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La Châtaigneraie (School)

International School of Geneva at La Châtaigneraie
Ecole International de Genève, Campus de La Châtaigneraie
Ecolint logo.png
Logo of the International School of Geneva
Address
2, Ch de la Ferme
Founex, 1297
Switzerland
Coordinates 46°20′23″N 6°10′19″E / 46.339783°N 6.171806°E / 46.339783; 6.171806
Information
School type International
Founded 1908
Principals
  • David Woods (Campus & Secondary School)
  • Jennifer Armstrong (Primary)
Grades 1 to 13
Gender Mixed
Enrollment 1170
Education system PYP, IGCSE, Brevet des collèges, IB Diploma, Maturité Fédéral
Language English and French (main)
Campus La Chât
Campus size 5.5 ha (13.6 Acres)
Campus type Countryside
Houses Jura, Rhône and Alps
Colour(s) Navy Blue and White         
Athletics Football, Basketball, Golf, Tennis, Skiing, Equestrian Events, Rugby, Cross Country, Track and Field,
Mascot Hawk
Nickname La Chât
Publication Et Cetera (foundation-wide)
Newspaper La Gazette (weekly)
Alumni Norman Schwarzkopf, Indira Gandhi,
Nobel laureates Edmond H. Fischer (as an Alumnus)
Website

La Châtaigneraie (also called La Chât) is a private, international, coeducational day school. It is part of the Foundation of the International School of Geneva and offers a comprehensive education in English or French for students from age 4 to 18. Founded in 1908, La Châtaigneraie is located in Founex, Switzerland.

In 1908, Ernest Schwartz-Buys founded the Ecole Nouvelle du Léman, a coeducational school to be based upon German and English institutions. It opened its doors to girls and boys between 7 and 18 years of age, with a probable enrollment of six students in the 1908–09 school year.

In the aftermath of the Second World War, between c. 1948–49, a group of pedagogues and pastors, led by the pastor Charles Bergier, decided that the Lake Geneva area needed a Protestant school. The official request for the establishment of such a school was filed on 10 April 1953 at the Office of Education in Lausanne. The following month the "Foundation for the creation of a Romand Protestant College" purchased the site of La Châtaigneraie from Mr Schwartz. The inaugural ceremony for this new school was held on 1 May 1954, and in September of that year the school began its first official school year as the Collège Protestant Romand. Its first director was Yves de Saussure, who led the school until 1958. La Châtaigneraie's founder, Mr Schwartz, lived for ten more years following his retirement. Neptune, the school newspaper at the time, announced in its 58th edition that Mr Schwartz died on 5 July 1964, at age 84.

Initially, the new school was boys-only and boarding. It was only under the direction of Director Yves le Pin (who led the school from 1958 to 1968) that girls could attend, and then only as day students. The majority of the Collège students were Swiss — in 1969 there were 42 students who were Swiss out of a 115 overall.

In 1969 the school underwent a crisis. Following the departure Yves Le Pin, Pierre Louis Bieler took over in September 1968. By February 1969 he was forced to resign, faced with a rebellion of both faculty and students. He was succeeded by Pastor Louis Dufour in September of that year. But the crisis had caused the number of students to fall — between 1969 and 1971 there were never more than 60. As a result, in May 1971 the Collège Protestant Romand was bankrupt. Immediately, a group of parents took over the school and created the Collège International de La Châtaigneraie

Following the collapse of the Collège Protestant Romand in 1971 a group of parents took over the school and created Collège International de La Châtaigneraie, or CIC. This school continued its existence until 1973, when, under the initiative of Foundation director M. A Groenendijk, the Foundation of the International School of Geneva took over La Châtaigneraie. The school was merged with the Lycée des Nations in Bellevue and the Ecole des Nations in Pregny (both in the canton of Geneva).


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Wikipedia

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