He studied there from 1987 to 1998. I managed to find a time when the school was at a high level. With the independence of the Republic of Kazakhstan, a time of change began, and education began to decline. Experienced teachers left: they mostly emigrated to Germany and the Russian Federation. For several months there were gaps in teaching a foreign language, mathematics - there were not enough teachers. With the arrival of another director, there was a period of "devastation" of the school's infrastructure itself. So, the toilets fell into disrepair, and a temporary M-Zh was built on the street instead. Workshops (where boys learned to work with their hands) have experienced several waves of "looting". If in the 5th grade, when we first came there, I was amazed by the abundance of innovative ideas in teaching (thanks to the previous master Koshkin Yu.) all the necessary tools were metal-wood-processing machines. And when they moved to the CPC at 9m, there was little left. In chemistry lessons, they no longer found laboratory work (to work with reagents). There were not enough visual aids in physics. And computer science, oh, since the mid-90s, "fundraising" has been going on for repairs of corridors, windows, roofs, etc. Often capable students were transferred to lyceums around the city at that time. However, the amount of knowledge that I managed to get helped a little in my life. Thank you to the teachers! In the senior class, it was not without the help of tutors. In general, when I was studying, I didn't think about all this, it was interesting, fun, difficult in some ways, easy in some ways. Our class was friendly. It was the best time! In the photo (taken from open sources), this is how I left her.
Oh. Nostalgia)
I remember there was a sign on top of the entrance (Kosh Keldynezder) welcome.
And we also came when the school was closed and climbed through the windows of the classrooms into the building through the bars, they are so big there, I remember them as stone type.
I also had a Kazakh friend, Rusya.