Deutsch-Französisches Gymnasium

There are four German-French secondary schools known as Deutsch-Französisches Gymnasium (DFG) or Lycée Franco-Allemand (LFA). The first DFG/LFA was established in Saarbrücken in 1961 as a cooperation between a French and a German school. In 1972, an agreement signed in Paris between France and West Germany formalised the DFG/LFA as unified school form and introduced the French-German Baccalaureate. The DFG/LFA schools are also governed by the French-German Schwerin Agreement of 2002. Teachers are paid by the French and German state, and tuition is free of charge. In Germany:

Deutsch-Französisches Gymnasium

There are four German-French secondary schools known as Deutsch-Französisches Gymnasium (DFG) or Lycée Franco-Allemand (LFA). The first DFG/LFA was established in Saarbrücken in 1961 as a cooperation between a French and a German school. In 1972, an agreement signed in Paris between France and West Germany formalised the DFG/LFA as unified school form and introduced the French-German Baccalaureate. The DFG/LFA schools are also governed by the French-German Schwerin Agreement of 2002. Teachers are paid by the French and German state, and tuition is free of charge. In Germany: