PhotosLocation


Lycée_André_Malraux_de_Rabat Latitude and Longitude:

33°58′12″N 6°49′36″W / 33.970080°N 6.826748°W / 33.970080; -6.826748
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lycée OSUI André Malraux
المجموعة المدرسية أندري مالرو
Location
Rue K’tama
10170 Rabat

Coordinates 33°58′12″N 6°49′36″W / 33.970080°N 6.826748°W / 33.970080; -6.826748
Information
TypeFrench International school
MottoTwo cultures, three languages
Established1997
PrincipalPierre-Jean Bertrand
GradesFrom Preschool to 12th Grade
Enrollment1,786 (2017/2018)
LanguageFrench, English, Arabic
Affiliation Mission laïque française [1]
(since 1997)
InformationOSUI School [2]
Exam Preparation French national diploma, Baccalauréat, OIB (Arabic)
Languages taught French, Arabic, English, Spanish
Language CertificationsEnglish ( Cambridge English), Spanish ( DELE)
ParticularitiesThree-language classes starting from the second year of Nursery school (French, English, Arabic)
Website lyceemalraux-rabat.org

The Lycée André Malraux ( Arabic: المجموعة المدرسية أندري مالرو) is a French international school in Rabat, Morocco. It was established in 1997 [3] and is part of the Mission laïque française OSUI network. [1] It serves levels maternelle (preschool) through terminale, the final year of lycée (senior high school) and it allows French, English and Arabic languages learning [4] from preschool for all children. [5] As of 2017 the school has about 1,800 students that range in age from 3 to 18 [1] in two different campuses. [6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Deberre, Jean-Christophe (publication manager); Bur, Michel (editorial manager); Buclon, Aude (coordination); Oukkal, Alexis (graphic design) (2017). Directory of schools - Mission laïque française OSUI 2017/2018 (pdf). Mission laïque française. p. 145. ISSN  2260-8605.
  2. ^ The Office scolaire et universitaire international (OSUI) is the administrator of the school, fully run by it in terms of administration, teaching and finances.
  3. ^ Thévenin, André (2002). La Mission laïque française à travers son histoire : 1902-2002 (pdf) (in French). Mission laïque française. p. 237.
  4. ^ Robertson, Sarah (2015). "Learned Perceptions of the Lycée Descartes and the École André Malraux". Transnational Education Systems In Morocco: How Language Of Instruction Shapes Identity (ISP). SIT Study Abroad. pp. 32–34. Retrieved 12 May 2018.
  5. ^ Lemaître, Aurélie (14 April 2018). "Mission laïque française : La laïcité comme pédagogie". Ouest-France (in French). Retrieved 12 May 2018.
  6. ^ "Mission française : L'Osui modernise son réseau". L'Économiste (in French). 25 February 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2018.

External links