Lycée Français René Cassin d'Oslo explained

Lycée Français René Cassin d'Oslo (Norwegian: '''Den Franske skolen i Oslo''') is a French international school in Oslo, Norway.[1] The school serves the levels preschool through the final year of lycée, terminale (high school).[2]

The school originated from the Vestheim School (Vestheim skole), founded by five people in 1891: Frederik Fredriksen, Nils Grøterud, Wilhelm Myhre, Hans H. K. Hougen, and Ole Jacobe Skattum.

In 2017 the Norwegian state gave NOK 4 million to the school because it lacked any funding to pay for new teachers and school supplies.[3] In 2024 the school had 673 students from 37 different countries.[4]

See also

External links

48.8481°N 2.3445°W

Notes and References

  1. "Locaux" (Archive). Lycée Français René Cassin d'Oslo. Retrieved on 23 March 2015. "Skovveien 9, 0257 Oslo"
  2. "Structure Pédagogique." Lycée Français René Cassin d'Oslo. Retrieved on 23 March 2015.
  3. " Bienvenue au 50 ème anniversaire du Lycée René Cassin d’Oslo Velkommen til det 50. jubileumet til Den Franske Skolen i Oslo" Lycée Français René Cassin d'Oslo. Retrieved on 23 March 2015. (Archive). ODP version (Archive). List of authors of the history document (Archive).
  4. Web site: 2020-07-06 . Accueil - Lycée français René Cassin d'Oslo . 2024-04-25 . lfo.no . fr-FR.