Lycée Janson de Sailly
The Janson de Sailly is one of the major Parisian high schools with approximately 3100 students and 350 teachers.
History
The Paris prosecutor Alexandre François Janson de Sailly Emmanuel (1785-1829) donated in his will all his property to the State, for the purchase of 3.5 acres of land and the construction of a high school. This was however only built in 1880 in the district of Passy (106, rue de la Pompe, 16 Arrdt. ). Victor Hugo gave a speech at the opening of the high school. Some years later, girls were taken.
Building
The school is divided into three parts: the collège and lycée that. In the third part are the administration, the library and the cafeteria.
The buildings will be renovated by 2008. In addition, new classrooms arise.
Lessons
In Janson, one can choose as a second language German or English as a first foreign language, German, English, Spanish, Italian, Russian or Chinese.
Latin, Ancient Greek and art history can be learned as electives.
There is a ABIBAC section and a bilingual German branch where an annual student exchange (for the 4 °) with the Max - Planck -Gymnasium in Dortmund and a trip to Berlin will be organized ( for T °).
Students must choose for her high school diploma ( baccalauréat ) a focus: In Janson can I take the scientific ( six classes), the economic ( three classes) or the literary (a class ) baccalauréat.
One can find all the preparatory classes for secondary schools ( prépas ): the literary (AL and BL), the scientific ( MPSI, PCSI, MP, PC, PSI and BCPST ) and economic (ECS and ECE).
Management
In Janson, there is a proviseur (Director ), which works with three deputies (one for grades 6 °, 5 °, 4 ° and 3 °, which the classes corresponds to 6 °, 7 °, 8 ° and 9 ° in Germany; one for grades 2 °, 1 ° and T °, corresponding to the classes, 10 °, 11 ° and 12 ° and 13 ° in Germany and one for the prépas ).
Former classmates
As with other traditional Parisian high schools, many former students have taken after the completion of the way through the school preparatory classes ( prépa ) to one of the elite high schools and came after a government service. This list is sorted alphabetically, but can be through identification of each birth cohort recognize the flowering periods of the school:
- Bernard and Jacques Attali (* both 1943)
- Jean -Louis Bianco ( born 1943 )
- Vincent Bolloré ( b. 1952 )
- Jean -Louis Borloo ( born 1951 )
- Élie Cartan (1869-1951)
- Pierre Daninos (1913-2005)
- Serge Dassault ( born 1925 )
- Alain Decaux (* 1925)
- Michel Déon (* 1919)
- Jean -Paul Enthoven ( b. 1949 )
- Henri Honoré d' Estienne d' Orves (1901-1941)
- Laurent Fabius ( born 1946 )
- Edgar Faure (1908-1988)
- Jacques- Napoléon - Biguet Faure (1893-1954)
- Jean -Michel Frank (1895-1941)
- François Furet (1927-1997)
- Jean Gabin (1904-1976)
- Roland Garros (1888-1918)
- José Giovanni (1923-2004)
- Valéry Giscard d' Estaing (* 1926)
- Julien Green (1900-1998)
- Sacha Guitry (1885-1957)
- Lionel Jospin (* 1937)
- Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta ( born in 1945 )
- Michel Leiris (1901-1990)
- Claude Lévi -Strauss (1908-2009)
- Roger Martin du Gard (1881-1958)
- Lennart Meri (1929-2006)
- Maurice Merleau -Ponty (1908-1961)
- Frédéric Mitterrand ( b. 1947 )
- Henry de Montherlant (1895-1972)
- Philippe Noiret (1930-2006)
- Gérard Oury (1919-2006)
- Matthieu Ricard ( b. 1946 )
- Mohammed Zahir Shah (1914-2007)
- Maurice Schumann (1911-1998)
- Ernest- Antoine Seillière ( b. 1937 )
- Jean -Jacques Servan-Schreiber (1924-2006)
- George Steiner ( born 1929 )
- Romain Zaleski (* 1933)
Footnotes
48.8653555555562.2798888888889Koordinaten: 48 ° 51 ' 55 " N, 2 ° 16' 48" E
- School in Paris
- School by Person
- 16th Arrondissement (Paris)