Gymnazium Union of Russia
The Gymnazium Union of Russia (Russian: Гимнази́ческий Союз Росси́и) is a government-backed open network of Russian gymnaziums, lyceums and secondary schools.
The Union was introduced by Andrei Fursenko, the Russian Education Minister, on November 6, 2007, at a major conference in education held at Saint Petersburg State University.[1][2]
The Union is sponsored and broadly supported by the Russian Foundation for Education Support, a Gazprom's non-profit foundation.[3] It makes a part of the National Priority Projects and is directly supported by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev[3] and the Russian Ministry of Education.[1][3][4]
The infrastructure of the Union relies on videoconferencing and allows to hold discussion meetings between member schools, befriended universities and research institutions, and the headquarters of the Foundation for Education Support.[3]
As of early April 2008, the Union brings together about 100 schools in all seven federal Russian districts and rapidly grows.[3]
Members
[edit]- Gymnazium 2, Belgorod (profile, website)
- Lyceym 3, Stary Oskol (profile, website)
- A.M. Rudy Borisov School 1, Borisov (profile, website)
Moscow Oblast and the Federal City of Moscow
[edit]- L.S. Demin Kadetsky Korpus, Tambov-4 (profile, website)
- Michurinsk Lyceum-Boarding School, Michurinsk (profile, website)
- Saint Pitirim Gymnazium 7, Tambov (profile, website)
- Uvarovo Lyceum, Uvarovo (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 21, Arkhangelsk (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 6, Arkhangelsk (profile, website)
- Lyceum 17, Severodvinsk (profile, website)
- Severodvinsk City Gymnazium, Severodvinsk (profile)
- Yagrinskaya Gymnazium, Severodvinsk (profile, website)
- Humanities Gymnazium 8, Arkhangelsk (profile)
- M.V. Lomonosov Lyceum, Arkhangelsk (profile)
- Novodvinsk Gymnazium, Novodvinsk (profile)
- Ecological and Biological Lyceum, Arkhangelsk (profile)
- Gymnazium 22, Kaliningrad (profile, website)
- Vyborg Gymnazium, Vyborg (profile)
- Lyceum 1, Vsevolozhsk (profile, website)
- Lyceum 8, Sosnovy Bor (profile)
- Gatchina K.D. Ushinsky Gymnazium (profile, website)
- Secondary School 1, Naryan-Mar (profile)
- A.P. Pyrerki Boarding School, Naryan-Mar (profile, website)
- Lyceum 10, Velikiye Luki (profile)
- Lyceum 11, Velikiye Luki (profile, website)
- Humanities Lyceum, Pskov (profile, website)
- Izborsk Lyceum, Izborsk (profile)
- Multiprofile Law Lyceum 8, Pskov (profile, website)
- Pedagogical Lyceum, Velikiye Luki (profile)
- Pechory Gymnazium, Pechory (profile, website)
- Pechory Secondary School 2, Pechory (profile, website)
- Pskov Linguistic Gymnazium, Pskov (profile, website)
- Pskov Pedagogical Complex, Pskov (profile)
- Pskov Technical Lyceum, Pskov (profile)
- Second Saint Petersburg Gymnazium, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 41, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 11, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 513, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 528, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 622, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 107, Saint Petersburg (profile, website
- Gymnazium 295, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Lyceum 150, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Lyceum 590, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Pedagogical College 1, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Pedagogical College 8, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Saint Petersburg Marine Technical College, Saint Petersburg (profile, website)
- Kadetsky Korpus Zheleznodorozhnykh Voisk, Petergof (profile, website)
- Akademicheskaya Gimnaziya (website)
- Saint Petersburg Lyceum 239, Saint Petersburg (website)
- Girls' Humanities Gymnazium, Cherepovets (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 2, Vologda (profile, website)
- Cadets' Boarding School, Sokol (profile, website)
- Vologda Multiprofile Lyceum, Vologda (profile, website)
- Veliky Ustyug Gymnazium, Veliky Ustyug (profile, website)
- Ustyuzhna Gymnazium, Ustyuzhna (profile)
- Evrika Gymnazium, Anapa (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 6, Tikhoretsk (profile, website at the Wayback Machine (archived August 17, 2011))
- Gymnazium 25, Rostov-on-Don (profile, website)
- Bashkirsky Lyceum, Sibai (profile, website)
- Duvanski Rayon RLI, Mesyagutovo (profile, website)
- Sterlitamak Lyceum-Boarding School 2, Sterlitamak (profile, website at the Wayback Machine (archived August 20, 2011))
- Lyceum 1, Bolsheustyinskoye (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 14, Beloretsk (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 6, Novocheboksarsk (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 8, Shumerlya (profile)
- RME Urgaksh Lyceum-Boarding School, Urgaksh (profile)
- Kosmodemyansk Gymnazium, Kosmodemyansk (profile)
- Kosmodemyansk Lyceum, Kosmodemyansk (profile)
- Secondary School 9, Ust-Ilimsk (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 164, Zelenogorsk (profile, website)
- Aldan Gymnazium, Aldan (profile, website)
- Gymnazium 1, Neryungri (profile, website)
- Maya Gimnazium, Maya (profile, website
- Pokrovsk Gymnazium, Pokrovsk (profile)
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Gimnazium Union unifies professors" (in Russian). NTV Russia. 2007-11-06. Archived from the original on 2007-11-08. Retrieved 2008-02-13.
- ^ "Forum of Gimnanium Union of Russia opened in Saint Petersburg" (in Russian). Rosbalt. 2007-11-06. Archived from the original on 2012-09-08. Retrieved 2008-02-13.
- ^ a b c d e "Profile of the Gymnazium Union of Russia {{in lang|ru}}". Archived from the original on 2008-05-02. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "Memorandum of Understanding and Cooperation between Russian Education Minister Andrei Fursenko and the Foundation President Tatyana Golubeva. February 11, 2008. {{in lang|ru}}" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 3, 2011. Retrieved April 8, 2008.
External links
[edit]- Gymnazium Union of Russia's website (in Russian)
- Website of the Foundation for Education Support (in Russian)
- Gymnazium Union unites Russian gymnaziums nationwide. NTV (in Russian) Archived 2007-11-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Forum of Gymnanium Union of Russia opened in Saint Petersburg. Rosbalt. (in Russian)
- Memorandum of Understanding between Russian Education Minister Andrei Fursenko and the Foundation President Tatyana Golubeva. February 11, 2008. (in Russian)