Middelbare Technische School | |
---|---|
Location | |
Verspronckweg,
Haarlem,
Netherlands | |
Information | |
Type | Public [1] Vocational school |
Motto | last housed Sterren College Haarlem |
Established | 1919 |
Staff | 82 |
Number of students | 715 |
Website | http://www.sterrencollegehaarlem.nl |
The Middelbare Technische School is a former MTS middelbare school on the Verspronckweg, Haarlem, Netherlands. It is one of the oldest public vocational schools in Haarlem, built as a boys school in 1919, which grew out of the first Ambachtsschool that was located on the Kamperstraat. [2] It currently houses one of the locations of the Sterren College.
This school that had such a difficult time during World War II because National Socialists ran it.[ clarification needed] After the war, it became the "Hoger Technische School" (HTS), and the young students were taught how to fix trams, trains, and airplanes. [2] On the Indonesian island Flores, many technical achievements were realized after being drawn and fabricated in this school. [2]
In 2010 the school and its history were one of the subjects at the Historisch Museum Haarlem's exhibition "Leren voor het Leven" (learning for life), a compilation of materials from various vocational schools in the Haarlem area.
The Sterren College school offers vmbo schooling today at a new location on the Badminton pad in Haarlem.[ clarification needed]
Middelbare Technische School | |
---|---|
Location | |
Verspronckweg,
Haarlem,
Netherlands | |
Information | |
Type | Public [1] Vocational school |
Motto | last housed Sterren College Haarlem |
Established | 1919 |
Staff | 82 |
Number of students | 715 |
Website | http://www.sterrencollegehaarlem.nl |
The Middelbare Technische School is a former MTS middelbare school on the Verspronckweg, Haarlem, Netherlands. It is one of the oldest public vocational schools in Haarlem, built as a boys school in 1919, which grew out of the first Ambachtsschool that was located on the Kamperstraat. [2] It currently houses one of the locations of the Sterren College.
This school that had such a difficult time during World War II because National Socialists ran it.[ clarification needed] After the war, it became the "Hoger Technische School" (HTS), and the young students were taught how to fix trams, trains, and airplanes. [2] On the Indonesian island Flores, many technical achievements were realized after being drawn and fabricated in this school. [2]
In 2010 the school and its history were one of the subjects at the Historisch Museum Haarlem's exhibition "Leren voor het Leven" (learning for life), a compilation of materials from various vocational schools in the Haarlem area.
The Sterren College school offers vmbo schooling today at a new location on the Badminton pad in Haarlem.[ clarification needed]