Lists of girls’ schools – Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Here are lists of schools which only admit girls, or those which only admit girls at certain levels/years/grades, or those which separate students by gender at certain points (such as the Diamond Schools model), by country.

Antigua and Barbuda[edit]

Australia[edit]

Azerbaijan[edit]

Former

Bahrain[edit]

Note that government schools in this country are separated by gender.
[1]

  • AAli Intermediate Girls
  • AAli Primary Girls
  • Ain Jaloot Primary Girls
  • Aisha Umm Al-Moemeneen Primary Girls
  • Al Ahad Al zaher Secondary Girls
  • Al Estiqlal Secondary Girls
  • Al Marefa Secondary Girls
  • Al Wafaa Secondary Girls
  • Al-Andalus Primary Girls
  • Al-Belad Al-Qadeem Primary Girls
  • Al-Budaiyya Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Busaiteen Primary Girls
  • Al-Daih Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Dair Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Duraz Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Duraz Primary Girls
  • Al-Hidd Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Hidd Secondary Girls
  • Al-Hunaineya Primary Girls
  • Al-Khaleej Al-Arabi Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Khansa Primary Girls
  • Al-Manhal Primary Girls
  • Al-Muharraq Primary Girls
  • Al-Nabeeh Saleh Primary Girls
  • Al-Noor Secondary Girls
  • Al-Nuzha Primary Girls
  • Al-Orouba Primary Girls
  • Al-Qadsiah Primary Girls
  • Al-Qayrawan Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Qudes Primary Girls
  • Al-Rawdha Primary Girls
  • Al-Safa Primary Girls
  • Al-Salam Primary Girls
  • Al-Sanabis Intermediate Girls
  • Al-Sanabis Primary Girls
  • Al-Sehlah Primary Girls
  • Al-Shorooq Secondary Girls
  • Al-Tadamon Secondary Girls
  • Al-Zallaq Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Al-nowaidrat Primary Girls
  • Almustaqbal Primary Girls
  • Aminah Bint Wahab Primary Girls
  • Arad Intermediate Girls
  • Arad Primary Girls
  • Asma That Alnetaqain Primary Girls
  • Bahrain Vocational Secondary
  • Bait Al-Hekmah Primary Girls
  • Balqees Primary Girls
  • Buri Primary Girls
  • Busaiteen Intermediate Girls
  • Dr.Ghazi Al Gusaybi Secondary Girls
  • East Riffa Intermediate Girls
  • East Riffa Primary Girls
  • Fatima Bint Alkhattab Primary Girls
  • Fatima Bint Asad Primary Girls
  • Gharnata Primary Girls
  • Hafsa Um Almoumineen Primary Girls
  • Hajer Primary Girls
  • Halima Al-Saadeyya Intermediate Girls
  • Hamad Town Intermediate Girls
  • Hamad Town Primary Girls
  • Hamad Town Secondary Girls
  • Isa Town Intermediate Girls
  • Isa Town Secondary Girls
  • Jidhafs Secondary Girls
  • Karrana Primary Girls
  • Khadija Al-Kubra Intermediate Girls
  • Khawlah Secondary Girls
  • Malkiya Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Mariam Bint Omran Primary Girls
  • Muharraq Secondary Girls
  • Nasiba Bint Kaab Primary Girls
  • Omaima Bint Al Noaman Secondary Girls
  • Qurtoba Intermediate Girls
  • Rabiaa Al-Adaweyia Primary Girls
  • Ruqaya Primary Girls
  • Saar Primary Girls
  • Saar Secondary Girls
  • Saba Primary Girls
  • Safeyia Bint Abdulmuttalib Primary Girls
  • Safrah Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Sakeena Bint Al-Hussain Primary Girls
  • Salmabad Primary Girls
  • Sanad Primary Girls
  • Shahrakkan Primary Girls
  • Shaikha Moza Bint Hamad Al Khalifa Intermediate Girls
  • Shaikha Moza Bint Hamad Al Khalifa Primary Girls
  • Shaikha Moza Bint Hamad Al Khalifa Secondary Girls
  • Sitra Intermediate Girls
  • Sitra Primary Girls
  • Sitra Secondary Girls
  • Sumayia Primary Girls
  • Tubli Primary Girls
  • Tulaitela Primary Girls
  • Um Al-Qura Primary Intermediate Girls
  • Um Ayman Primary Girls
  • Um Kalthoom Intermediate Girls
  • Um Salama Intermediate Secondary Girls
  • West Rifaa Secondary Girls
  • West Riffa Intermediate Girls
  • West Riffa Primary Girls
  • Yathreb Intermediate Girls
  • Zainab Intermediate Girls
  • Zannoobia Intermediate Girls

Bangladesh[edit]

Chittagong Division
Dhaka Division
Khulna Division
Mymensingh Division
Rajshahi Division
Rangpur Division

Bermuda[edit]

Cameroon[edit]

Alberta[edit]

British Columbia[edit]

Vancouver
Victoria

Manitoba[edit]

Nova Scotia[edit]

Former

Ontario[edit]

Brampton
Mississauga
Ottawa
Toronto

Former:

Quebec[edit]

Gatineau (Ottawa area)
Montreal

This list covers Mainland China only. For Hong Kong and Macau see their respective lists. For schools in the Taiwan area, including the island of Taiwan, go to “Taiwan (Republic of China)”

Former:

Former

Denmark[edit]

Now coeducational
Former

Finland[edit]

Former

Germany[edit]

Hesse
North Rhine-Westphalia
Former
Ashanti Region
Brong-Afaho Region
Central Region
Eastern Region
Greater Accra Region
Northern Region
Upper East Region
Upper West Region
Volta Region
Western Region
Now coeducational

Gibraltar[edit]

Now coeducational:

Former girls’ schools

Guernsey[edit]

Hong Kong[edit]

Since the Iranian Revolution government schools have been divided by gender

Former
Baghdad

Al Mutamayizeen Secondary has girls’ schools.

Ireland (Republic of)[edit]

Connacht
Leinster
  • Alexandra College
  • Coláiste Íosagáin
  • Loreto Abbey, Dalkey
  • Loreto College, Swords
  • Loreto Secondary School, Kilkenny
  • Loreto Secondary School, Navan
  • Manor House School, Raheny
  • Mercy College (Dublin)
  • Mount Anville Secondary School
  • Muckross Park College
  • Our Lady’s College, Greenhills
  • Presentation Secondary School, Kilkenny
  • Sancta Maria College, Rathfarnham
  • St Leo’s College, Carlow
  • St Louis Secondary School, Dundalk
  • St Louis High School, Rathmines
  • St Joseph’s Secondary School, Navan
  • St Wolstan’s Community School
Munster
Ulster
Former girls’ schools

Former

Jamaica[edit]

Former:

North Korea[edit]

South Korea[edit]

Busan
Daegu
Incheon
Gyeonggi Province
Jeju Province
Sejong City
Seoul
South Chungcheong Province
Nossa Senhora de Fátima

Malaysia[edit]

Johor
Kuala Lumpur
Negeri Sembilan
Penang
Perak
Sabah
Selangor

Mauritius[edit]

Irish Institute in the State of Mexico has a separate campus for girls.

Universidad Panamericana Preparatoria in Mexico City has a separate campus for girls.

Myanmar (Burma)[edit]

Mandalay

New Zealand[edit]

Auckland Region
Bay of Plenty Region
Canterbury
Hawke’s Bay Region
Marlborough Region
Manawatū-Whanganui
Otago
Taranaki
Waikato
Wellington Region
???
  • Craighead Diocesan School
  • Saint Kentigern School for Girls
  • Selwyn House
  • Taranaki Diocesan School for Girls
  • Woodford House

Nigeria[edit]

Abuja[edit]

Delta State[edit]

Edo State
Enugu State
Imo State
Kwara State
Lagos State
Niger State
Ogun State
Osun State
Rivers State

Pakistan[edit]

Balochistan
Punjab
Sindh

Palestine[edit]

Note that Schmidt’s Girls College is in East Jerusalem which is under Israel control and is claimed by Palestine.

Philippines[edit]

Metro Manila
Rizal
Became coeducational
Closed
Former
  • Cambridge International School for Girls School (now coeducational, as Cambridge International School, Doha)

Sierra Leone[edit]

Singapore[edit]

Secondary girls’ schools

South Africa[edit]

Eastern Cape
Free State
Gauteng
KwaZulu-Natal
Western Cape
Community of Madrid
Former
Former

Switzerland[edit]

Former

Taiwan (Republic of China)[edit]

Hsinchu
Kaohsiung
Tainan
Taipei

Tanzania[edit]

Thailand[edit]

Bangkok
Nakhon Ratchasima Province

Previously girls’ schools:

Became coeducational
Closed
  • Istanbul Girls High School
  • Zappeion (Constantinople, now Istanbul) – Established in 1875, it was a school for girls catering to the Greek population. Ayşe Sıdıka Hanım [tr], an ethnic Turk, attended this school. Johann Strauss, author of “Language and power in the late Ottoman Empire,” described it as “prestigious”.[10]

United Arab Emirates[edit]

Abu Dhabi
Dubai

United Kingdom[edit]

United States[edit]

Vietnam[edit]

Formerly all girls

Zimbabwe[edit]

Harare
Bulawayo
Other

By former countries[edit]

Ottoman Empire[edit]

  • Aidin Vilayet
  • Constantinople Vilayet
    • American Academy for Girls (now Üsküdar American Academy) (Constantinople, now Istanbul)
    • Zappeion (Constantinople, now Istanbul) – Established in 1875, it was a school for girls catering to the Greek population. Ayşe Sıdıka Hanım [tr], an ethnic Turk, attended this school. Johann Strauss, author of “Language and power in the late Ottoman Empire,” described it as “prestigious”.[10]
  • Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem

See also[edit]

References[edit]