Neha Patil (Editor)

Jilin City No.1 High School

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Type
  
Public

Principal
  
Zhang Yanming (张彦明)

Building area
  
136,000㎡

Motto
  
敦品励行,热心向学

Founded
  
1907

Established
  
1907

Area
  
285,000㎡

Province
  
Jilin

Number of students
  
5,000

Staff
  
390

Nickname
  
大一中 (the Great No.1 High School)

Address
  
China, Jilin Sheng, Jilin Shi, Chuanying Qu, 黄旗街

Jilin City No.1 High School (Chinese: 吉林市第一中学校, Pinyin: jí lín shì dì yī Zhōng xué xiào), commonly abbreviated as Jilin Yizhong (Chinese: 吉林一中), is a highly prestigious public key high school in Jilin City.

Contents

History

Jilin City No.1 High School was founded in 1907, in the 33rd year of the reign of the Guangxu Emperor. In 1905 the Qing dynasty abolished the traditional imperial examinations, and decided to reform China's education system based a Western model. In 1907 it increased its support for educational reform.

In 1907 several Chinese scholars who had studied overseas, including Sun Shutang, Zhao Mingxin, Nie Shuqing, Ba Yang'a and Wu Yusen, returned to China and wrote a joint letter to the government, proposing the establishment of a modern high school. In March 29, 1907, the Jilin Academy was established, the first government-run general high school in China. In 1912, shortly following the end of the Qing dynasty and the establishment of the Republic of China (1912–49), the school was renamed "Jilin High School", and was expanded to offer four years of schooling.

In 1931, after Japan occupied Manchuria, Chinese Communist Party agents secretly developed a cell on campus, a student-led patriotic group named the "Society for Mutual Aid" (互濟會). While Northeast China was administerd by the Japanese puppet-state of Manchukuo (1931-1945), students from Jilin No. 1 High School repeatedly scored among the top students in Manchukuo.

In 1959, a decade after the founding of the People's Republic of China, the school was renamed "Jilin City No.1 High School". After the Cultural Revolution occurred in 1966, the school was shut down by Red Guards. It remained closed until 1973, when it was allowed to reopen, with a limited curriculum and attendance, due to the presence and influence of some staff on a local revolutionary committee. In 1976, following the death of Mao Zedong, the school campus was expanded to 10,000 square meters. In 1978, following the educational and economic reforms of Deng Xiaoping, the school was identified as a model for reforming the education system in Jilin province, and was allowed to resume the educational mandate that it had exercised before the Cultural Revolution. In 2003 the Jilin provincial government recognized Jilin City No.1 High School as a "key school", giving it special funding and developing it as a prestigious school within the province of Jilin.

Campus

Over its history, the school has moved to different campuses six times. Its current campus covers 285,000 square meters, of which 136,000 square meters has been developed. It has 5,000 students and 390 staff members.

References

Jilin City No.1 High School Wikipedia