Deaconal Folk High School

Deaconal Folk High School
Diakonhøjskolen
Type Folk High School
Established 1920s
Dean Jens Maibom Pedersen(2015)
Administrative staff
30
Students 150
Location Aarhus, Denmark
Website http://www.diakonhojskolen.dk/

Deaconal Folk High School (Danish: Diakonhoejskolen) is a school and university college in Højbjerg, a southern district of Aarhus, Jutland, Denmark.[1] The school offers a 4-year bachelor's degree programme in Diaconia and Social Pedagogy. The education produces deaconal personnel, which in a modern Danish context are church-related social workers. Deacons educated in Denmark are lay people. Graduates from the Deaconal Folk High School often get jobs in NGOs, such as the YMCA and YWCA social programmes, as well as state-based institutions and projects.[2]

The Deaconal Folk High School is based on the values and creed of the Danish National Church, which is episcopal evangelical Lutheran. However, respect and dialogue is highly valued with regard to students of other denominations who attend the school.[3]

The school also runs a 3-month course for international students. The course aims to equip students be able to initiate, monitor and evaluate development projects and to raise awareness of social and development issues in church and society.

History

The school dates from the 1920s and has eventually evolved from educating deacons for the nursing sector to providing training in different fields of social work——taking care of people with drug addictions, the mentally challenged, children and adults with special physical and/or mental needs.

References

  1. "Location" (in Danish). Diakonhøjskolen. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  2. "Bekendtgørelse om uddannelsen til professionsbachelor i diakoni og socialpædagogik" (in Danish). Retsinformation. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  3. "School" (in Danish). Diakonhøjskolen. Retrieved 29 August 2015.

External links

Coordinates: 56°06′37″N 10°12′10″E / 56.11028°N 10.20278°E / 56.11028; 10.20278

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, August 30, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.