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What foreign parents really think about German schools

Rachel Loxton
Rachel Loxton - rachel.loxton@thelocal.com
What foreign parents really think about German schools
Pupils at a secondary school in Heitersheim, Baden-Württemberg. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Philipp von Ditfurth

It can be tricky for foreign parents in Germany to navigate the school system. We asked The Local readers to share their experiences.

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Comments (3)

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steve
It's very difficult for kids here unless they begin early. The teachers at some schools are almost oblivious as to how long it takes to learn the German language. They expect the kids to understand everything in "months". All I can say is if your child is going to a public German school, take some time with them every evening to talk about school, what's going on, and to practise their language skills.
Anonymous
I see no mention at the article on Gesamtschule (which mixes Realschule and Gymnasium until class 10). Specially for people that comes with older kids or teens (older then 10 or 12), this provides a good alternative: you can integrate into a public German school, learn the language, learn the other subjects, and still find your way to the Abitur. The level of German proficiency that gymnasiums expect is _very_ hard for a kind that learned German 1 year ago. Also, I must say that I also find this split between students when they are 10/11 years awful.
Anonymous
This is a much nicer review than what I have actually heard from my fellow foreigners- I think we all understand that German schools are great, educationally, but the way they split out kids young is very difficult on the children. German schools are a lot of pressure, with very little focus on the social emotional parts of growing up. I want my children to grow up as decent humans, not just well educated robots. I have seen children yelled at for writing a letter or a number top to bottom instead of bottom to top- you can't see the difference once it's done. They squash creativity out of the children from a young age and their methods are antiquated. Will they be well educated? Yes, but at what cost?

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