Italy, Rome
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The campus is a large, green complex described as the school's third educator. The building has digital equipment in every classroom, advanced science laboratories, and extensive sports facilities including an indoor pool. The campus houses an auditorium, a music room, an art room, and a computer room, plus science laboratories and a library. The sports facilities include an indoor pool, football fields, basketball courts, volleyball courts, gyms, an athletics track, and green areas. For student well‑being, the campus provides a café/bar, cafeteria, school bus service, parking, student welfare services, an infirmary, a play area, and a summer camp. The school incorporates sustainability measures such as a water dispenser to reduce plastic bottles, a photovoltaic system and solar thermal, a school garden with a pond, and bicycle parking.
Sport education is practiced for all age groups on the school's own facilities. In some disciplines there are school teams. The on‑site facilities include an indoor pool, football fields, basketball courts, volleyball courts, gyms, a running track, and green areas.
The campus building houses an auditorium, a music room, an art room, and a computer room, along with science laboratories for biology, chemistry and physics, and a library. All classrooms are equipped with digital technology to support teaching and learning.
The after‑school program includes working groups (AG), laboratories, and other activities. Clubs and project‑based activities are available after regular classes. There is a play area on campus and a summer camp. Space and resources support these extracurricular activities.
Deutsche Schule Rom is a German international K–12 school in Rome serving ages 2 to 18. The curriculum follows a continuous program from Nursery through Grundschule to Gymnasium, with a bespoke, European framework supervised by KMK. A core feature is Mehrsprachigkeit: German and Italian are integrated from the early years, with German-language instruction in Kindergarten and a multilingual approach in Grundschule that links the two languages. The Gymnasium culminates in the Deutsche Internationale Abitur (DIA), earned alongside the Italian maturità. The curriculum covers Deutsch, Italienisch, Englisch, Französisch, Latein, Mathematik, Biologie, Chemie, Physik, Informatik; Economics is taught in English; Philosophy/Filosofia is bilingual (Italian–German, Years 10–11); Italian History is offered. Students graduate with two diplomas and are prepared for university admission across Europe. The campus features digital classrooms, science laboratories, a 25‑meter indoor pool, an auditorium, music and art rooms, libraries, and outdoor facilities. After-school clubs and language certifications complement the academic program.