Miina Härma Gymnasium

Miina Härma Gymnasium
Miina Härma Gümnaasium
Address
Jaan Tõnissoni 3
Tartu, Tartu County, 50409
Estonia
Coordinates 58°22′36″N 26°42′32″E / 58.37667°N 26.70889°E / 58.37667; 26.70889Coordinates: 58°22′36″N 26°42′32″E / 58.37667°N 26.70889°E / 58.37667; 26.70889
Information
School type State-funded, secondary school
Established 1906
Founder ENKS
Status Open
Director Ene Tannberg
Grades 1-12
Language Estonian, English
Newspaper Tabula Rasa
Website mhg.tartu.ee

Miina Härma Gymnasium (Estonian: Miina Härma Gümnaasium; abbreviated as MHG) is an institution composed of a secondary school and a primary school in Tartu, Estonia. The school holds a special emphasis on languages. Miina Härma Gymnasium is an IB World School offering the Diploma Programme and the Primary Years Programme, and a candidate school for the Middle Years Programme.[1]

Oskar Kallas, one of the schools founders and its first director.

History

After the Estonian national awakening had ended the estonian people were still left under the supremacy of german language and culture. This meant that the upper class mostly spoke german. The first generation of estonian intellectuals, who were mostly men, didn’t stop using estonian language but they married german women. This meant that the domestic language was usually german, which lead to their offsprings preferring it to estonian.

In the beginning of the 20th century estonian intellectuals such as Jakob Hurt, Oskar Kallas, Jaan Tõnisson and many others decided to tackle the problem by founding a secondary school for girls. In order to obtain a permission to do that an association had to be started. This association was established in the year 1906 and named the Estonian Youth Education Association (Estonian: Eesti Noorsoo Kasvatuse Selts; abbreviated as ENKS). The opening ceremony for the school was held on 1st september 1906 by the Julian calendar and it was named Estonian Youth Education Association’s secondary school for girls. Its first director was Oskar Kallas.[1]

School building

Despite having the plan to build their own school house from the start Miina Härma Gymnasium spent its early years moving from place to place. It was caused by the unanticipated costs of building a suitable school building and political conflicts. A contest was run in Finland to design a suitable building for the school, but the winning design turned out to be too costly. Thus, it was adjusted by engineers Aleksander Raudsepp and Fromhold Kangro to fit the budget of financiers.

The cornerstone of the school house was installed on 1st June 1914. A year later the school building was complete, but the school was unable to move in due to the beginning of World War I. Instead of letting the school to move in the authorities decided to place there Austrian prisoners of war. In the year 1917 it was occupied by a military hospital. A year later the German military took possession of the building. Shortly after the communists did the same. It was only in the year of 1921 that the school was finally able to move into its designated building.

Since the school operated several years without a building of its own, it had to rent rooms in a number of places. The first year was spent in 24 Jaani St. after which they moved to 74 Tiigi St. In spite of the unfavorable conditions for studying the school operated there until the year 1915. The school was moved out of there in hopes of finally moving into its newly built school house. Alas, they could not do that. The school found shelter in the commercial school of 6 Fortuuna St., the business school of H. Margens and 12 Holmi St. In the year 1919 the whole school moved to the Hugo Treffner Gymnasium building in the Rüütli St. Finally in the year 1921 they succeeded in moving into their own school building.[1]

Curriculum

Miina Härma Gymnasium serves students from form 1 to 12. Students enter based on an entrance exam, which is taken in the spring of each year. Students who have reached the final round in a national olympiad are not required to take the entrance test.

Altho the school has aptitude in languages it still lets students pick from four departments: social, humanities, life sciences and IB programme. The choice of departments starts to matter from the 11th form. In addition the school provides a wide variety of extracurricular activities such as choir and folk dancing.[2][3]

International Studies

Together with the Ministry of Education and Research and Tartu City Government, Miina Härma Gümnaasium is preparing to implement the continuum of International Baccalaureate programmes [4](Primary Years, Middle Years and Diploma) to serve the educational needs of children who temporarily visit Tartu and neighbouring counties due to their parents' mobility. Implementing the IBO programmes takes a couple of years of preparatory work, at the end of which the school is officially authorised by the IBO.

Miina Härma Gümnaasium has gained authorisation to teach the Diploma Programme (for students aged 16-19) and the Primary Years Programme (for students aged 7-11). They are in the candidacy phase for the Middle Years Programme, estimated time of authorisation is in 2018. In the academic year 2016/17, MYP grades 1-2 are opened, in the academic year MYP grades 3-4 follow. No tuition fee is charged in the IB Programmes, in the candidacy phase the implementation of the IB pedagogy in in process.[5]

Newspaper

Throughout the years Miina Härma Gymnasium has had several different newspapers. The first was published from 1929 to 1940 and was named “karuohakas” after Hans Karu, the school’s headmaster during that period. It spoke of the life in school, country’s history and students’ creative works. In the year 1996 the newspaper “Härmakakk” was published.

The current newspaper Tabula Rasa came to be in the year 1998. It means clean slate in Latin. The first publication won the prize of best school newspaper in Estonia. In the following years it has also won many other prizes.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Tannberg (2006). Sajandi Kool. Tartu: Miina Härma Gymnasium. ISBN 978-9949-13-693-3.
  2. janar.haidak. "Curriculum". mhg.tartu.ee (in Estonian). Retrieved 2017-06-13.
  3. janar.haidak. "Miina Härma Gümnaasiumi 10. klassi vastuvõtt". mhg.tartu.ee (in Estonian). Retrieved 2017-06-13.
  4. "International Baccalaureate". Wikipedia. 2017-06-11.
  5. janar.haidak. "International Studies". mhg.tartu.ee (in Estonian). Retrieved 2017-06-13.
  6. Administrator. "Kooli leht Tabula Rasa". mhg.tartu.ee (in Estonian). Retrieved 2017-06-13.
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