l'école secondaire
junior high school is called 'le collège' in French. Senior high school is called 'le lycée'
Un lycee.
The name of the exam taken by French students after high school is called the Baccalauréat.
(junior) high school is called 'le collège' (masc.) in French. The student there is called 'un collégien / une collégienne'.(senior) high school is called 'le lycée' (masc.); the student is called 'un lycéen / une lycéenne'
In French, haut école or l'école is high school; le lycée is college, or senior high school.
School- l'ecole Middle School- l'college High School- l'lycee
In French, you say "lycéen" for a male high school student and "lycéenne" for a female high school student.
It means "What are you doing in high school?" (beware that the French 'collège' is called 'junior high school' in the American system, the senior high school being called 'lycée'
the junior high school is called "le collège" (masc.) in French. The pupil taught there is "un collégien" or "une collégienne". The senior high school is called "le lycée" (masc.). The student is called "un lycéen" or "une lycéenne".
French exams are typically called "examens" or "épreuves" in French. This can vary depending on the specific type of exam, such as "le baccalauréat" for the national high school diploma exam.
high schools in France are called 'collège' (for junior high) or lycée (senior high). The subjects taught are roughly equivalent (except there is no religious education). Some collèges or lycées can be boarding schools (especially in rural areas). French students often have their lunch at school (unless they live very close to the school). They don't have to wear uniforms.
It's not French