The lycée autogéré de Paris is an created in 1982 by Education MinisterAlain Savary. Teachers and students are the foundation, the "initiator" was Jean Lévi. LAP teaches adolescents and young adults, aged 15 to 21, as an alternative to the Education in France.
History
Job cuts
In 2011, during parity meetings of the rectorate of Paris, where the allocation of teaching posts for each establishment was decided, LAP were informed of the loss of five posts from 2011, threatening the closure of the establishment. In reaction to this news, the lycée mobilised and managed to save four and a half of the jobs. In 2015, faced with further mobilisation of staff and students, the remaining half-post was reallocated to the lycée. Therefore, the lycée kept its 25 teaching staff.
Incident
In, the lycée autogéré de Paris was disturbed by far-right militants of the Groupe Union Défense, who threatened to infiltrate the establishment and create incidents. The lycée filed notice leading to, one year in prison, of which six months are suspended by the Paris prosecutor's office for the two defendants.
Teaching
The lycée autogéré de Paris was inspired by preexisting teaching experience, particularly from the network of experimental schools and colleges created in the 1960s and 1970s, such as the école élémentaire Vitruve opened in 1962 in the 20th arrondissement of Paris and Oslo Experimental School, opened in 1967 in Norway. They also looked at the lycée expérimental de Saint-Nazaire, which had opened six months earlier in Saint-Nazaire. Among the theoretical references, they looked at Célestin Freinet and his colleagues in the Freinet Modern School Movement, but also took inspiration from the theories of the "dissidents", who studied institutional pedagogy - Raymond Fonvieille and Fernand Oury. Nevertheless, the lycée autogéré de Paris leaned closer to the self-management ideals of Fonvieille, than the psychoanalytical tendencies of Oury. From a practical point of view, the texts of scholars Georges Lapassade and Michel Lobrot promote this type of experience. The pedagogy of LAP also relies on the work of institutional psychotherapy. In practice, there is a conciliation between the different theories and practice, and the entire establishment is key to making it work.
Function
In the lycée autogéré de Paris, there are three types of members:
salaried teachers, responsible for experience vis-à-vis the outside world;
a "specialist", a worker who carries out maintenance of the grounds, but who trains students who want it;
The participation of all in the actions and decisions that affect the life of the establishment is particularly sought after. Self-management is translated into structures such as grassroots groups, commissions, general management meetings, and a general assembly. In practice, LAP works so that life inside its premises is decided and executed "as much as possible" by all members of the community. The experience is run by a team of teachers who work in self-management: a teacher volunteers to work in the establishment, and is chosen by members of the team. For each teacher, paid by the National Education, participation in different areas is imperative. The participation of every student is encouraged, but not mandatory. According to LAP, this participation creates conflict with other projects: obtaining the baccalauréat, earning money, carrying out artistic projects, etc. Students are free to attend classes. For some, the inspiration is a "cooperative" ideology, for others, a "consumerist" attitude, for others, "desire". Among the management, there is a team meeting, at least two hours per week, in the form of collegial leadership. Difficulties are analysed collectively and the analysis contributed to training all members of the group. The lycée was considered by the Ministry as a pointer for the whole French education system, a "guide", to allow for the understanding of the system by the National Education. A very comprehensive "school project" is published each year by the lycée team and gives detailed information about its operation. Contacts with a range of self-management companies have been developed since 2005 with exchange of alternative practices and ideas.
Results and rankings
A ranking published by the magazine L'Étudiant in January 2009 gave the level of obtaining the Baccalauréat in the lycée at 26%, ranking it, according to the magazine, last of the 1871 lycées in France. In 2013, a ranking published in the magazine Le Monde again ranked the lycée last in France in terms of added value compared to similar lycées in the academy, and second-last in bac results with a rate of 30%. In 2015, the lycée ranked 109th out of 109 at départemental level in terms of teaching quality, and 2285th at national level. The ranking is based on three criteria: the level of bac results, the proportion of students who obtain their baccalauréat having spent the last two years at the establishment, and added value. In 2018, an article in Figaro stated that in the lycée, the level of bac results was around 40%,. The results are relative to the school, partly as students are not obliged to attend the courses, and also because the lycée is as much about encouraging students to take part in cultural activities to which they may never have had access, as it is about gaining the baccalauréat.