Marie Curie High School
| Marie Curie High School | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
159 Nam Kỳ Khởi Nghĩa, District 3, Ho Chi Minh City | |
| Information | |
| Type | High school |
| Headmaster | Nguyễn Trần Khánh Bảo |
Marie Curie High School (French: Lycée Marie Curie, Vietnamese: Trường Trung học Phổ thông Marie Curie) is a public high school in District 3, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Established in 1918 and named after the Nobel prize-winning scientist Marie Curie by the French colonial government, it remains the sole high school in Saigon that still bears its original name.
Founded in 1918 as a private all-girls school, it began accepting boys in 1970. All courses were taught in French until the French instructors were sent home to France after the Vietnam War ended in 1975, at which time the school became bilingual (Vietnamese and French). In 1997, the school was turned into a semi-public high school, and in 2007, it became a public high school. In the 1990s, it was one of the largest high schools in Vietnam, with around 5,000 students in regular attendance; however, enrollment has dropped to about 3,500 students (2025) since the school shifted its focus to providing a higher quality education. Over the past two decades, the school has participated in and been the subject of multiple research studies and projects.
History
By 1884, Vietnam was colonized by the French, and in 1887 it became part of French Indochina.[1] Lycée Marie Curie is an example of the Western education school system that developed throughout the country under colonial rule.[1] Located in the city of Saigon (known as Ho Chi Minh City since 1975), the school itself was very popular among French natives as the majority of the French settlers settled in Saigon.[1]
After the Japanese entered Indochina in 1941, the school was requisitioned as a hospital, so all activities were moved to a kindergarten on Pham Ngoc Thach Street. A year later, the school was returned to its original location under the new name of Calmette Middle School. After the French returned to occupy Saigon on September 23, 1945, the school was renamed Lucien Mossard High School. In early 1948, it was renamed as Marie Curie High School (or Lycée Marie Curie). During the Republic of Vietnam era, the school was a private high school for girls. In 1970, the school started accepting male students.[2][3]
The school was originally established in 1918 as an all-girls private school by the French colonial government and taught mostly French settlers and some Vietnamese locals.[4] The majority of the Vietnamese students who attended the school were from wealthy families or were the children of government employees.[4] Instruction for all courses at the institution was in French, and the majority of the courses taught were popular subjects in Europe that were underdeveloped fields of study in Vietnam.[4] Despite the Vietnam War (known as the American War in Vietnam) going on during the early to mid-1900s, PhD candidate Nguyen Thuy Phong found that the school was considered to be a safe place for students which allowed for free speech, upon interviewing Vietnamese alumni of the school.[4]
In 1975, the Ho Chi Minh City Education and Training Department took over the school and sent the French teachers back home to France.[4] Lycée Marie Curie thereafter transitioned to a bilingual school - with classes taught in both Vietnamese and French.[4] In 1997, the school transitioned from a private school to a semi-public one (it was not entirely controlled by the government, but it was also not entirely privately owned).[4] During the late 1900s, Lycée Marie Curie was the largest co-ed high school in Vietnam (with over 5,000 students); however, the school reduced its enrollment size in order to prioritize providing a higher quality education (only about 3,500 students in 2025).[4] The school has also become increasingly selective of who they accept.[4] By 2007, the school became fully public and, as of 2025, has remained that way.[5] The school's layout which was greatly influenced by French design principles remains mostly intact, as evidenced by the school's entrance gate.[4]
Research projects
A 2008 research project developed a training tool for teachers that provides a brief understanding of how to teach the concept of sustainable energy.[6] Lycée Marie Curie and a few other pre-college level and college level institutions, participated in the project.[6] Because this training tool is directed towards pre-college level institutions, Lycée Marie Curie was considered a fit candidate for the project.[6] The school's teachers and students gained a new perspective on understanding sustainable energy from this project.[6]
A 2021 study examined how bilingual students treat non-bilingual students at the same institution versus how they treat other bilingual students at a different institution.[7] Conducted by Tam Kiet Vuong, Ho Fai Chan, and Benno Torgler, they found Lycée Marie Curie to be a great fit for the study as it had transitioned to a bilingual institution, teaching both Vietnamese and French.[7] The study results concluded that students who are bilingual are more likely to be discriminatory towards non-bilinguals at the same institution than they are towards bilinguals at other institutions.[7]
List of Principals
- Lycée Marie Curie
- 1948 – 1950: Madame Marie
- 1950 – 1954: Mrs. Fortunel
- 1954 – 1965: Mr. Castagnon
- 1965 – 1974: Mr. Gages
- 1974 – 1975: Mr. Thevenin
- Marie Curie High School
- 1975 – 1977: Tôn Tuyết Dung[8]
- 1977 – 1978: Lê Thị Loan[8]
- 1978 – 1987: Trần Tố Nga[8]
- 1987 – 1992: Hoàng Bảo Quân[8]
- 1992 – 1999: Dương Thu Hằng[8]
- 1999 – 2000: Nguyễn Bác Dụng[8]
- 2000 – 2006: Nguyễn Đình Hân[8]
- 2006 – 2008: Nguyễn Ngọc Lang[8]
- 2008 – 2016: Nguyễn Văn Vân[8]
- 2016 – 2023: Nguyễn Đăng Khoa[8]
- 2023 - 2025: Nguyễn Vân Yên[8]
- 2025 - now: Nguyễn Trần Khánh Bảo[8]
Notable alumni
- Bảo Thy,[9] singer
- Đông Nhi,[10] singer
- Loan Chau, singer
- Nguyễn Thiên Nga,[11] Miss Vietnam in 1996
- Phuong Dung, singer
- Quang Vinh,[11] singer
- Suboi,[11] rapper, singer, actress
- Thanh Lan,[12][13] singer
- Thuỳ Lâm,[10] model, actress
- Tôn Nữ Thị Ninh,[14] former Vice Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Assembly of Vietnam
- Trương Hòa Bình,[14] Deputy Prime Minister of Vietnam
- Tuyet Nguyet, Asian art expert
- Võ Hoàng Yến,[10] model
References
- ^ a b c "Origins of the Vietnam War | Pritzker Military Museum & Library | Chicago". www.pritzkermilitary.org. Retrieved 2025-12-08.
- ^ Thành Nguyễn. Trường nữ sinh lớn nhất Sài Gòn 100 năm trước. VnExpress.
- ^ Mạnh Tùng. Bốn ngôi trường trung học trăm tuổi ở Sài Gòn. VnExpress.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Lycée Marie Curie: The High School That Has Stood the Test of Time | Saigoneer". saigoneer.com. Retrieved 2025-12-08.
- ^ "Marie Curie High School, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam - Reviews, Ratings, Tips and Why You Should Go". Wanderlog. Retrieved 2025-12-08.
- ^ a b c d Visa, I., et al. "INTEGRATED APPROACH OF SUSTAINABLE ENERGY EDUCATION AND RESEARCH FOR PRE-UNIVERSITY CURRICULA." Bulletin of the Transilvania University of Brasov.Engineering Sciences.Series I, vol. 1, 2008, pp. 287-292. ProQuest.
- ^ a b c Vuong, Tam Kiet; Chan, Ho Fai; Torgler, Benno (2021-12-09). "Competing social identities and intergroup discrimination: Evidence from a framed field experiment with high school students in Vietnam". PLOS ONE. 16 (12) e0261275. Bibcode:2021PLoSO..1661275V. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0261275. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 8659309. PMID 34882747.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l P.V. Trường THPT Marie Curie, Q.3: Tự hào ngôi trường 100 tuổi Archived 2018-04-07 at the Wayback Machine. Báo Giáo dục Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh.
- ^ Bảo Thy nhí nhảnh cùng ông kẹ Sulley về thăm trường cũ . Zing News.
- ^ a b c Sơn Anh. Loạt sao nữ 'ăn dầm nằm dề' dưới mái trường Marie Curie TP HCM. VnExpress.
- ^ a b c Nhiên (March 14, 2020). Lò đào tạo sao Việt" dưới danh trường THPT: Marie Curie chiếm số đông. Yan.
- ^ L.D. Người đẹp màn bạc Việt một thời - Kỳ 12: Thanh Lan - nghệ sĩ đa tài. Thanh Niên.
- ^ Thanh Thủy. Những scandal tình ái trong giới nghệ sĩ Sài Gòn (Kỳ 6): "Quả bom sex" Thanh Lan làm "cháy" vé các rạp hát Sài Gòn. Lao động.
- ^ a b Thành Nguyễn (November 17, 2018). Trường trung học lớn nhất Sài Gòn kỷ niệm 100 năm thành lập. VnExpress.
External links
- Official website
- (in French) Lycée Marie Curie de Saïgon
- (in Vietnamese) Marie Curie high school - Saigon - Vietnam - Student forum
10°46′57″N 106°41′27″E / 10.7824°N 106.6908°E