Established 1915 Phone +886 4 2222 6081 Motto 公誠勤樸 | President 陳木柱 Founded 1915 | |
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Type Municipal senior high school Location Taichung City, Taiwan, Republic of China Address No. 2, Yucai Street, North District, Taichung City, Taiwan 404 Similar Taichung Girls' Senior Hi, Chungyo, Taichung Municipal Taichung, Wen‑Hua Senior High Sch, The Affiliated Senior Hi Profiles |
Tcfsh winter training openin vid
The Taichung municipal Taichung First Senior High School (TCFSH; Chinese: 臺中市立臺中第一高級中學, also 台中一中) is a senior high school in North District, Taichung, Taiwan. It is one of the most prestigious and distinguished high school in Taiwan. TCFSH was the first high school founded by Taiwanese to educate their youngsters during the colonial days under Japanese rule Japanese occupation.
Contents
- Tcfsh winter training openin vid
- 20160621 xiaogangdong yizhong
- Overview
- History
- Partner Schools
- Art
- Academia
- Politics
- References
20160621 xiaogangdong yizhong
Overview
The admission of Taichung First Senior High School is extremely competitive. Less than top 1% of scorers on the Basic Competence Test for Junior High School Students (國民中學學生基本學力測驗) receive admission. A large portion of graduates go on to attend prestigious universities in Taiwan as well as worldwide. For many international science and math competitions such as the International Mathematics Olympiad, the International Geography Olympiad, the International Physics Olympiad, the International Biology Olympiad, the Intel Science Fair, the International Chemistry Olympiad, the International Earth Science Olympiad, &c., students from Taichung First Senior High are usually chosen to represent Taiwan.
History
The National Taichung First High School was founded by elite members of gentry in Taichung in 1915, including Lin Lie-tang (林烈堂), Lin Hsien-tang (林獻堂), Lin Hsiung-chen (林熊徵), Tsai Lien-fang (蔡蓮舫) and Koo Hsien-jung (辜顯榮). Fought against the unfair education policy of Japanese colonial government, they established the Taichung Middle School to provide better education to the young Taiwanese who did not have the opportunity to attend middle schools which were reserved for the Japanese children exclusively.