Yuri Gagarin Secondary School
Yuri Gagarin Secondary School is a secondary school in Razzakov, Kyrgyzstan. Although the school is called a secondary school, it offers classes for grades one through eleven. The school has Russian and Kyrgyz classes.
The school is named after the Russian astronaut Yuri Gagarin. Yuri Gagarin Secondary School is one of only two schools in Razzakov where students can complete the whole eleven-year school term in Russian. The current building of the school was completed in 1966.
General framework and curriculum
At Yuri Gagarin Secondary School, children are accepted to first grade at the age of six or seven, depending on the child's individual development. The eleven-year school term is split into elementary, middle and senior classes. Attending a "basic" nine-year program is compulsory. Grades 10-11 are optional.As in many parts of the country, at Yuri Gagarin Secondary School children of elementary classes are normally separated from other classes within their own floor of the school building. They are taught, ideally, by a single teacher through all four elementary grades.
Starting from the fifth grade, each academic subject is taught by a dedicated specialty teacher. The school curriculum for senior students includes subjects like mathematics, informatics, physics, chemistry, geography, biology, arts, music, physical education, history, and astronomy.
Like many other schools in Kyrgyzstan, Yuri Gagarin Secondary School is a double shift school where two streams of students share the same facility. The reason for this is that school capacity is insufficient to teach all of the students on a normal, morning-to-afternoon, schedule.
The school year extends from the beginning of September to the end of May and is divided into four terms. The school curriculum at Yuri Gagarin Secondary School is fixed: unlike in some Western countries, schoolchildren cannot choose what subjects to study. Students are graded on a five-step scale, ranging in practice from 2 to 5 ; 1 is a rarely used sign of extreme failure. Teachers regularly subdivide these grades in daily use, but term and year results are graded strictly 2, 3, 4, or 5.