Lycée français international Louis-Massignon

The Lycée français international Louis-Massignon, previously Groupe Scolaire Louis Massignon, (Arabic: ثانوية لويس ماسينيون) is a French international school in Casablanca, Morocco. It was established in 1996[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 4,400 students range from 3 to 18 years[1] in four different campuses: Bouskoura, Aïn Sebaâ, Mers Sultan, Val d'Anfa.[6]

Lycée français international Louis-Massignon
ثانوية لويس ماسينيون
Location
Lycée français international Louis-Massignon
Lycée français international Louis-Massignon
Lycée français international Louis-Massignon
B.P. 6 Bouskoura Ville Verte
CP 27182 Casablanca

Coordinates33.478702°N 7.620388°W / 33.478702; -7.620388
Information
TypeFrench International school
MottoTwo cultures, three languages
Established1996
PrincipalCatherine Bellus
GradesFrom Preschool to 12th Grade
Enrollment4,359 (2017/2018)
Medium of languageFrench, English, Arabic
AffiliationMission laïque française[1]
(since 1996)
InformationOSUI School[2]
Exam PreparationFrench national diploma, Baccalauréat, OIB (Arabic)
Languages taughtFrench, Arabic, English, Spanish
Language CertificationsEnglish (Cambridge English), Spanish (DELE)
ParticularitiesThree-language classes starting from the second year of Nursery school (French, English, Arabic)
Websitelyceemassignon.com

See also

References

  1. 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. 137. 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. pp. 236–237.
  4. Robertson, Sarah (2015). Transnational Education Systems In Morocco: How Language Of Instruction Shapes Identity (ISP). SIT Study Abroad. 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.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.