German Embassy School Tehran

German Embassy School Tehran (German: Deutsche Botschaftsschule Teheran, DBST) is a German international school in Tehran.[1] The school serves kindergarten through Sekundarstufe II (senior high school).[2] There is a nursery through class 8 international section.[3]

German Embassy School Tehran
Address
German Embassy School Tehran
German Embassy School Tehran
Shariati, under the Sadr Bridge Shahid Keshani St. (Mahale Darbdowom) Tehran/Iran


Iran
Coordinates
Information
Websitedbst.ir

It shares its campus with the former The British School, Tehran (BST).[4] After the BST's closure in 2011, the DBST acquired the BST's assets and established an international section operating in the former BST campus.[5]

History

The first German School in Tehran opened in 1907. It closed in World War II but reopened in 1955.[6] In the 1960s it moved from the center of Tehran to Gholhak, Yakhchal Street. There it grew to become the largest German School abroad with a max of 1,800 school children in the School year 1978-1979. In 1975 the school established a bilingual German-Persian section for dual German-Iranian students. This German school operated until spring 1980, when the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran closed it due to a ban on schools for foreigners.[6]

The negotiations between the German Embassy and the responsible authorities dragged along, until the "German Embassy School" had been established in September 1980.[7] So, the German School transitioned smoothly into the German Embassy School, situated also in Gholhak, in Eslamieh Street, a premise where the Tehran office of DAAD is still operating today. In the 1990s the German Embassy School moved from this place to the Residence of the British Embassy on Shariati Avenue. In 2011 the school had to be closed for security reasons for a few days after the 2011 attack on the British Embassy in Iran occurred. Some windows of the buildings of the German school were shattered during the siege.[8]

The British School was closed after the attacks and the German Embassy School continued the school service for the children of the former British School by offering them the concept based on the German curriculum for European Schools.

gollark: Thus, ☭ bad.
gollark: Nobody except you is mentioning Jews or whatever, komrad.
gollark: Some physicist.
gollark: I don't think that's how de Broglie waves work. The wavelengths of those are too ridiculously tiny to be significant outside of quantum mechanics.
gollark: I must note that the "17gb of info" was mostly random unexplained PDFs and images.

See also

References

  1. "Contact Us Archived 2015-03-13 at the Wayback Machine." German Embassy School Tehran. Retrieved on 23 March 2015. "German Embassy School Tehran Shariati, under the Sadr Bridge Shahid Keshani St. (Mahale Darbdowom) Tehran/Iran" - Address in German Archived 2015-02-19 at the Wayback Machine: "Deutsche Botschaftsschule Teheran Shariati, unter der Sadr Brücke Shahid Keshani Str. (Mahale Darbdowom) Teheran/Iran."
  2. "sekundarstufeII Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine." German Embassy School Tehran. Retrieved on 23 March 2015.
  3. "International Section." German Embassy School Tehran. Retrieved on September 22, 2016.
  4. "Facilities" (). The British School, Tehran. Retrieved on 23 March 2015.
  5. "To the Friends, Staff, Parents and Children of the British School, Tehran," (). British School of Tehran. April 28, 2012. Retrieved on September 17, 2015.
  6. "Geschichte." German Embassy School Tehran. Retrieved on September 22, 2016.
  7. " Deutsch-Iranische Kulturbeziehungen - Kulturmittler" (Archive). German Embassy of Tehran. Retrieved on September 18, 2015.
  8. Ya'ar, Chana. "International Schools Close in Tehran" (Archive). Arutz Sheva (Israel National News). 12 June 2011. Retrieved on 16 September 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.