Jump to content

Saint Maur International School

Coordinates: 35°26′7″N 139°39′9″E / 35.43528°N 139.65250°E / 35.43528; 139.65250
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 173.164.194.69 (talk) at 19:53, 18 June 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Saint Maur International School
サンモール · インターナショナルスクール
Saint Maur International School Emblem
Address
Map
83 Yamate-cho

,
Japan
Coordinates35°26′7″N 139°39′9″E / 35.43528°N 139.65250°E / 35.43528; 139.65250
Information
TypePrivate, Day, College-prep
International school
MottoSimple Dans Ma Vertu, Forte Dans Mon Devoir
(Simple in virtue, steadfast in duty)
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Established1872
FoundersSisters of the Holy Infant Jesus
Head of SchoolCatherine O. Endo
Deputy Head of SchoolAnnette Levy
GradesP12
Enrollment480 (2016–17[3])
Color(s)Grey and red
Team nameCougars
AccreditationNEASC, IBO[1]
AffiliationsCIS, EARCOS, JCIS[2]
Websitestmaur.ac.jp

Saint Maur International School, established in 1872 in Yokohama within the Greater Tokyo Area, is the oldest international school in Japan. The school, which is co-educational, caters to students of all nationalities and faiths from ages 2½ through high school age. Saint Maur International School is located in a historically international district in Yokohama, Japan, one of the few places where foreigners were allowed entrance into the country during the closed – country policy of the late Edo period.

History

Established in 1872 by the missionary Sisters of the Holy Infant Jesus from the Saint Maur Rue in Paris, France, led by Mother Mathilde Raclot. Saint Maur began with "direct support received from over 15 legations, such as the United Kingdom, the United States of America, France, Austria, Holland, and Germany." Although it is a Catholic school, the school emphasizes the philosophy and approach of "acceptance of all." In 1884, the buildings were devastated by a typhoon and in 1894, an earthquake demolished the school. Its Japanese medium sister school, Futaba Gakuen (jp), was founded in 1901 for local girls. The school was closed during World War II. In 1947 Sister Carmel O’Keeffe (1918–2011) was sent to Japan to reopen the school and would serve as principal from 1967 to 1991.[4]

Campus and facilities

The Fine Arts Center consists of a 400-seat auditorium, specialist rehearsal and practice rooms for band class. In addition, the school purchased property located three minutes away from the school campus in 2003 and built an outdoor sports complex called Peverley Place.[5] A Science Center was erected and completed in February 2011, housing a chemistry lab, physics lab biology lab and general science and robotics lab. The gymnasium is currently being rebuilt with a completion date scheduled for spring 2021. This newest building will increase the available floor space and is expected to host the cafeteria and additional training and exercise rooms.

Curriculum

Saint Maur follows certain aspects of the American school system, such as age group nomenclature and academic calendar.

In addition to the Montessori Preschool, the school is subdivided into the Elementary School (Grades 1 to 5), Middle School (Grades 6 to 8) and High School (Grades 9 to 12). An Ecole Française ("French School") was opened in 2007 and is available to children from maternelle to cours moyen 2 (ages 5/6 to 10/11). The ecole also provides programs for students in middle and high school who wish to continue learning French as their primary language via the National Centre for Distance Education (CNED),.[6]

Students entering Grade 9 (first year of high school) prepare to take the IGCSE in Grade 10 and go on to the IB Diploma Programme for Grades 11 and 12. There are options to take Advanced Placement classes and the PSAT or SAT exams.[7]

Notable alumni


See also

References

  1. ^ "Directory: Saint Maur International School". International Baccalaureate Organisation.
  2. ^ "At a Glance: Accreditations & Affiliations". stmaur.ac.jp.
  3. ^ "School Profile 2015–16". Saint Maur International School (via Google Drive).
  4. ^ "Sister blazed a trail for international education". Japan Times. 1 November 2011.
  5. ^ "Campus Tour". stmaur.ac.jp.
  6. ^ "Learning: Ecole Française" (in French). stmaur.ac.jp.
  7. ^ "Learning: High School". stmaur.ac.jp.
  8. ^ http://sixthsense.jp/hana/
  9. ^ http://www.generasia.com/wiki/Kimaguren
  10. ^ "Japanese-American singer SHANTI making sound waves". Japan Today. 11 May 2011.
  11. ^ "Former TV presenter Mie Yamaguchi dead at 51". Japan Today. 9 March 2012.