European School of Bruxelles-Argenteuil

Summary

The European School of Bruxelles-Argenteuil (French: École Européenne de Bruxelles-Argenteuil), also known as the EEBA, is a private, Accredited European School located on the grounds of the Château d'Argenteuil, in Waterloo, 15 km south of Brussels, Belgium. Founded in 2016, the EEBA is a partnership between the Belgian private school "Lycée Molière", and the Scandinavian School of Brussels (SSB). The EEBA, through its partnership with the SSB, offers its students the International Baccalaureate as its secondary leaving qualification, with plans to also offer the European Baccalaureate in the near future. The school caters to nursery, primary and secondary students and is equipped with facilities for boarders aged 15 and up.

European School of Bruxelles-Argenteuil
École Européenne de Bruxelles-Argenteuil
Address
Map
Square d’Argenteuil 5

,
1410

Coordinates50°43′03″N 4°25′42″E / 50.717460°N 4.428200°E / 50.717460; 4.428200
Information
Other nameEEBA
Established2016
PrincipalUlf Mazetti[1]
GenderMixed
Age range4 to 18
Enrolment111[2] (2018-2019)
 • Nursery10
 • Primary59
 • Secondary42
AccreditationAccredited by the European Schools[2]
AffiliationsScandinavian School of Brussels
Lycée Molière
Websiteeuropeanschool.be

History edit

European Schools edit

Since 1958, Brussels has played host to a growing number of institutions and bodies of the European Communities (EC) - now European Union (EU). In 1958, the European School, Brussels I (ESB1) opened its doors with the primary purpose of providing an education to the children of the staff of said institutions.[3] The ESB1, was to be unusual in that it was to be the second in a network of schools directly governed and financed through a new separate intergovernmental organisation, originally established by the 1957 Statue of the European School - since repealed and replaced by the 1994 Convention Defining the Statute of the European Schools. The Board of Governors of the school network was to be composed of education ministers of the signatory states.[3] The European Schools committed themselves to a multilingual and multicultural pedagogical approach, leading to the European Baccalaureate - a bilingual secondary leaving qualification overseen by the Board of Governors.[3]

High demand edit

As member states each acceded to the EC - and, later, the EU - they would successively sign up to the treaties governing the European Schools in order to guarantee an education to the children of staff of their respective nationalities. Simultaneously increased European institutional presence and staff numbers in Brussels put a strain on the European Schools in the city.[4] Between the founding of the ESB1 and 2007, three more European Schools were founded in Brussels.[3] In 2015, the European Schools authorised a fifth school.[5]

In the years since the European Schools' founding, its curriculum, ethos, and qualification had become popular amongst families of staff of other international institutions and corporations in Brussels, as well as locals.[4] However, with the European Schools legally obligated to provide an education to the children of EU staff first, there was often little availability of school places.[4]

Belgium's first Accredited European School edit

In 2013, seeking a solution to the high demand for European School places in Brussels, the Board of Governors of the European Schools requested the Belgian state permit the creation of the Belgium's first "Accredited European School".[4] Taking advantage of regulations agreed by the Board of Governors in 2005, such a school would be accredited to provide the European Schools' curriculum, and the European Baccalaureate, whilst being under national jurisdiction and independently financed.[4][6] It would join a network of thirteen existing such Accredited European Schools across the EU.[6]

Responding to the Belgian government's calls, the Belgian private school, "Lycée Molière", and the Scandinavian School of Brussels, proposed a partnership venture for the creation of an Accredited European School.[4] In September 2016, the English-language primary school section of the European School of Bruxelles-Argenteuil opened its doors on the grounds of the Château d'Argenteuil, in Waterloo, 15 km south of Brussels.[4] From September 2017, the EEBA was able to provide education to secondary level education for students whose mother-tongue was English, French, or Swedish.[4]

Accreditation edit

The Board of Governors of the European Schools signed an accreditation agreement with the EEBA on 13 March 2018, valid until 31 August 2021, when upon it will require renewal.[2][7] In concordance with the rigorous accreditation process, accredited schools are routinely audited by the Boards of Inspectors of the European Schools, with the EEBA's last audit taking place between 17 and 21 September 2018.[2] As the school is opening in a phased manner, it is currently only accredited to offer the European Schools' curriculum up to fifth year secondary, (ages 4 to 16), with a further accreditation agreement extending to the European Baccalaureate programme years (sixth and seventh year secondary) due in the future.[2]

Campus and Facilities edit

The EEBA is located on the grounds of the Château d’Argenteuil, a nineteenth century estate, with extensive park and woodland.[8] The school is equipped with modern class rooms and laboratories, an inside sports hall, outdoor sport courts and recreational grounds.[8] The Château itself hosts the school canteen, music rooms, a small theater, and a boarding house for students age 15 and up.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ulf Mazetti, new Principal". European School. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e "The Accredited European Schools/Schools in the process of accreditation 2018-2019 school year : Fact Sheets" (PDF). eursc.eu. Office of the Secretary-General of the European Schools. p. 3. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d "Background". eursc.eu. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Woelfle, G. (8 March 2016). "Une nouvelle Ecole européenne à Waterloo à la rentrée prochaine" [A new European School in Waterloo at the beginning of the next school year]. La Libre.be (in French). Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  5. ^ Hope, Alan (29 July 2018). "Fifth European School to take over former site of NATO". The Brussels Times. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  6. ^ a b "About the Accredited European Schools". eursc.eu. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  7. ^ "Convention d'agrément et de coopération" [Accreditation and cooperation agreement] (PDF) (in French). European Schools. 13 March 2018. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  8. ^ a b c "Facilities". European School. Retrieved 28 March 2019.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • About Accredited European Schools