Oberprima - traduzione in Inglese
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Oberprima - traduzione in Inglese

SECONDARY SCHOOL
Realgymnasium; Gymnasia and Realgymnasia; Gymnasien; Fachgymnasium; German Gymnasium; Humanistisches Gymnasium; Humanities-oriented gymnasium (Germany); German humanities-oriented gymnasium; Humanities-oriented gymnasium; Oberprima
  • This vignette of the Arndt-Gymnasium Dahlem shows a young man studying at the left and a young man doing sports at the right; it was printed on the 2008 school programme.
  • The [[Aloisiuskolleg]]
  • The [[Kolleg St. Blasien]] in a former Benedictine monastery
  • Representation of [[Aristotle]] at the [[Joachimsthalsches Gymnasium]], a humanities-oriented gymnasium
  • Students at the Heinrich-Böll-Gymnasium (Ludwigshafen) can wear a t-shirt that says "Reading endangers stupidity" (it resembles the German warning label on cigarettes)
  • This 1961 picture shows a student standing up, to answer the teacher's question. On the wall is a Christian crucifix, then commonly found in a gymnasium classroom, but now less frequent. In 1995, a court ruled it violates the rights of non-Christian students and must be removed if any student objects.
  • Students of the Gymnasium Nonnenwerth, an all-girls school in 1960
  • Students raising their hands to indicate they know the answer, Bonn, 1988
  • Gymnasium student in crafts class, Bonn, 1988
  • Gymnasium students wearing traditional caps in 1904. Wearing them was seen not as a liability, but a privilege
  • ''Gymnasiasten'' on a skiing-trip. In many cases, the booster club covers the costs of poorer students
  • The first class of students admitted at the Gymnasium Kirchseeon (founded in 2008) gather in the assembly hall to celebrate their first day of school
  • The [[Georg-Cantor-Gymnasium]] is an all-day school founded in 1989
  • [[Berlinisches Gymnasium zum Grauen Kloster]] (1910)
  • Brass-band of the gymnasium in Gütersloh, 2006, the students are wearing traditional uniforms and caps
  • H. W. Patterson. A Ladies' Class at The German Gymnasium. 1872
  • [[Evangelical Seminaries of Maulbronn and Blaubeuren]] – church and courtyard
  • Feldkirch]]
  • Students of the Arndt-Gymnasium, standing in front of their "rowing house," baptising their new boat in 2007
  • Internat Schloss Torgelow]], a renowned private Gymnasium boarding school in [[Mecklenburg]], that leads to prestigious [[Abitur]] exams.
  • Rowing has a long tradition for many German Gymnasia: Students participating in a Regatta in Neumünster, 1959
  • These Gymnasiasts enjoy rowing on the Unterelbe in 1959

Oberprima      
n. senior high school, higher grades in an American high school

Wikipedia

Gymnasium (Germany)

Gymnasium (German pronunciation: [ɡʏmˈnaːzi̯ʊm]; German plural: Gymnasien), in the German education system, is the most advanced and highest of the three types of German secondary schools, the others being Hauptschule (lowest) and Realschule (middle). Gymnasium strongly emphasizes academic learning, comparable to the British sixth form system or with prep schools in the United States. A student attending Gymnasium is called a Gymnasiast (German plural: Gymnasiasten). In 2009/10 there were 3,094 gymnasia in Germany, with c. 2,475,000 students (about 28 percent of all precollegiate students during that period), resulting in an average student number of 800 students per school.

Gymnasia are generally public, state-funded schools, but a number of parochial and private gymnasia also exist. In 2009/10, 11.1 percent of gymnasium students attended a private gymnasium. These often charge tuition fees, though many also offer scholarships. Tuition fees are lower than in comparable European countries. Some gymnasia are boarding schools, while others run as day schools; they are now predominantly co-educational, and few single-sex schools remain.

Students are generally admitted at 10 years of age and are required to have completed four years (six in Berlin and Brandenburg where they are enrolled at the age of 12) of grundschule (primary education). In some states of Germany, permission to apply for gymnasium is nominally dependent on a letter of recommendation written by a teacher or a certain GPA, although when parents petition, an examination can be used to decide the outcome.

Traditionally, a pupil attended gymnasium for nine years in western Germany. However, since 2004, there has been a strong political movement to reduce the time spent at the gymnasium to eight years throughout Germany; nowadays most pupils throughout Germany attend the gymnasium for 8 years (referred to as G8), dispensing with the traditional ninth year or oberprima (except in Rhineland-Palatinate and Lower Saxony which still has a year 13; Bavaria will bring back the 13th year in 2024, North Rhine Westphalia and Schleswig Holstein will bring back the 13th year in 2025), which is roughly equivalent to the first year of higher education. Final year students take the abitur final exam.