Index page
../ [Root community]

Community: Schools in Albania

Contains 4 Wikipedia articles.
View connectivity of community members

Community members, in decreasing PageRank scores:

  1. [Abstract] Category:Schools in Albania
  2. [Abstract] Jordan Misja High School
  3. [Abstract] 28 Nentori High School
  4. [Abstract] Scutari High School
Average similarity of community members: 0.7617415789869959

Abstracts for community members

[Up] Category:Schools in Albania

[Abstract not available for the category]

[Up] Jordan Misja High School

Jordan Misja High School is a public high school located in the major northern city of Shkodra, in Albania, which was established in 1957, therefore being the city's oldest high school. Although there are no official publications of the number of students who study in this school, it is thought that the number may reach 600 or so, making it one of largest schools in the city.

[Up] 28 Nentori High School

28 Nentori High School is a public high school that teaches several hundreds students in the city of Shkodra, Albania. It is the second-largest school in the city. The school has received a number of local and national awards. Overall, when its learning environment is taken into account, the school is listed second, after Pjeter Meshkalla.

The location of the school is just a few blocks away from another public high school called Jordan Misja High School.

[Up] Scutari High School

Scutari High School is a private high school located in the city of Shkodra, Albania. It began its regular work in 2004, but it was officially accepted by the local court as a private subject in the year of 2005, making it the newest private high school to date in the city of Shkodra.

Scutari High School was created to serve those students of middle-class and upper-class society, as the monthly payment is 10,000 lek (appx. 100 U.S. dollars) per student, which is a large amount for the average Albanian.

In order to be a student of Scutari High School each student must have at the very least an 8th-grade average of 80 percent, or else they will not be allowed to attend the school. Also, there's a code of dressing which doesn't allow students to wear short shorts, mini skirts, and other types of clothing that expose too much skin.

As of June 2005, the school only had 19 students of different religious backgrounds, all 9<sup>th</sup> graders (freshmens), however, according to the principal there are serious plans to expand the school to a full-featured high school. The owner and founder, Njazi Lima has said that he aims to make his school an important national institution for learning that will give local students a chance to be educated in a high-standard environment.