools (barneskole) for 1st to 7th grade, lower secondary schools (ungdomsskole) for 8th to 10th grade, upper secondary schools (videregående skole) for 11th to 13th grade, colleges (høgskole), and universities (universitet).

  4. 2024 Norwegian Fourth Division - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Norwegian_Fourth_Division

    The 2024 season of the 4. divisjon, the fifth highest association football league for men in Norway. For the first time since covid-19 interrupted the league, all districts employed a regular round-robin tournament, with Nordland being the last to revert from a regular/playoff format.

  5. Fredrikstad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fredrikstad

    Fredrikstad was founded by citizens of Sarpsborg and both the fortress and the bear are taken from the old arms of Sarpsborg. The composition of the seal was also used as arms since the beginning of the 19th century. The new arms were granted at the 400th anniversary of the city in 1967 and show a more modern variation on the fortress and bear. [4]

  6. Hald International Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hald_International_Center

    Hald International Center (Norwegian: Hald internasjonale senter) is a vocational school offering courses in cross-cultural understanding and international work.The school is owned by the Strømme Foundation, the Norwegian Missionary Society, and the Norwegian Christian Student and School Association, which each have their own exchange program.

  7. Skagerak International School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skagerak_International_School

    The schools’ population is made up of a mix of Norwegian students, those who have lived overseas, and students with a variety of other nationalities. [2] Although English is the language of instruction, students are, or become, bilingual and several additional languages are offered in the middle and high schools.

  8. Fredrikstad IF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fredrikstad_IF

    Fredrikstad Idrettsforening is a Norwegian athletics club from Fredrikstad, founded on 4 September 1896. As a stadium the club uses the Sentralidrettsanlegget in Lisleby, a borough of Fredrikstad. They hosted the Norwegian athletics championships in 2003. Its most prominent members are Mette Bergmann and Tor Øivind Ødegård.

  9. Lycée Français René Cassin d'Oslo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycée_Français_René...

    The school originated from the Vestheim School (Vestheim skole), founded by five people in 1891: Frederik Fredriksen, Nils Grøterud, Wilhelm Myhre, Hans H. K. Hougen, and Ole Jacobe Skattum. In 2017 the Norwegian state gave NOK 4 million to the school because it lacked any funding to pay for new teachers and school supplies. [ 3 ]