On Wednesday Bavaria's high school students wrote their first Abitur exam - in German.
It was not a "Corona gift", says the Miesbach school principal Rainer Dlugosch.
Miesbach
- On Wednesday Bavaria's high school students wrote their first Abitur exam - in German.
"It was not a corona gift, in the sense of a concession, because deficits could have arisen through distance and alternating lessons," emphasizes Rainer Dlogosch, head of the Miesbach grammar school.
The task was normal and feasible.
“It included everything we prepared for.” Among other things, the students had a choice of interpreting a literary text.
They could choose between Schiller's Wilhelm Tell and Mann's Buddenbrooks.
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Of the 120 students who were admitted to the exam at the Miesbach grammar school, one was unable to take notes - he is corona-positive and in quarantine.
According to Dlugosch, he now has to take the exam on one of the central catch-up dates.
He will probably be able to “test himself freely” until his maths Abitur, which will take place next Tuesday.
As reported, a maximum of eight students write in one room at the Miesbach high school in order to keep the prescribed distances.
In order to be able to prepare enough rooms for this, Dlugosch sent the other classes to distance lessons on Wednesday.
"In order to be able to comply with all the measures, a great deal of organizational effort was required," says Dlugosch, "but I have a great team that did a great job." The last written Abitur test will follow on Friday, May 21.
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