Brussels Elementary High School
Brussels Elementary High School, also known as Brussels Unit School, and formerly Brussels American School (BAS),[1] is an elementary through high school of the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA).
It opened in October 1967.[2] It is located near Brussels, Belgium on a 17-acre (69,000 m2) area in Sterrebeek, part of the municipality of Zaventem, Flemish Brabant.
The school serves as a DoDDS school for all US military and DOD civilian sponsor dependents, who are allowed to enroll their children tuition free.[3] Non-DOD persons, including U.S., Belgian, and other citizens, are required to pay tuition.[4] It celebrated its fortieth anniversary in late 2007. It also takes European students from Partnership for Peace (PfP) countries of NATO, to include Macedonia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia etc. Its proximity to NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) helps serve as an opportunity for American children to enroll in a school taught to familiarize them with the American school system.
Student body
[edit]The school has thirty-six faculty members, many of whom have been at Brussels American School for more than fourteen years. The student body holds, on average, three hundred students K-12, and approximately one hundred students in its high school. With so few students, BAS changed from Division Three to Division Four in the year 2006. In the year 2009-2010 the DODDSE schools combined Divisions 3 and 4; therefore, making Brussels American School division 3 again. Of all the DoDDS schools, Brussels American School holds the highest percentage of students who graduate, highest average AP & SAT scores, and highest acceptance rate to the Service Academies, with two of the fourteen people in the senior class of 2016 going to the U.S. Air Force Academy and U.S. Coast Guard Academy. A prime example of this is the AP Chemistry class of 2009, where seven of the eight students achieved fives on the AP exam.
References
[edit]- ^ "Home". Brussels American School. Archived from the original on 2004-12-05. Retrieved 2024-10-26.
- ^ "About Brussels American School". Archived from the original on 2008-03-13. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
- ^ "Parent/Student Handbook SY 2014-2015" (Archive). Brussels American School. p. 13. Retrieved on April 15, 2015.
- ^ "Parent/Student Handbook SY 2014-2015" (Archive). Brussels American School. p. 15. Retrieved on April 15, 2015.