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Hanseatic School for Life : ウィキペディア英語版 | Hanseatic School for Life
The Hanseatic School for Life is a large non-profit organization in Thailand 〔(HSFL Website )〕 that cares for children and adolescents in need. The Hanseatic School for Life pursues an educational concept on the basis of the "situational approach", which UNESCO classified as a "... much needed world-class innovative effort in the field of education" and a "new standard of educational excellence for the world community of the 21st century".〔http://www.worldharmonyrun.org/thailand/news/2007/0222〕 Through family-like living and project-oriented learning, the children and adolescents gain basic professional, social and entrepreneurial skills which can give their life a positive direction. The intellectual father of the situational approach is the Berlin educationalist Prof. em. Dr. Jürgen Zimmer,〔http://www.ewi-psy.fu-berlin.de/v/ina/mitarbeiter/jzimmer/index.html〕 who founded the International Academy for Innovative Pedagogy, Psychology and Economics gGmbH (INA) at the Free University Berlin, and who accompanies the implementation of the concept at the Hanseatic School for Life. ==History==
Hanseatic School for Life, formerly Beluga School for Life, in Na Nai ("village in a rice field") near Khao Lak in the south of Thailand was founded by Niels Stolberg and inaugurated in October 2006. The initial aim was to help the numerous children in Thailand who had lost their parents due to the tsunami in the Indian Ocean on December 26, 2004. Thailand was among the regions most affected by the natural disaster. From the beginning the concept of the Hanseatic School for Life rested on the two pillars of living and learning. The children live in family-like structures, similar to those of the worldwide SOS Children's Villages. Knowledge transfer takes place in so-called "Learning Centers" on the premises. The objective of the Beluga School for Life is to promote lasting successes in the region. The focus of the school is therefore no longer exclusively aimed at the victims of the 2004 tsunami catastrophe, but also at local children and adolescents in need. The former premises of a coconut plantation in the heartland of Thailand have been continuously developed since the opening of the school.〔http://www.lyra-kultur.de/html/tsunami-hilfe.html〕 Currently, 150 children and adolescents live in the newly built village. The age of the children ranges from infancy through adolescence. The Hanseatic School for Life is open to the public, and since 2007 it has also been possible to temporarily live on the premises as a visitor.〔http://www.focus.de/politik/deutschland/hilfsaktion-der-vater-von-na-nai_aid_359394.html〕 The first School for Life following the concept of Professor em. Dr. Jürgen Zimmer was already founded in 2003 in the north of Thailand, near the provincial capital Chiang Mai. This facility focused primarily on AIDS orphans, as AIDS had caused the death of many parents in the region and left numerous children in utmost poverty.〔http://www.unesco-kinder.de/media/Jahresbericht_2006-deutsch.pdf〕 The School for Life near Chiang Mai is located approximately a 45-minute drive away from the provincial capital on the farm "Suan Suo Fha Sai", which in English means "clear skies over beautiful gardens". Today the school cares for and teaches more than 120 orphans.〔http://www.fu-berlin.de/presse/publikationen/alumnimagazin_wir/alumni/zimmer0107/index.html〕
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