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  2. SchoolTool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SchoolTool

    SchoolTool is a GPL licensed, free student information system for schools around the world. The goals of the project are to create a student information system, including demographics, gradebook, attendance, calendaring and reporting for primary and secondary schools, as well as a framework for building customized applications and configurations for individual schools or states.

  3. Warsaw (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warsaw_(video_game)

    Warsaw (stylized as WARSAW) is a turn-based tactical role-playing video game developed and published by Polish studio Pixelated Milk, featuring art by Polish comic book artist Michał Śledziński. It was released for PlayStation 4 , Microsoft Windows , Nintendo Switch and Xbox One on 2 October 2019, and later for PlayStation 5 on 12 November 2020.

  4. Education in Warsaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Warsaw

    Warsaw is one of the most important education centres of Poland. It is home to four major universities and over 62 smaller schools of higher education. The overall number of students of all grades of education in Warsaw is almost 500,000 (29.2% of the city population; 2002). The number of university students is over 255,000. University of ...

  5. History of Warsaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Warsaw

    The history of Warsaw spans over 1400 years. In that time, the city evolved from a cluster of villages to the capital of a major European power, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth —and, under the patronage of its kings, a center of enlightenment and otherwise unknown tolerance. Fortified settlements founded in the 9th century form the core ...

  6. Warsaw Lyceum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warsaw_Lyceum

    Kazimierz Palace, 2019 Saxon Palace in 1765, before its 1842 remodeling. The Warsaw Lyceum (Polish: Liceum Warszawskie; German: Königlich-Preußisches Lyzäum zu Warschau) was a secondary school that existed in Warsaw, under the Kingdom of Prussia and under the Kingdom of Poland, from 1804 to its closing in 1831 by Imperial Russia following the Polish November 1830 Uprising.

  7. Polish School of Mathematics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_School_of_Mathematics

    the Warsaw School of Mathematics - mostly focused on set theory, mathematical logic and topology; and; the Kraków School of Mathematics - mostly focused on differential equations, analytic functions, differential geometry. Nomenclature. Poland's mathematicians provided a name to Polish notation and Polish space. Background

  8. Warsaw School (history of ideas) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warsaw_School_(history_of...

    The Warsaw School was a group of Polish historians of ideas active in the late 1950s and the 1960s. It was headed by Bronisław Baczko and Leszek Kołakowski and also included scholars such as Andrzej Walicki, Jerzy Szacki and Krzysztof Pomian. Members of the group had institutional ties with the PAN Institute of Philosophy and Sociology and ...

  9. Lauder – Morasha School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauder_–_Morasha_School

    It is the first school under Jewish auspices in Warsaw since 1949. [1] In 2007, its enrollment was 240 students, ranging in age from three to sixteen years old (pre-school to Grade 9). The school's founding director was Helise E. Lieberman (1994–2006); the second director (2006-2017) was Polish-born Rabbi Maciej Pawlak.