Lhasa Middle School

Lhasa Middle School of the Tibet Autonomous Region (西藏自治区拉萨中学, ) is an autonomous regionally-run middle school of the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, the first middle school in the history of Tibet, and is now directly under the Department of Education of the TAR, and is a modernized, general middle school. The middle school is located on West Linkor Road in Lhasa.

History
In April 1956, Vice Premier Chen Yi, during his visit to Lhasa Primary School, suggested that Lhasa Middle School should be founded as soon as possible. In July, the Preparatory Committee of the Autonomous Region made the Resolution on the Establishment of Lhasa Secondary School.

Lhasa Middle School opened on September 20, 1956, with five junior high school classes, two junior high school preparatory classes, two teacher training classes and one teacher class, with a total of 58 teaching staff and 650 students. In addition to the general secondary school curriculum, the junior high school class also set up a morning meditation class, praying and reciting Buddhist scriptures every morning; the scribe class was taught by a living Buddha; the Hui teachers and students could go home to worship every Friday. In 1957, the scribe class was closed down, and the junior high school class and the teacher's short training class were reorganized. In 1977, the school was changed into the first secondary school of Lhasa City, which was designated as a key secondary school of the Tibet Autonomous Region. In 1984, it was changed into the Lhasa Secondary School of the Tibet Autonomous Region, which is directly under the Tibet Autonomous Region, and the first secondary school of Lhasa City. In 1984, the school was transformed into the Lhasa Middle School of the Tibet Autonomous Region, directly under the Department of Education of the Tibet Autonomous Region. In 1985, the school recruited 78 students from the border ethnic minorities such as the Menba, Lhoba, Nakhi and the Sherpas, and set up 2 border ethnic minority classes.