About the European Schools
The European Schools are official educational establishments
controlled jointly by the governments of the Member
States of the European Union. In all these countries
they are legally regarded as public institutions.
Originally, they were governed by the Intergovernmental
Protocol incorporating the "Statute of the European
School", signed by the six founder Member States in
Luxembourg on 12 April 1957 and ratified by the national
authorities of the signatory countries. The present
Convention defining the Statute of the European Schools,
which has replaced the previous agreements, entered
into force in October 2002. Following the latest wave
of EU enlargement on 1 May 2004, the accession to
the Convention of the ten new Member States is in
progress.
The mission of the European Schools is to provide
a multilingual, multicultural and multidenominational
education for nursery, primary and secondary level
pupils.
There are currently thirteen Schools (Alicante, Brussels
I (Uccle), Brussels II (Woluwé), Brussels III (Ixelles),
Frankfurt am Main, Mol, Bergen, Karlsruhe, Munich,
Varese, Culham, Luxembourg I & Luxembourg II),
in seven countries (Belgium, Netherlands, Germany,
Italy, United Kingdom, Spain and Luxembourg), with
a total of approximately 20,000 pupils on roll.