Middelbare Technische School (Haarlem)
The Middelbare Technische School is a former MTS middelbare school on the Verspronckweg, Haarlem, The 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.
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 |
History
It was this school that had such a difficult time during World War II because it was run by National Socialists. 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 was 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.
Sterren College
The Sterren College school offers vmbo schooling today at a new location on the Badminton pad in Haarlem.
References
- A public (openbare) school in the Netherlands is a school which receives only state funding, as opposed to special schools, which often receive religious funding too. See also: Schoolstrijd
- Deugd boven geweld, Een geschiedenis van Haarlem, 1245-1995, edited by Gineke van der Ree-Scholtens, 1995, ISBN 90-6550-504-0, p555