Haagaas School

Private gymnasium school in Oslo, Norway
59°55′07″N 10°43′01″E / 59.9185°N 10.7169°E / 59.9185; 10.7169InformationSchool typePrivate gymnasiumFounded1915FounderTheodor HaagaasClosed1955HeadmasterTheodor HaagaasEmployees20 (1946)[1]Age range16–19Number of students127 (1946)[1]LanguageNorwegianCampusUrban

The Haagaas School (Norwegian: Haagaas Artiumskursus, informally also Haagaas skole, Haagaas private gymnas or Haagaas' studentfabrikk), or simply Haagaas, was a private gymnasium in Oslo, that existed from 1915 to 1955. It was located in Niels Juels gate 52 at Frogner, in the same building as Frogner School. The school's founder, owner and headmaster until his retirement in 1946 was Theodor Haagaas. The school was a so-called "student factory" (studentfabrikk), offering a fast track to the examen artium (university entrance exam), in the tradition of the Heltberg School of the 19th century, and was considered the "new Heltberg."[2] As of 1946, the school had 20 teachers, five classes and 127 students, and was entirely funded by tuition.[1]

Alumni

References

  1. ^ a b c Skolestatistikk 1945–46, pp. 74–75, Norges offisielle statistikk X. 189, Ministry of Education, 1949
  2. ^ Jørgensen, Mosse (1997). "Haagaas Artiumskursus". Skoler jeg møtte. Pedagogisk psykologisk forlag. pp. 42–51. ISBN 8277670591.