Lycée Franco-Mexicain / Liceo Franco Mexicano
Address
Polanco Campus: Homero 1521, Col. Polanco, Delegación Miguel Hidalgo, México, D.F., C.P. 11560
Coyoacán Campus: Calle Xico 24, Col. Oxtopulco Universidad, Delegación Coyoacán, México, D.F. C.P. 04310
Cuernavaca Campus: Francisco I. Madero 315, Ocotepec, Cuernavaca, Morelos, C.P. 62220


Mexico
Coordinates19°26′14.7″N 99°12′21.5″W / 19.437417°N 99.205972°W / 19.437417; -99.205972 (Polanco Campus)

19°20′36.9″N 99°10′48.7″W / 19.343583°N 99.180194°W / 19.343583; -99.180194 (Coyoacán Campus)

18°57′57.3″N 99°13′13.9″W / 18.965917°N 99.220528°W / 18.965917; -99.220528 (Escuela/École Molière de Cuernavaca)
Information
TypePrimary and secondary education
GradesK-12
Websitelfm.edu.mx
Lycée Franco-Mexicain is located in Greater Mexico City
Polanco Campus
Polanco Campus
Coyoacán Campus
Coyoacán Campus
Campuses in Mexico City
Lycée Franco-Mexicain is located in Morelos
Cuernavaca
Cuernavaca
Campus in Morelos
Lycée Franco-Mexicain is located in Mexico
Polanco
Polanco
Coyoacán
Coyoacán
Cuernavaca
Cuernavaca
Campuses in Mexico

The Liceo Franco Mexicano A.C. or the Lycée Franco-Mexicain is a private French school with three campuses. It is one of the largest French lycées in the world with over 3,000 students in its two Mexico City campuses: Polanco in Miguel Hidalgo in northern Mexico City, and Coyoacán in southern Mexico City. The third campus, École Molière de Cuernavaca (Escuela Molière) is in the city of Ocotepec, Cuernavaca, Morelos.[1]

History

The Lycée was established in 1937 so that the extensive French community in Mexico could give a French education and culture to their family and stay linked to their motherland. Since then the school has evolved a lot and the number of students has increased considerably. Nowadays the school receives mostly French-Mexican and Mexican students, but also children of many diplomats from all over the world, the children of all the French expatriate workers and many other students from other European countries.

Structure

Before the equivalent of high school, the school is divided into a "French" and a "bilingual" section. In the first one, all the courses are given in French (except language courses). In the other section, the classes are taught in Spanish, but they include a French language course. By high school, students of the "bilingual" section are proficient in the language and the two sections are mixed together under the French system and all courses are in French.

Academic performance

The academic level of the school is extremely good and it is recognized as one of the best schools in Mexico, especially recognized for its high level of mathematics (on the same level than the Mexican-Japanese Lyceum and the Colegio Alemán Alexander von Humboldt). The results of the Baccalauréat are especially good, with 97% of students having passed the exam. After graduating, the students follow several paths. The majority are admitted into prestigious Mexican universities, however a good amount also follow superior studies in French universities and the so-called "classes prepa". There is also an increasing number of students who decide to study in other countries (US, Switzerland, UK, etc.).

Architecture

The school building was designed by Vladimir Kaspé.[2]

The National Institute of Fine Arts (Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, INBA) declared that the original building has artistic value. The Secretariat for Housing and Urban Development of the Government of Mexico City (Secretaría de Desarrollo Urbano y Vivienda del Gobierno del Distrito Federal; SEDUVI) declared that the original building has heritage value.[3]

Notable alumni

Artists, scientists, CEOs, academics and politicians (as former Secretary of Foreign Affairs Jorge Castañeda Gutman and acclaimed German historian Friedrich Katz) all studied at the LFM, among many other distinguished alumni.

Angélica Aragón[5]
Jorge Castañeda Gutman[6]
Justo Sierra[7]
Friedrich Katz[8]
Elena Poniatowska[9][10]
Daniel SanMateo
Nicole Reich de Polignac
Jorge Volpi
Thalía[11]
Juan Manuel Gómez Robledo[12]
Anna Fusoni[13]

See also

Further reading

References

  1. Home. Lycée Franco-Mexicain. Retrieved on March 14, 2014. "polanco Homero 1521, Col. Polanco, México, D.F., C.P. 11560" and "coyoacán Calle Xico 24, Col. Oxtopulco Universidad, México, D.F. C.P. 04310" and "cuernavaca Francisco I. Madero 315, Ocotepec, Morelos, C.P. 6220"
  2. Turner, Jane. Encyclopedia of Latin American and Caribbean art (Grove encyclopedias of the arts of the Americas, Grove Library of World Art). Grove's Dictionaries, 2000. ISBN 1884446043, 9781884446047. p. 382 (Another view) "Other examples of his educational architecture, notable for their formal austerity, include the Liceo Franco-Mexicano (1950) and the Facultad de Econ- omia (1953; with J. Hanhausen), Ciudad Universitaria, both in Mexico City."
  3. "Full Documentation Fiche 2007 Liceo Franco Mexicano" (Archive). Docomomo International. p. 2/12. Retrieved on May 14, 2014.
  4. "Cinq questions à... Arielle Dombasle." Canoe.ca. 08-03-2007. Retrieved on March 14, 2014. "Arielle Dombasle passe son enfance au Mexique où elle étudie dans un lycée franco-mexicain."
  5. Canal Judicial "Más que una historia": Angélica Aragón part 3.
  6. Ai Camp, Roderic. Mexico's Mandarins: Crafting a Power Elite for the Twenty-first Century. University of California Press, 2002. ISBN 0520233433, 9780520233430. p. 262. "A younger version of Fuentes is Jorge G. Castañeda[...]Castañeda has spent much of his life outside Mexico,[...]Even when he completed his secondary and preparatory studies in Mexico City in the late 1960s, it was at the French Lycee, subsidized by the French government."
  7. Tenenbaum, Barbara A. "Payno and Mexico's Financial Reform." In: Peloso, Vincent C. and Barbara A. Tenenbaum (editors). Liberals, Politics, and Power: State Formation in Nineteenth-century Latin America. University of Georgia Press (EN), 1996. ISBN 0820318000, 9780820318004. p. 233 "Justo Sierra Méndez, for example, received his education at the Liceo-Franco Mexicano in Mexico City"
  8. Haffenstangel, Renata von. México, el exilio bien temperado. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 1 de enero de 1995. ISBN 9683644481, 9789683644480. p. 350. "Aquí Friedrich Katz obtuvo su bachillerato en el Liceo Franco-Mexicano en 1945."
  9. Cherem S., Silvia (13 May 2012). Reforma (ed.). "El secreto de Elena" (Artículo) (in Spanish). Sección Opinión: Periódico Reforma. Retrieved 18 November 2014.
  10. Schuessler, Michael Karl. Elena Poniatowska: An Intimate Biography. University of Arizona Press (EN), 2007. ISBN 0816525013, 9780816525010. p. 29. "In an interview, Elena provided some curious details regarding her elementary education from the perspective of a newly arrived little girl:[...]Afterwards, I attended the Liceo Franco Mexicano with my sister Kitzia, but she did not like[...]"
  11. "Thalía Biografia" (Archivo). Univisión. Consultado el 14 de mayo de 2014.
  12. "6 membres du Ministère des Relations Extérieures (SRE) distingués dans l'ordre de la Légion d'Honneur".
  13. "45 años de moda" (in Spanish). El Universal. 22 May 2011. Retrieved 19 November 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.