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French School in Gothenburg

Education in GothenburgSchools in Sweden

French School in Gothenburg (Swedish: Franska skolan Göteborg or French: L'école Francais de Göteborg) was founded in 1992 in Gothenburg by Medborgarskolan. The reason was the influx of families from France, after a collaboration between the automobile manufactures Volvo and Renault started. The school is located in the district of Landala. The school offers classes from kindergarten to ninth grade. And the premises are situated in Viktor Rydbergsgatan and Landalagången. School profile is French. It does not mean that all the lessons are in French but that the students have French lessons from their first class. The school's headmistress is called Ellenore Sinclair. The school offers CNED. Franska Skolan GbG also has a song based on the famous song ‘Les Champs-Élysées’ this is how it goes: A franska Skolan padadadada; A franska Skolan padadadada; Från Paris till Göteborg från Asien till Afrika det finns nåt för allas smak på franska skolan. (The song is longer)

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article French School in Gothenburg (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

French School in Gothenburg
Landalagången, Gothenburg Landala (Centrum)

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N 57.6927 ° E 11.9711 °
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Franska skolan i Göteborg

Landalagången
400 15 Gothenburg, Landala (Centrum)
Sweden
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Hvitfeldtska gymnasiet
Hvitfeldtska gymnasiet

Hvitfeldtska Gymnasiet, the "Hvitfeldtska High School" (gymnasium), is in central Gothenburg, Sweden. The school was founded in 1647 by Queen Kristina and is the largest in Gothenburg. It was originally called "Göteborgs gymnasium" and later known as "Göteborgs högre latinläroverk" before being named after its benefactress, the Norwegian-Swedish noblewoman Margareta Hvitfeldt (1608–1683), who left the larger part of her estate to the school. Hvitfeldtska has a sister school in Nairobi, Kenya: Eutychus Academy. It is typically attended by students aged 15–19 coming from all over Gothenburg, and occasionally from other Swedish regions. International student enrolment is small but significant. Because of admitting students from lower all the way through upper class, there is a high socioeconomic diversity within its student population. The school runs a variety of student clubs. It serves as one of the limited number of exam centres in Sweden for the SAT, ACT, and Oxbridge admission tests. Annually, some Hvitfeldtska students (also called Hvitfeldtare) get accepted to top summer schools and universities worldwide, and represent Sweden in international competitions. Hvitfeldtska Gymnasiet is known for the events that occurred there during the Gothenburg riots of the EU summit of 2001. This did not involve the staff or the students as such, since, in the summer holidays, the school buildings were used for housing the participants of a youth convent. The school is divided into three buildings: northern (the main building), western and southern. The library is in the southern building.