Central Agency for German Schools Abroad

The Central Agency for German Schools Abroad (German: Zentralstelle für das Auslandsschulwesen, ZfA) is an agency of the Federal Office of Administration that operates and manages schools for German children outside of Germany.[1]

Schools that are a part of the ZfA network serve children of expatriates working for offices of German multinational companies and/or who live in major centres of economic and/or political operations. Schools in some locations emphasise ties to Germany and/or Germanness while others emphasize international connections and education and promote their instruction of the English language. Many German schools in the Middle East and the Far East emphasize international education, and many schools in developing countries have German-speaking groups as the minority in their student bodies.[2] Schools attracting English-speaking and local students have websites and materials in other languages. In other parts of the world German schools are catered to local German communities.[3] Within North America many schools emphasise ties to Germany, and there are some Saturday-only programmes in operation on that continent.[2]

See also

References

  • Moore, Fiona. "The German School in London, UK: Fostering the Next Generation of National Cosmopolitans?" (Chapter 4). In: Coles, Anne and Anne-Meike Fechter. Gender and Family Among Transnational Professionals (Routledge International Studies of Women and Place). Routledge, 6 August 2012. ISBN 1134156200, 9781134156207.

Notes

  1. "Central Agency for Schools Abroad." Federal Office of Administration. Retrieved on 23 January 2015.
  2. Moore, Google Books PT90 (actual page number unstated).
  3. Moore, Google Books PT91 (actual page number unstated).
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