Comparing 9 schools side by side in USD.
Located at No. 2 Huxia Street, Yuan Yang Town, Yubei District, Chongqing 401122, China. The campus sits in the Yuan Yang Town area of Yubei District. It occupies more than 5,000 square meters of space for indoor and outdoor learning.
The school serves children aged 2 to 6. The curriculum includes Toddler Curriculum (ages 2–3), Early Childhood Curriculum (ages 3–5), and Pre-Primary Preparation Curriculum (ages 5–6).
The kindergarten serves both local Chinese and expatriate families and operates as a day kindergarten in a bilingual learning environment.
SEN provisions are not publicly listed. The school emphasizes child protection and safety policies as part of its safeguarding framework. Families with learning needs should contact the admissions team for guidance.
No formal country affiliation is listed; the school is part of the Yew Chung Yew Wah (YCYW) international education network.
No religious affiliation is indicated. The school frames its values around science, culture, and charity rather than a specific religion.
Daily life routines vary by class. For K2 and K3, the day begins around 8:30 a.m. with outdoor time at 9:00 a.m., followed by play and exploration at 10:00 a.m., Morning Talk/Language Talk at 11:15 a.m., and lunch at 11:30 a.m. K4 starts around 8:20 a.m. with a similar pattern, and K5 begins around 8:10 a.m. with a slightly extended morning schedule and lunch around 11:35 a.m.
Bus service information is not publicly published. Interested families should inquire with admissions for transport options.
The school is owned by the Chongqing Fudi Yew Wah International Kindergarten Foundation. It is part of the Yew Chung Yew Wah (YCYW) network of international schools. Governance is provided by the foundation in coordination with the YCYW network.
The Chongqing Fudi Yew Wah International Education Kindergarten follows the YWIEK Curriculum developed by Yew Wah Early Childhood Education Research and Development Centre for children aged six or below, with three stages: Toddler Curriculum (2–3), Early Childhood Curriculum (3–5), and Pre-Primary Preparation Curriculum (5–6). It uses an emergent curriculum and learning-through-play approach in a bilingual English–Chinese environment, guided by an observation-reflection-response cycle. The program emphasizes whole-child development—health, social skills, language, science, and arts—and aims to cultivate confident, imaginative, and caring learners. Unique programmes include the YW Adaption Programme for New Students, YW Early Literacy Education Programme, Early Mathematics Education Programme, English Programme, Early Music and Movement Programme, and Early Physical Development Programme. Daily life routines for K2–K5 illustrate structured, age-appropriate activities, including outdoor play, morning language talks, and group activities, reflecting the emergent curriculum in practice.
YWIEK Chongqing Fudi supports Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) through a focus on healthy, balanced growth and all‑round development, with an emphasis on strong teacher–child relationships and close cooperation with parents to foster an open, inclusive, and supportive learning environment. The school emphasizes character education to nurture care, respect, honesty, trust, and positive social interactions among students. It describes its learning environment as positive, loving, enjoyable and appreciative, aiming to build confident, global citizens with both Chinese cultural heritage and international perspectives. The co‑operative teaching model between Chinese and Western teachers helps children develop social awareness within a bilingual setting, reinforcing social and cultural understanding. Emergent curriculum supports SEL by integrating health, social and other development domains through child‑led inquiry and collaborative learning.
The school does not publicly disclose information regarding Special Educational Needs (SEN) provision or whether it operates as a specialist SEN institution.
EAL support is evidenced in YWIEK's curriculum, which describes a bilingual learning environment and a focus on second language learning. The curriculum notes a Yew Wah English Programme and other language supports as part of Unique Programmes, indicating structured English language development alongside the home language. It highlights learning through an emergent curriculum that treats English language learning as an integrated part of activities, rather than a separate, standalone program. This aligns with a bilingual approach where English is taught alongside Chinese within a shared learning context. The school also emphasizes a Chinese–English bilingual environment, staffed by a co‑leadership model that blends Western and Chinese approaches.
The curriculum promotes holistic development and healthful growth, describing aims for students to have a healthy body and a lively, cheerful personality, with health and social development embedded in the emergent curriculum. Specific mental wellbeing programs or dedicated mental health services are not publicly disclosed in available materials. The emphasis on positive relationships and a supportive, interactive learning environment suggests a focus on social‑emotional well‑being within daily activities, though explicit mental health provisions are not itemized.
YWIEK Chongqing Fudi identifies itself as a Child‑Safe School and provides access to Child Protection Policies and Procedures through its site. The English‑language page notes a dedicated Child Protection section, and the Chinese page likewise centers safeguarding and child protection as core commitments. Public statements describe the school's safeguarding approach as part of its broader child safety framework, without detailing specific safeguarding roles or procedures in a stand‑alone, public, policy document. The presence of a formal child protection framework is supported by references to policies and procedures on the site.
Step 1 — Complete the Online Application. Parents submit the Online Enquiry form to arrange a visit to YWIEK Chongqing Fudi. The Admissions Office will review the completed application package and then notify the family about the placement assessment and interview. This initial step sets the timeline for the next stage of the process.
Step 2 — Placement Assessment & Interviews. All children must be interviewed together with their parents, which allows the kindergarten to understand and meet the child's needs. During this step, the Admissions Office processes the application package and informs the family about the scheduled placement assessment and interview.
Step 3 — Application Review and Decision Notification. After the interview, the family receives a placement offer letter from the school if the candidacy is successful. The school may also issue subsequent communications related to the next steps in enrollment.
Scholarships: The Yew Chung Yew Wah Education Network offers network-wide scholarships with several categories (for example, Madam Tsang Chor-hang Memorial Scholarship, YCYW Subject & Talent Award, and IGCSE/IB/A Level Award). These scholarships generally provide tuition fee waivers ranging from about 15% to 100% and are open to eligible students in certain grade levels, typically starting from upper primary through secondary (grades 7–13) with specific eligibility requirements and documentation. The exact applicability of these scholarships to YWIEK Chongqing Fudi Kindergarten is not published on its campus pages; the network's scholarship program information is available across the network, and individual campus eligibility can vary.
No waitlist or pool system information is published for Chongqing Fudi Yew Wah International Education Kindergarten.
Beijing New Talent Academy is in the Tianzhu Development Zone (No.9 Anhua Street), Shunyi District — on the west side of Beijing Capital International Airport and close to the China International Exhibition Center. The campus is in suburban Shunyi with road links to the airport and nearby exhibition and villa districts.
The school describes itself as a 15‑year continuous school covering kindergarten through senior high (approximately ages 3–18) and hosts a Kindergarten, Primary School, Secondary School plus specialised units such as a Cambridge Centre and an AP Centre. International and Chinese‑language programmes are offered within those divisions.
Beijing New Talent Academy is a private, co‑educational K–12 school that operates both day and boarding options; the school's public materials and term fee descriptions note workday boarding and meals are provided for boarding and some day pupils.
The school's public webpages do not publish a detailed Special Educational Needs (SEN) programme. Its website does emphasise small classes and a mentor/tutor system, which may offer additional pastoral support, but parents seeking formal SEN provision, assessments or external‑therapy arrangements should contact Admissions for current details.
The school is a Chinese school based in Beijing and is not presented as affiliated to another country.
No religious affiliation is indicated on the school's public materials.
The school runs a full‑day programme; specific start and finish times are not published on the main site. The school's recent notices show after‑school elective/club sessions commonly run around 15:50–17:00, and admissions information notes workday boarding and meals are included for boarding pupils. For precise daily times by age group, contact Admissions.
There is no clear school‑bus timetable or provider information published on the public website. Prospective parents should ask Admissions about whether a dedicated school bus route is available for their neighbourhood, how routes and stops are organised, and whether bus supervision or third‑party providers are used. Contact details are available on the school's admissions pages.
The school is a private boarding school.
The school is privately owned and operated with investment from The Yingcai Group.
Beijing New Talent Academy (北京市新英才学校) is a 15‑year continuous school offering kindergarten through high school; its programme blends China's national curriculum with school‑based and integrated courses and multiple international pathways. The kindergarten runs an “爱与创造” thematic bilingual programme with English led by foreign teachers alongside character, physical and exploratory courses. The primary years follow the national curriculum while adding personalised elective tracks in STEM, arts, language and sports. The junior secondary (grades 7–9) retains the national curriculum as core and uses a “必修+选修+社团” model to strengthen subject foundations, study skills and preparation for international competitions. In senior secondary the school keeps domestic high‑school (高考) courses as the core and offers multiple international qualification routes — IGCSE and A‑Level, AP, Canadian (BC) courses, Hong Kong DSE and specialised international art pathways — giving students both domestic and overseas university exit options.
Beijing New Talent Academy describes whole-school character and social development within its curriculum frameworks: elementary curriculum lists ten育人目标 (including interpersonal skills, self-management and teamwork) that are taught across subjects, and the kindergarten uses cross‑discipline thematic projects to develop social and communication skills. The AP/International programmes also reference dedicated “品格” (character) courses alongside academic subjects. The school's Psychology/Research Centre runs psychological education activities and exam‑anxiety workshops for students, and the centre publishes materials used in class to address emotional regulation. The school has also run anti‑bullying lessons and immersive activities through the psychological centre.
Beijing New Talent Academy publishes several language provisions on its site: a Chinese Language Centre (汉语中心) offering HSK testing and immersion for international students, a bilingual kindergarten that lists both Chinese and foreign lead teachers in each class, and senior programmes (HKDSE/AP) that reference language‑support courses, IELTS training and shared Chinese/English teaching in some classes. These pages indicate the school provides in‑school language services and foreign teachers rather than a separately labelled “EAL” programme. The site does not present a distinct, named EAL policy but does advertise bilingual instruction and targeted language courses.
The school operates a Psychological Health Education and Counseling Center that offers psychological health education, individual counselling, psychological assessment (including anxiety and depression screening), group courses (e.g., sand‑tray therapy for upper primary), and a published counselling hotline and contact email. The centre also documents crisis‑intervention work and publishes guidance for students and parents about coping and resilience during events such as extended home study. The school's news items describe themed mental‑health workshops (for example, exam‑anxiety series) run by the psychology team.
The school's website reports routine campus safety work and inspections by municipal education authorities, formal procedures for approving and risk‑assessing off‑campus student activities, and in‑school events (law/rights talks) aimed at protecting minors and preventing harm. The site also documents anti‑bullying education activities delivered through the psychology centre and lists practical safety measures (e.g., closed campus management and coordinated patrols) discussed in official safety reviews.
1. Prepare and submit the application form and required documents. Parents should complete the school's international application form (available from the school's admissions office or website) and include a recent passport photo. The school requires the applicant's passport (original for inspection and a photocopy), current visa or residence permit, and the previous school's transcript and conduct report in Chinese or English (sealed or signed). These document requirements and the application timelines are described on the school's admissions pages; check the latest version before you apply.
2. Note application timing and fees. The school's published windows for external intake have historically included a fall and a spring intake (examples cited: April 15–Aug 25 for fall and Nov 15–Feb 20 for spring), and there is a one‑time application fee (sources show either RMB ¥800 or an equivalent USD application charge listed by third‑party agents — confirm the current amount with the school). Parents should plan to submit materials early in the window because testing and interviews are arranged in application order.
3. Testing and interview / placement. After documents are received, students are normally scheduled for a written test and an interview; the school evaluates language level and academic knowledge to place students into the appropriate track (domestic class, Cambridge/IGCSE–A Level, or AP pathways). Parents should expect the school to use test results plus transcripts and interview performance to determine grade placement and whether additional language support or bridging is required. If you have recent standardized test scores or school reports in English or Chinese, bring them to the interview to help placement.
4. Admissions decision and seat reservation. The school issues an offer after review of tests and materials; offers commonly require a timely reply and payment of a deposit or registration fee to hold the place. Parents should ask at the time of the offer about the amount and refund conditions of any deposit, the full tuition payment schedule, and what is included in the tuition package (for example, published information states tuition usually covers textbooks, campus clinic, basic accident/medical insurance, and weekday boarding/meals). Keep written confirmation of dates and amounts.
5. Visa, residence permit and health checks. For non‑Chinese nationals, the school will need copies of the student's passport and visa/residence permit; parents should start visa procedures early and confirm any school‑issued documents needed for a student X‑ or S‑type visa or residence permit. Also check China's current entry, medical check, and vaccination requirements for school enrollment — some elements (health checks or medical records) are typically part of registration. Ask the admissions office which documents they will return and which they will retain for records.
6. Boarding, daily logistics and orientation. If the student will board, parents should confirm boarding fees (if separate), rooming policy, what meals are included, and the school's weekend/holiday procedures. The school publishes that tuition packages for boarding students have covered weekday boarding and meals in prior descriptions, but boarding rules, curfew, laundry, and supervision details change — request a boarding handbook and sample weekly timetable. Attend the orientation meeting so you and your child understand the school routines, health services, and disciplinary code.
7. Curriculum track selection and internal priorities. The school operates multiple curricular tracks (Chinese domestic curriculum, Cambridge IGCSE/A Level and AP pathways); in some centers the school gives priority to internal students for places in specific centers and then opens remaining places to external applicants. Parents should ask which track the offer refers to, whether the student will “join a domestic class” or an international center class, and what the expectations are for language and exam preparation. If your child aims for a particular program (IGCSE/A Level or AP), request the program start date and any preparatory course recommendations.
8. Final enrollment and annual re‑registration. After payment and registration, expect an annual re‑registration process (schools with scholarship programmes and competitive tracks often require reapplication for scholarships and revalidation of status each year). Keep copies of receipts and the school's enrollment agreement, and confirm refund and withdrawal deadlines in writing in case your family circumstances change. For anything not clearly stated online, contact the admissions office directly for a written clarification before you sign.
The school operates several scholarship mechanisms and a formal internal scholarship application process. The school's published scholarship page describes academic scholarships for current students (awarded in grades 9–11 to offset the next academic year's tuition) and a graduate scholarship that, for qualifying 12th‑grade students who receive formal offers from specified universities, refunds the 12th‑grade tuition for that year. Scholarship awards are administered by a scholarship review committee; applications require supporting documents (official test scores or language exam results, school transcripts, a personal statement, recommendation letters, and certificates of awards) and must be submitted by the stated deadline (the school page lists June 30 for some internal applications). Scholarships granted by the school are applied as reductions against tuition and normally require annual reapplication or review to continue.
There are also merit‑based entrance and enrolment scholarships reported in education outlets and school admission summaries (examples include tiered fee waivers tied to specific exam score cutoffs reported for some intake years). These third‑party reports indicate the school has, at times, offered full or partial fee waivers to very high‑scoring applicants, but the exact score bands, amount of fee waiver, and whether such schemes apply to a given intake year vary and are not always formalized on the main English admissions pages — treat those reports as indicative and verify the current policy directly with admissions. For the clearest, up‑to‑date information about available awards, the review committee's criteria, application deadlines and required documents, contact the school's scholarship or admissions office (emails and phone contacts are listed on the school site and admissions listings).
Publicly available information does not show a formal, published “waitlist” process with a public queue number; instead, the school's external materials indicate that written tests and interviews are scheduled in the order applications arrive and that some internal students are given priority for places in particular centers. That phrasing implies offers are made by availability and merit rather than via a standardized online waitlist that publishes rank or wait time. If a grade or program is full, families should ask admissions whether the school keeps an internal pool of alternates, how long that pool typically lasts, and whether a deposit or reply deadline would convert an alternate status into a confirmed place. Because practices can change from year to year, I recommend contacting the admissions office directly to learn the school's current policy for the cohort and grade you are applying to.
Located at 1555 Jufeng Road, near Jinjing Road in Pudong District, Shanghai. The campus sits in a dedicated education area with convenient access by road and public transit. The site covers a large campus with multiple buildings and substantial green space. The school serves pupils from kindergarten through Grade 12, including an international department.
The school comprises a Kindergarten, Primary Department, Secondary Department (including middle and high school) and an International Department.
Private, all-through boarding school. It operates as a boarding school and includes an International Department.
The school emphasizes personalized education and features an Apple Model Classroom approach. The International Department includes a Mandarin Center to support Chinese language learning for international students.
No official country affiliation is listed publicly.
No religious affiliation is indicated publicly.
The school day runs Monday to Friday from 7:30am to 4:00pm.
Nearby public transport options include multiple bus routes (e.g., 987, 1006, 791, 995, 1016, 774, 799) and Shanghai Metro Line 12.
Shanghai Gold Apple School operates as a modern boarding school with on-campus housing for students across its kindergarten through high school and international departments. Enrollment materials show a boarding option exists alongside day students, with accommodation priced at 5,000 RMB per semester. For the International Department's Mandarin Center, on-site dormitories house 2–4 students per apartment with private bathrooms and essential amenities, including Wi‑Fi, a water dispenser, air conditioning, hot water, and a washing machine, with living staff on 24-hour duty. The staff recruitment page notes that the school provides dormitories or arranges transport for staff, which confirms the existence of on-site housing infrastructure.
A school uniform is required. The Mandarin Center page lists a uniform fee of 5,000 Yuan for four-season uniforms. Color, sourcing, and purchasing details are not specified on the site.
The on-site canteen provides breakfast, lunch, and dinner, with meals primarily in Chinese style and some Western options; a halal window is available. Milk and dessert are provided at 10:00 am, and fruit and a late snack follow dinner.
Shanghai Gold Apple School was founded in 2000 by the Yalong Group (Shanghai Yalong Investment Group Co., Ltd.). It is a member school of Jianping Group, reflecting its governance and network within a private-education group.
Shanghai Gold Apple School is a K-12 modern boarding school in Pudong that comprises a Kindergarten, Primary Department, Secondary Department (middle and high school), and an International Department, with a Mandarin Center for Chinese language education. The domestic curriculum follows the Chinese national system for primary through high school, while the International Department provides international pathways aligned to UK and US frameworks. The International Department includes centers for Mandarin language (Mandarin Center), U.S. High School studies, and Cambridge International (Cambridge Center), with additional regional centers and a focus on overseas university admissions. The Mandarin Center Curriculum offers five categories: language courses, Shanghai curriculum, international curricula (primarily UK and US systems), specialty courses, and expansion courses, with personalized plans based on entry level. Graduation from the Secondary Department yields three certificates (achievement, physical ability, and bilingual speech); the Cambridge Center has produced many Oxbridge entrants, and the U.S. High School Center offers pathways toward admission to top U.S. universities.
Shanghai Gold Apple School supports social-emotional learning through the Apple Classroom model, which facilitates student self-construction and interaction, and through Life Guidance courses that help students develop good behavior and leadership within the school's five development areas (Keep Fit, Good Behavior, Art, Learning and English).
The school does not publicly disclose information regarding Special Educational Needs (SEN) support.
English language development is a focus within the five development areas, with the Primary Department aiming for graduates to master 1000 English phrases, and the International Department offering centers such as the US High School Center and the Cambridge Center as part of its programs.
Mental wellbeing provisions are not explicitly described; Life Guidance courses contribute to student well-being and behavioral development.
A Safe Campus section exists under Campus Culture on the site, indicating safeguarding provisions are part of campus culture, though specific safeguarding policies are not publicly disclosed.
1. Program eligibility and options. Shanghai Gold Apple School runs three international streams: International Primary for ages roughly 6–12, International Middle for about 14–16, and International High School for students who have completed middle school or higher. International Primary classes are capped at 22 students per class, International Middle at no more than 30 per class, and International High School at 25 per class; teaching is conducted in English for the international high school. These details define which track a family should pursue based on the student's age and current grade.
2. Initial inquiry and registration. Families begin by contacting the admissions team by telephone or by online registration to start the process. After registration, parents wait for an admissions staff member to reach out with next steps and scheduling information. This registration step helps determine eligibility and the appropriate interview and testing windows.
3. Application and examination fee. An application/examination fee of 300 RMB must be paid to proceed with the assessment. The fee is paid as part of the enrollment process after registration and before testing. This fee is non-refundable and confirms the candidate's participation in the admissions assessments.
4. Entrance assessments and interviews. For international streams, admissions involve English and Mathematics examinations, followed by an interview (often bilingual). The class placement is informed by the exam results and interview performance. Successful candidates move on to the tuition/payment stage after completing these assessments.
5. Admission decision, tuition payment, and formal notice. Upon meeting the required assessments, families are asked to pay the applicable tuition and related fees. After payment, the school issues a formal admission notice, finalizing enrollment for the chosen program. This completes the admissions process and allows the student to begin the program.
Public information does not list scholarship programs for Shanghai Gold Apple School.
MSB is located in Chaoyang District, Beijing at Building No. 8, 2A Xiang Jiang Bei Lu (Xiangjiang Beilu). The school site and campus pages note it sits in a villa/residential area on the edge of Chaoyang (near the Chaoyang–Shunyi junction), with standard road access and on-site campus facilities; families typically travel by car or school bus.
MSB runs a full-age programme from early years to secondary: Little Bees (6–24 months), toddler/infant and preschool (roughly 18 months–6 years), elementary (Grades 1–6 / ages ~6–12) and middle/high school through Year 12. The site lists specific pages for each stage and fee bands up to Grade 11–12.
The International Montessori School of Beijing is a co-educational day school (no boarding is advertised on the school site). It is operated as an international school and appears under the Wisdom International Education Group umbrella.
MSB publishes a student-support programme that includes EAL (English as an Additional Language), reading and library support, classroom-level differentiated support, one-to-one and small-group learning support, psychological/behavioural assessment and, where required, full-time shadowing; some supports (for example individualized IEP tutoring or additional staff) may carry extra fees. The admissions policy notes trial/assessment periods for applicants with additional needs.
MSB does not state an affiliation to a single national school system; it identifies as an international school in Beijing and is part of Wisdom International Education Group. In 2025 the school also announced a partnership to develop an American-style high school pathway with a California school district (Placentia‑Yorba Linda USD).
The school website does not indicate any religious affiliation; programme and policy pages present MSB as a non‑religious, international institution.
MSB publishes an academic calendar with term dates, school events and holiday periods but does not publish standard daily start/end times on its public pages; parents are directed to the admissions or contact team for operational details. Office/contact information and the calendar are available on the site.
MSB operates an optional school-bus service run in partnership with Beijing BAIC Taxi Group (北京北汽出租汽车集团). Routes and stops are set according to demand and are adjusted annually; the school warns it may not be able to serve addresses far outside regular routes and that mid‑year moves can affect continued eligibility. For route details and booking the site links a bus-service document and gives a bus email (busservices@msb.edu.cn) and a contact (Joseph) via the main switchboard.
Day school; no boarding provision.
Part of Wisdom International Education Group.
MSB delivers a Montessori‑based, individualized curriculum that spans early years through secondary education (ages 0–18). The school's age bands are infant/toddler 0–3, early childhood 3–6, primary 6–12 and secondary 12–18, with age‑appropriate Montessori and project‑based learning in each stage. The full curriculum covers core literacy and numeracy, cross‑disciplinary project work and specialist programmes in science, art, music and physical education (including weekly labs, exhibitions and performances). MSB operates dual streams (bilingual Chinese/English and a pure‑English stream); bilingual students learn subjects in an immersion model while every student receives a 40‑minute daily Chinese language class and EAL support is provided as needed. At secondary level the school integrates Montessori practice with a standards‑based academic middle programme and has announced the launch of a US‑style university‑preparatory high school in partnership with PYLUSD (announcement in 2025).
MSB states that Social and Emotional Learning is embedded across the curriculum using a virtues/character-education approach (the school uses the Virtues Project), with virtues explored in classrooms, playgrounds and assemblies and reinforced in weekly celebration assemblies. MSB says this work is integrated into daily learning rather than treated as a separate subject, and aims to develop students' self-regulation, resilience and interpersonal skills. The school also runs student leadership (Student Council) and regular community events which it cites as part of pupils' social development. (Sources: MSB news on SEL; Learning at MSB).
MSB publishes a Learning Support programme on its website that lists additional provisions including regular learning support, speech therapy, psycho-educational assessment, one-to-one or small-group teaching and the option of a full-time shadow. The school says it has on-site staff to provide tailored academic and counselling support and that counselling, assessments and observations used to guide teachers are provided free of charge, although additional manpower for admitted students with existing needs may incur fees. MSB also states that applicants with known learning needs are assessed during admissions and must supply past records to allow the school to determine if it can meet the child's needs; the admissions/enrolment policy notes a probationary period during which the school may withdraw a place if it cannot meet a student's needs. MSB does not describe itself as a specialist SEN institution; it frames support as part of its general learning-support provision.
MSB publishes an EAL programme and an English department structure (Reading, Libraries and an EAL team) on its Student Support page. The school describes initial English assessments in the first two weeks of term, small-group in-class and after-school EAL lessons, phonics-focused instruction for beginner learners, and an Individualised English Programme (IEP) for pupils who need intensive support (IEP places are fee-based). MSB also states that classroom teachers receive EAL training and that preschool EC1/EC2 receive formal EAL support from specialist EAL teachers while toddlers are expected to acquire English more naturally in the classroom environment.
MSB's Student Support material states the school offers psychological/counselling support, assessment and observation to meet students' social and emotional needs and to guide classroom teachers; the school says these services are provided without charge when initiated by the school. The school's job listing for a School Counselor outlines duties to facilitate social/emotional development, provide individual support (including for low-incidence needs and autism spectrum conditions), run group guidance and social-skills activities, and consult with teachers and families. MSB therefore presents counsellor-led support and school-initiated assessment/observation as part of its approach to student mental wellbeing.
The school's public website does not publish a standalone safeguarding or child-protection policy that could be located during this review. Therefore, MSB does not appear to publicly disclose detailed safeguarding/child-protection policy documents on its website. For specific, up-to-date safeguarding policies or designated safeguarding contacts you should contact the school directly (contact details are provided on the MSB website).
1. Initial enquiry and online application — Start by completing MSB's online application form (the site labels this “Apply Now”). Parents should prepare to upload the child's passport, both parents' passports and visas (or Chinese ID where applicable), school reports (if any), one teacher recommendation, any learning‑support documentation, and payment of the RMB 3,000 application fee. Only fully completed applications are reviewed, and MSB operates rolling admissions so earlier complete submissions increase the chance of timely consideration.
2. Admissions review and interview — After your complete application is received the Admissions Director will contact you to arrange an interview or meeting; if the family is overseas MSB accepts an additional teacher recommendation in place of an in‑person interview. Parents should expect the school to check documents and past records carefully and to ask clarifying questions about the child's learning needs and school history. If your family cannot attend an in‑person interview, plan to supply the extra recommendation promptly so the application can proceed.
3. Decision and formal offer — If the school offers a place you will receive written notification. MSB requires written confirmation of enrollment within 10 working days of the offer and expects payment of the Placement (security) Deposit to secure the place; if the deposit is not received by the invoice date MSB may reassign the place. Parents should watch the invoice deadline closely and understand the deposit rules before confirming acceptance.
4. Placement deposit and what it secures — The Placement Deposit is ¥20,000 per child (a one‑time, refundable, non‑interest deposit held while the student is enrolled). The deposit secures the student's place; MSB's website explains the deposit will be refunded (less any outstanding charges) when a student leaves, according to the school's withdrawal and refund policy. Note that, under local regulations, the school cannot issue an official fapiao for the refundable placement deposit—MSB will issue a deposit receipt instead.
5. Practical requirements and probationary period — For Early Childhood applicants MSB follows Beijing Municipal Education Commission rules: the student and at least one parent must hold foreign passports and the parent must have a valid work visa (permanent‑resident cases are handled via direct contact with admissions). All new students are subject to a 20 attended‑school‑day probationary period during which MSB may withdraw acceptance if the school cannot meet the child's needs; parents should therefore disclose any past assessments or support needs up front. Also, all Early Childhood applicants must be toilet trained before their first day, and class placement is based on educational background and the child's age as of October 1.
6. Fees, other optional services and next steps after acceptance — Before finalizing acceptance, review the published tuition rates for the relevant year (MSB lists year‑by‑year tuition bands on its Fees page) and check optional services (lunch, bus) for separate charges. After paying the placement deposit and completing enrollment paperwork you will receive guidance on payment schedules, optional service sign‑ups (lunch/bus), and the calendar.
MSB maintains a waiting‑list system and gives priority to certain groups, including returning students, siblings, applicants for full‑day classes, those previously enrolled in Montessori, and applicants who were on the previous year's waiting list. The school operates rolling admissions, and places are secured only after written confirmation and payment of the ¥20,000 Placement Deposit; if the deposit is not received by the invoice deadline MSB may offer the place to another applicant. The website does not publish a public, detailed algorithm or expected waiting times for the waitlist (for example, it does not state how positions are ordered within the waiting list or the typical time a family will wait), so families who want clarity on their current position or the likelihood of an offer should contact Admissions directly.
QAIS is located at the Baishan Campus, Dongjiang, Shazikou, Laoshan District, Qingdao, Shandong Province, China 266102. The campus is in the Baishan area of Qingdao and is accessible via local transport within the city. The school operates as an international campus serving families from multiple nationalities.
QAIS serves students from 18 months to 18 years old. The school delivers Montessori programming for toddler and early childhood, and IB programs for the primary through secondary years, including IB Primary Years Programme (PYP), Middle Years Programme (MYP), and Diploma Programme (DP). Lower School and Upper School structures align with these programs.
QAIS is a co-educational day school. It does not operate boarding facilities.
QAIS provides a dedicated Student Support team, including Learning Support, an English Language Support program (English Foundation Program), and multilingual counseling services. The school uses MTSS (Multi-Tiered System of Support) to address academic, social-emotional, and behavioral needs. Parents and teachers can refer students to the support programs as needed.
QAIS is not affiliated with a specific country; it operates as an international school in China and holds approval from the Chinese Ministry of Education as International School No. 110.
QAIS does not have a religious affiliation. The school emphasizes a diverse, inclusive, non-denominational community, with a diversity pledge that includes all faiths.
A formal public listing of exact daily start and end times is not published on public pages; QAIS maintains a school calendar with sessions and activities. The school calendar confirms an ongoing, structured program across the academic year.
QAIS offers a school bus service with routes organized as part of enrollment. Details about specific bus routes and arrangements are provided during enrollment, and families receive information about bus options through the admissions process.
QAIS requires a school uniform for students. A School Uniform Catalog Order Form is available on the QAIS site to guide uniform purchases; details on sizes and ordering are included in the catalog.
QAIS is part of the Baishan Education Group, a private Qingdao-based education group that operates multiple schools, including Qingdao Baishan School. The school is an IB World School (PYP, MYP, DP) and AMS-accredited, and it is approved by the Chinese Ministry of Education as International School No. 110.
QAIS offers Montessori Toddler and Early Childhood programs accredited by the American Montessori Society and is an IB World School providing the full IB Continuum: Primary Years Programme (PYP), Middle Years Programme (MYP), and Diploma Programme (DP). The school serves students from 18 months to 18 years, with PYP implemented in the lower/elementary years, MYP for ages 12-16, and DP for ages 16-18. In PYP, students engage with a Program of Inquiry consisting of six transdisciplinary units each year. In MYP, Language and Literature is offered in English, Chinese, and Korean, while Language Acquisition covers English and Chinese; core subject groups include Individuals and Societies, Experimental Sciences, Mathematics, Arts, Physical and Health Education, and Design Technology. The Diploma Programme provides the IB DP curriculum for the final two years, enabling university admissions worldwide. QAIS also features the Dream Lab robotics program, robust arts and athletics, and extensive after-school activities as part of its Beyond the Classroom offerings.
QAIS supports social and emotional learning through a multilingual counseling team and a MTSS-based student support system that addresses students' social, emotional, and behavioural needs.
The school offers Learning Support and English Language Support through MTSS, but it does not specify which kinds of Special Educational Needs it can support, nor whether it is a specialist SEN institution.
The English Language Support Program includes the English Foundation Program, a six-week intensive language development course for newly enrolled students who are two or more years below the grade-level standard in English.
Counseling services, offered in multiple languages, support students' mental wellbeing as part of QAIS's social-emotional framework.
QAIS maintains a Child Protection Team and safeguarding policies to protect students' physical and emotional well-being, follows the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, and requires staff to report suspected abuse.
1. Application Submission: Begin by completing the online application form at qais.openapply.cn or via the school site. If you have trouble filling out the form, call the admissions team at +86 532 8388-9900 for assistance. This step starts your admissions file and initiates the process of scheduling next steps.
2. Documents Submission: Submit the documents listed at this stage, including a recent passport photo, photocopies of the student's and parents' passport information pages, visa information page, a Medical Form with up-to-date immunization records, and academic records in English. If records are not in English, provide them with a certified English translation if requested. Include any available standardized test scores and documents related to any special needs testing or IEPs.
3. Application Fee Payment: Pay the application fee of 3,000 RMB via bank transfer, cash, or AliPay. A receipt is issued upon payment, and the fee is non-refundable. After payment, the receipt can be brought to the accounting office for official processing.
4. Assessment & Interview: After completing the documents and fee steps, an admissions officer will schedule your child's academic assessment and an interview. Acceptance is determined through a holistic review of the application materials, the assessment results, and the interview performance. English proficiency is specifically assessed to ensure access to the curriculum, and language placement may be considered if needed.
5. Tuition Payment: If your child is offered a place, the Financial Department will issue an invoice for tuition and fees. Payable within two weeks, during which time a health examination form should be completed. Tuition and fees details appear in the Tuition & Fees policy. QAIS can accept payment in US dollars to the designated account, but the amount withdrawn in RMB must align with the balance due.
6. Orientation & Enrollment: A school representative will schedule your enrollment date and invite you to an orientation to review policies, bus routes, email addresses, school uniforms, and other procedures. For Lower School enrollments, a parent–teacher meeting is arranged before the student begins.
QAIS offers scholarships and merit-based awards. The Scholars of Promise Award for DP 1 & 2 is a holistic selection process considering academic achievement, teacher references, an internal examination, and a personal essay, with awards granted based on overall merit. The Amerasia Global Youth Scholarship is designed to attract academically gifted international students from outside China and to support their experience in QAIS and in completing the IB Diploma Programme; inquiries are directed to the school's contact channels. These programs reflect QAIS's commitment to international mindedness and access to high-quality IB/Montessori education.
QAIS uses a Waitpool when a grade level reaches capacity. Applicants in the Waitpool are considered for admission only when an opening emerges and are not guaranteed a place based on the order of application; instead, admissions are determined by the school's priority ranking. The Admissions Office will notify a family immediately if a place becomes available.
The Bao'an campus is in Hangcheng (Hangcheng Street), Bao'an District, Shenzhen — address: No.2, Beiqi Road. The campus is a short drive from central Bao'an and is part of a newly opened SAIS campus complex that includes academic buildings, dormitories and a dining hall. Public metro and bus links serve Bao'an generally, but exact route/times for daily commutes will depend on your neighbourhood and are best checked locally.
SAIS operates as a K–12 international school overall (preschool through Grade 12), while the Bao'an campus focuses on middle and high school provision. The Bao'an campus offers middle-school foundation (Grades 6–8) and multiple high-school pathways (IBDP, AP, A‑Level, HKDSE).
The school is co-educational and provides both day and boarding options; the Bao'an campus includes an on-site boarding programme for Grade 6 and above. There is no indication that the school is operated by a religious organisation.
SAIS Bao'an states it provides Special Educational Needs (SEN) support and places emphasis on inclusive admissions procedures and counselling. School counsellors run both group and individual sessions and the school asks parents to work collaboratively with staff on support plans; admissions and the Student Development Center are listed contacts for further detail.
The school is an independent international school operating in Shenzhen; it offers multiple international curricula (including American-style AP, A‑Level, IB and HKDSE pathways) and is not presented as formally affiliated to a single foreign government. The school was established with approval from the Chinese education authorities and the Bao'an campus is run in partnership with Tianli Educational Group.
The school website does not list any religious affiliation and presents SAIS as a secular international school.
The school office hours for the Bao'an campus are Monday–Friday, 08:00–17:00; specific daily timetables (start/end times by grade, lesson blocks, and lunch/break schedules) are not detailed on the public pages and can be confirmed with admissions. Boarding students follow a campus boarding schedule with after‑school activities, enrichment and supervised self-study in the evenings.
The Bao'an campus website does not publish a dedicated school-bus schedule; SAIS's Shekou main campus operates a paid school-bus service covering Nanshan, Futian and parts of Bao'an, with fees and routes set by service area — for Bao'an-specific transport you should confirm directly with admissions.
The Bao'an Campus offers a boarding program for Grade 6 and above. Boarding provides dormitory living spaces with comfortable accommodations and nutritious meals, with 24/7 supervision by boarding parents. The program includes student-led after-school activities, enrichment classes, and self-study support to promote holistic development.
The culinary team includes chefs from star-rated hotels to offer a diverse range of Chinese and Western dishes for students and staff. Meals are nutritionally balanced and reflect an international palate. Staff and students dine in the same canteen to enable interaction and timely feedback on dining needs.
The Bao'an campus is governed through a strategic partnership between Shenzhen American International School and Tianli Educational Group (01773.HK). It operates independently from the Shekou campus, with governance strengthened by this partnership to support sustainable educational growth. Tianli Group aims to explore multiple opportunities within the educational sector.
Shenzhen American International School offers a K–12 international programme: IB‑PYP in early years/elementary, a Middle Years/Foundation bridge in middle school, and multiple Grade 10–12 pathways (IBDP, AP, A‑Level (Edexcel/AQA) and HKDSE).
Grades 6–8 follow a Middle Year Foundation Program (MYFP) with core subjects in English, Chinese, mathematics, science, individuals & societies, arts, music, ICT, physical health education, Service as Action (SAS) and after‑school activities.
Grade 9 is a High School Foundation Year (Pre‑DP) that prepares students for pathway selection (Pre‑DP into IBDP, AP, A‑Levels or HKDSE) and includes TOK and PHE in the programme.
The American Placement (AP) pathway (Grades 10–12) lets students choose AP subjects across languages, humanities, sciences and maths and sit external AP exams (students typically take 2–3 exams and may earn university credits).
The A‑Level route includes a Grade 10 Pre‑DP year and Pearson Edexcel IAL / AQA Oxford International qualifications in Grades 11–12 (students usually select three specialist subjects alongside mandatory English/Chinese, PHE and ASAs); the HKDSE pathway (Grades 10–12) follows Hong Kong Diploma requirements with compulsory Chinese, English, mathematics and liberal studies plus elective sciences, humanities, Applied Learning options and mathematics extension modules.
The IBDP option comprises a Grade 10 Pre‑DP transition and the two‑year Diploma Programme (Grades 11–12) with the six subject groups, Theory of Knowledge, Extended Essay and CAS; students can follow HL/SL subject choices across languages, individuals & societies, sciences, mathematics and the arts.
SAIS describes a range of student-led after‑school activities (ASA) that the school says develop teamwork, leadership, resilience and confidence through clubs and sports. The SEN/Student Development information also states school counselors run general, age‑group sessions on mental‑health topics as well as individual counselling. The Student Development Center is led by a named director (Ms Aleezer Li), who is presented as a life mentor involved in student support. The school website frames these elements as part of a broader “holistic education” approach on the main site.
The school's SEN page states SAIS offers Special Educational Needs support and says inclusivity and gathering information through the admissions process are part of that provision. The page describes dedicated school counselors providing general and individual counselling tailored to students' needs. The site invites parents to cooperate with the school's SEN work and provides contact emails for further enquiries. The school does not publicly specify on its website which specific categories of SEN it can support, nor does it describe itself as a specialist SEN institution.
SAIS states it offers English language support through English as a Second Language (ESL) and English as an Additional Language (EAL) programmes and lists TOEFL and IELTS preparatory courses. The Language Programs page also notes additional instruction in Chinese, French and Japanese to enrich language learning. The school says its language teaching team includes native and experienced non‑native English teachers to support students transitioning to an English‑language environment. For more detail (levels, entry criteria or class sizes) the site directs enquiries to admissions email addresses.
The school's SEN and Student Development pages state that school counselors provide both group sessions on age‑appropriate mental‑health topics and one‑to‑one counselling for individual needs. The Student Development Center is presented as a focal point for student support and college counselling, led by a named director. The campus description also refers to a “Home Parent” programme and dormitory living spaces intended to create a supportive, home‑like environment for boarders. If you need specifics about counselling qualifications, referral processes or external mental‑health partnerships, the website provides contact emails but does not publish those operational details.
The school does not publicly disclose information regarding safeguarding and child‑protection policies on its website.
1. Initial inquiry and information-gathering (Contact & tour). The school's contact page provides a form to request tours and lists school hours and phone/email contacts; families should confirm which campus/program (Bao'an vs. Shekou) they are applying to before proceeding. Visiting or a phone call is useful because the school offers both day and boarding options and bus/meal arrangements differ by campus.
2. Create an OpenApply account and complete the online application.
- SAIS uses OpenApply for admissions; parents should register a family account and complete every required section of the online application (personal details, family, previous schools, health/SEN information and fees section) before submitting. The OpenApply form also asks whether you want boarding or day place and which academic year and curriculum stream (IB/AP/A‑Level/DSE) you are applying to; fill those carefully because they affect placement and fee schedules. You can preview the full checklist on the OpenApply portal so you can gather translations, transcripts, and medical records before submission.
3. Prepare and submit required documents and pay the non-refundable application fee.
- The application will not be processed until the non-refundable application fee (¥2,000 RMB) is paid and the required documents are received. The school's published application checklist requires a completed application form plus copies of the student's passport, birth certificate (English translation), residence permit or visa (if available), immunization record, two passport photos, the last two years' official school reports (English translation), and any specialist SEN reports. If you do not yet have a Chinese visa/residence permit you may submit passport copies now and email visa/permit copies later.
4. Admission review and any follow-up (selection process).
- Once the application fee and documents are received the school's selection/review process begins; the school may request additional information, clarification of records, or follow-up communications with the sending school. The website and application form do not publish a single fixed interview/exam sequence for all applicants, so the school may contact you to arrange placement testing, an interview, or a meeting with staff as appropriate for the student's age and programme; for high‑school entry the school also runs entrance examinations and scholarship-related assessments. Parents should be ready to supply original documents on request and to schedule in-person or online meetings for placement discussions.
5. Offer, acceptance, and payment of the enrollment deposit.
- If the school issues an offer, new families must pay the non-refundable enrollment deposit (published as ¥60,000 RMB) within five working days of receiving the admission letter to secure the place; continuing students must meet the seat-reservation deadline (published as March 31). The enrollment deposit is applied toward total fees but is non-refundable; if the deposit is not paid by the deadline the school explicitly reserves the right to offer the place to other applicants. Parents should check the offer letter for exact dates and the finance contact for bank details.
6. Tuition payment schedule, early-bird and payment options.
- The school publishes grade-group tuition bands and offers an early-bird rate for payments by March 31; full tuition deadlines and the standard payment schedule show an annual (due by August 10) or semester option (due by August 10 and January 10). For example (published in the SAIS fee policy for 2025–26) annual tuition figures differ by grade and programme (primary, middle, AP/IB high school, A‑Level, HKDSE) and boarding and meal fees are additional. Parents should review the current Fee Policy PDF carefully for the grade-specific tuition amount that applies to their child and confirm whether their employer will pay directly or whether they will pay as family.
7. Additional fees and optional services (boarding, meals, transport, school fund).
- The Fee Policy lists boarding fees (annual boarding fee and meal and dormitory amounts), a School Fund / uniform & BYOD one-time fee for new students (published as ¥20,000 RMB), and bus fee zones (published zone rates); meal and transport fees can be optional and non-refundable depending on your selections. Sibling discounts apply to tuition only (with the structure published in the fee document) but do not apply to boarding, meals or uniform/school-fund charges. If you are considering boarding, note the fee structure for dormitory configurations and that meal arrangements differ between the Bao'an and Shekou campuses.
8. Withdrawal, refunds, and arrival preparations.
- The school publishes a withdrawal and refund policy with proportional refunds depending on the withdrawal date (e.g., 100% refund before school year begins, scaled refunds through the year) and specific rules for temporary leave, late payments, and documentation release. Parents should also prepare immunization records and any medical documentation in advance; the application form requires immunization and health history and indicates the school will follow emergency procedures if necessary. If a visa/residence permit is required for enrollment, start that process early (the application form asks for residence/visa details).
SAIS publishes a school scholarship programme and a scholarship application form for the Bao'an campus. The school's scholarships page and the SAIS Scholarship Application Form list several categories in the 2025 plan, including a High School Entrance Examination Scholarship, Top University Scholarship, Outstanding Student Scholarship, and Talent Scholarship (for arts or sports); the application form describes required items such as a 200–500 word personal statement, two recommendation letters, certified transcripts, and supporting evidence (competition results, portfolios) for talent awards. Deadlines and timelines are published in the scholarship form (examples: application deadlines of December 20 for spring-entry and June 30 for fall-entry; selected applicants notified by January 10 or July 31; successful applicants required to confirm by January 20 or August 5). The scholarship form identifies a Scholarship Coordinator (Ms. Aleezer Li) and gives a contact email and phone number for questions and submission instructions. The scholarships page also includes student testimonial material (example: a 12th‑grade recipient reporting a half scholarship) indicating the school has awarded partial scholarships in practice. If you are considering a scholarship, submit the scholarship form and all supporting documents by the published deadline and follow up with the scholarship coordinator for any programme-specific steps.
The school website and published admissions documents do not present a separate, public ‘waitlist' policy or named ‘admissions pool' for general applicants. However, the Fee Policy states that if a new student's enrollment deposit is not paid by the required deadline the school reserves the right to offer the place to other applicants, which indicates places may be reallocated promptly when deposits are not received. Because the site does not describe a formal waitlist process (priority rules, how long students remain on a list, or how waitlisted families are notified), parents who want to know the practical handling of oversubscribed grades should contact admissions directly (admissions@szsaisba.org) to ask whether a waitlist will be created for their child and how offers from that list are managed.
CIS Beijing is on a single downtown campus at 38 Liangmaqiao Road in Chaoyang District (the Liangmaqiao/3rd Embassy area of central Beijing), within easy reach of the embassy and Sanlitun neighbourhoods. The school describes itself as a downtown campus and gives the full address and admissions contact on its website.
CISB covers Early Years through Grade 12: Early Years (from around 6 months to 5 years), Elementary (Grades 1–5), Middle School (Grades 6–8) and High School (Grades 9–12). The site also notes the school delivers the IB PYP, MYP and DP within a Canadian (New Brunswick) curriculum framework.
CISB is a co‑educational, private day school; the school's public materials describe a single downtown day campus. External summaries list it as a private day school; the official site does not describe on‑site boarding.
The school operates a Student Support/Student Support Services structure and states in its admissions information that it accepts students with mild learning disabilities and certain physical disabilities, with placements considered case‑by‑case. Elementary facilities listed on the site (for example a sensory room) indicate specific resources used in support and inclusion.
CISB follows a Canadian curriculum in partnership with the New Brunswick provincial system and presents itself as a Canadian international school on its website. The school combines that Canadian curriculum with the IB continuum (PYP/MYP/DP).
The school does not list any religious affiliation on its public materials and presents itself as a secular international school. No faith or religious denomination is indicated on the official site.
Division‑specific schedules are published for families (for example through the Parent Portal and the Student/Parent handbooks), and the school calendar shows regular school days plus occasional early dismissals. School transport timings on the site indicate buses arrive around 8:00–8:10 a.m. and regular dismissal is mid/late afternoon (see bus times below); for exact start/end times by division check the school's Student Handbook or contact Admissions.
CISB operates an on‑site school bus service; the school says its fleet typically arrives at campus each morning around 8:00–8:10 a.m. and departs after school at about 3:45 p.m. (Mon–Thurs) and 2:45 p.m. (Friday). A later bus for after‑school activities is available (about 4:45 p.m. Mon–Thurs and 3:45 p.m. Friday); most stops serve north‑east Beijing and the school will consider new stops when there is sufficient demand. The school lists a dedicated bus email and phone extension for enquiries and publishes a bus policy and stop/fee details.
All students wear CISB school uniforms while on campus. Uniforms and CISB merchandise are available through the CISB Online Uniform Shop, which stocks all uniform articles including athletic wear.
The CISB cafeteria is operated by Sodexo, providing healthy, balanced meals prepared onsite. A diverse menu includes Western and Chinese-inspired dishes. Students use a smart card for food services, with balances managed via WeChat or in person.
CISB was founded in 2005 as a State Level Project. It is a not-for-profit, co-educational international school governed by a Board of Directors. It is fully licensed and accredited by the New Brunswick Department of Education and is undergoing accreditation with the Council of International Schools (CIS) and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC).
Canadian International School of Beijing (CISB) delivers a New Brunswick (Canadian) curriculum taught within the International Baccalaureate framework and is authorized to offer the PYP, MYP and DP. Early Years (6 months–5 years) includes a Montessori nursery and early-years programming that prepares children for the Primary Years Programme. Elementary School (Grades 1–5) follows the IB Primary Years Programme. Middle School (Grades 6–8) comprises the first three years of the five-year MYP (MYP covers Grades 6–10) and teaches the eight MYP subject groups, including Language & Literature, Language Acquisition (Mandarin or French), Mathematics, Sciences, Individuals & Societies, Design, The Arts and Physical & Health Education. High School (Grades 9–12) provides senior secondary courses with the two-year IB Diploma Programme in Grades 11–12, and students who complete the IB Diploma at CISB also qualify for the New Brunswick High School Diploma.
CISB states that Social-Emotional Learning is integrated across its IB programmes and is supported through a daily Advisory programme with extended Advisory sessions on Wednesday afternoons for deeper SEL work. Elementary structures include daily morning meetings, classroom agreements and a response-to-intervention model for tiered support. Teachers receive training in responsive classroom approaches and work with the school counsellor when students need individual or small-group interventions. The school names specific leaders involved in SEL delivery, including the Middle/High vice-principal and school counsellors who contribute to programme design and delivery.
CISB's admissions information states the school accepts students with mild learning disabilities and certain physical disabilities but notes it cannot accept students whose needs it cannot effectively meet. The school has a Learning Support role on staff (for example, Paul Amos is listed as Learning Support) and an Inclusion Policy describing differentiated instruction and support. Where needs exceed school capacity the admissions process and support planning involve observations, external assessments and collaboration with parents and external professionals. CISB is not presented as a specialist SEN institution; support is provided within its mainstream programmes.
CISB is an English-medium school and explains that non-native speakers complete WIDA assessments during admission; the school runs an English as an Additional Language (EAL) programme for students who need extra support. The EAL department describes a co-teaching model in which EAL teachers co-teach content classes (especially Individuals & Societies and some Sciences, Maths and Design) and collaborate with content teachers on scaffolding and sheltered instruction. The website also lists EAL staff and sets WIDA-based proficiency requirements by grade for progression.
CISB publishes that it employs school counsellors and psychologists who provide one-to-one and group counselling, workshops and wellbeing programmes (for example, stress-management and meditation sessions) across Early Years through High School. The school's counselling team is named in staff pages and news items, with counsellors trained in approaches such as CBT and with external training like ASIST noted for some staff. Counsellors work with teachers, parents and external specialists (occupational therapists, speech and language therapists and clinical psychologists) when needed to create support plans. The school describes advisory and counselling as central elements of student wellbeing provision.
CISB publishes a detailed Safeguarding & Child Protection Policy (effective February 2025, revised May 2025) that sets out roles, reporting procedures, definitions of abuse, staff responsibilities and links to Chinese law and international best practice. The policy names the Designated Safeguarding Lead (David Bremner) and a Deputy DSL (Hisham Farghaly) and states that all staff must be trained and required to report concerns. The school's Policies page links explicitly to the full child protection policy and to related policies (Inclusion, Health & Safety, Complaints). The document therefore provides the formal procedures and contact points for safeguarding and child-protection matters.
1. Once you inquire, the school assigns a dedicated Admissions Officer who will guide you through paperwork, tours, and next steps; keep that officer's contact details for follow-up. Parents should be ready to explain the child's current school placement, intended start date, and any learning-support needs during this stage.
2. Visit — The Admissions Officer will offer an on-campus visit or a virtual meeting so your family can view facilities and meet staff. During the visit you can ask specifically about how CISB integrates the IB programmes with the New Brunswick (Canada) curriculum and how the school supports transitions from other curricula. If you cannot visit in person, request a virtual tour and ask for sample timetables, examples of student work, and a description of typical class sizes (average 18–20; maximum 25).
3. Application — Complete the OpenApply application and upload all required documents listed on CISB's Application Checklist (two full years of school reports notarized and translated into English, confidential school reference for Grade 1+, passport and visa copies for student and parents, birth certificate, medical insurance proof, completed Enrollment Agreement and Health Questionnaire). A non-refundable application fee of RMB 2,000 is required when you submit the application; keep receipts and record the OpenApply application ID. Parents should ensure transcripts are full (all terms/semesters), officially notarized and translated where necessary — incomplete or non-notarized records delay review.
4. Assessment & Interview — After documents are reviewed, CISB schedules the appropriate assessment(s), observation and an interview (often a Principal interview) for the student and family. English language ability is measured with the WIDA assessment across Listening, Speaking, Reading and Writing (levels 1–6); there are minimum English proficiency requirements from Grade 5 upward, so check FAQs for grade-specific thresholds. Be prepared to provide recent school reports and, where relevant, samples of work or teacher references; if your child needs additional language support, discuss available EAL/learning-support options during the interview.
5. Decision & Enrollment — CISB reviews each application holistically (academic records, assessments, interview and references) and aims to notify families within 1–3 working days after assessment completion (allow 5–7 working days in peak periods). The school operates rolling admissions and class placement depends on seat availability; note that applications received in March or later for Pre‑School and Elementary may require Principal approval and could be deferred to the next academic year. Once accepted you will be asked to return the signed Enrollment Agreement and follow the school's payment and registration instructions — confirm deadlines and refund/withdrawal dates with Admissions to avoid losing a place.
Note on tuition/fees: CISB's full tuition schedule is published on the School Fees / Tuition page; the application fee of RMB 2,000 is specifically listed in the application checklist. Independent fee aggregators (which mirror published school figures) list per-grade annual tuition ranges for 2025–26 (for example, total first‑year costs and annual tuition by grade). Tuition amounts can change year to year — contact admissions to request the official current fee schedule, payment options, and details about extras (bus, meals, ASA, uniform).
CISB runs an internal Scholarship and Bobcat Grants programme that is intended primarily for current CISB students (awards are credited to tuition for the stated academic year). For 2025–2026 the school has allocated up to RMB 3,000,000 across Scholarships and Bobcat Grants; Scholarship categories include Academic Scholarships (examples published include up to RMB 200,000 for IB/NB Diploma students and RMB 100,000 for Grades 9–12), CISB Excellence Scholarships (for Leadership, STEM and the Arts) and Bobcat Grants (up to RMB 5,000 per student per trip for extracurricular team support). All awards require a formal application to the CISB Scholarship Committee with the documentation specified for each award; decisions are internal, final and applied as tuition credit for the stated year, so families should check deadlines, eligibility criteria, and whether new applicants (incoming students) may apply for particular scholarships.
CISB does operate a waiting‑list system when a grade level is full. Accepted students for whom no place is immediately available are placed on the waiting list in strict chronological order based on the date their application was completed. The school applies priority criteria when offering places from the waiting list; priority groups explicitly include Canadian Embassy staff, CISB alumni/returning students and siblings of current students — if you think you may fit a priority category, notify Admissions and supply supporting documentation. When a space becomes available CISB will offer it according to that order; parents should confirm with Admissions how long waitlist offers remain open and whether any deposit or re-confirmation is required.
The Dalian campus is located at 2 Dianchi Road, Golden Pebble Beach National Resort, Jinzhou New District, Dalian, Liaoning Province, China. The Golden Pebble Beach area is a resort district about 60 kilometers east of Dalian's city centre. DAIS runs a transport service to and from the school that covers downtown Dalian, the Dalian Development Area (DDA), and Jinshitan.
DAIS is structured into four levels: Early Years, Elementary, Middle School, and High School. Early Years serves roughly 3–5 year olds, Elementary covers the next several years, Middle School includes early adolescence, and High School serves older teens (ages ~14–18). The school accommodates students from Pre-Kindergarten through Grade 12.
DAIS is a private international day school and offers boarding facilities for some grades on campus (an Elementary Boarding Program is described for younger students). This combination reflects a day-school model with selective boarding options.
DAIS provides a Learning Support Philosophy and uses assessments to identify and plan for learning needs. Non-native English speakers in Grades 2–12 participate in an English Language Proficiency assessment as part of admissions, and further testing may be used to inform placement and support.
There is no formal country affiliation for DAIS.
DAIS has no religious affiliation.
The DAIS Early Years day runs from 8:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m., with lunch from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. and a nap/quiet time for younger children from about 12:45 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
DAIS operates a school transport service to and from the campus, with routes covering downtown Dalian, the DDA, and Jinshitan. Families are asked to accompany their children to and from designated pick-up/drop-off points.
The school offers a residential boarding program with small dorms for four students, with air-conditioning and purification, heating, en-suite bathrooms, and card-only access for security. The program fosters community, leadership, and academic growth under Residential Teachers, with on-campus medical support and weekend activities. There are five-day and seven-day boarding options with defined sign-out rules.
The school offers Chinese and Western lunch options. Lunch menus are published monthly and can be pre-ordered. Elementary students are encouraged to bring a healthy snack.
The boarding program uses a house system with Heads of House for girls and for boys.
The school is part of Nord Anglia Education.
DAIS is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) and is a member of EARCOS, AAIE, ACAMIS, and NESSIC. The school offers an all‑through American curriculum from Early Years (ages 3–5) to High School (ages 14–18), with Advanced Placement (AP) courses available in High School and a built‑in Applied Studies program. Elementary School (ages 6–10) provides Literacy and Mathematics aligned to CCSS (with AERO standards), Science aligned to NGSS, and Social Studies aligned to AERO; a Host Country Language of Mandarin is taught, alongside Art, Music, Technology, and Physical/Health Education, with Learning Support and EAL. Middle School (grades 6–8, ages 11–13) uses a standards‑based model with CCSS‑aligned English Language Arts and accelerated CCSS Mathematics, NGSS Science, ACTFL Mandarin, and four quarterly Applied Studies courses (Drama, Creative Writing, Product Design, Coding and Digital Design); the program builds toward High School AP courses. High School (ages 14–18) follows the American High School model with a robust AP program; assessment is standards‑based and GPA is calculated on a 4.0 scale and is unweighted (Applied Studies not included in the GPA), with courses across Mathematics, Science, Social Studies, English Language Arts, Visual Arts, Music, World Languages, Physical and Health Education, and Applied Studies (Drama, Government, Engineering and Product Design, and Video Production).
DAIS runs a Comprehensive Counseling and Student Services program that supports social and emotional learning (SEL), health, and wellbeing for all students. SEL is delivered through a year-by-year, developmentally appropriate program integrated with academic and wellbeing goals, including advisory structures and college/career readiness components. The school's counseling team includes a Director of Counseling and Student Services (Dr. Daniel Gould) and a Social Emotional Counselor, with additional college counselors who provide SEL-focused support; a Whole School Learning Support Coordinator coordinates learning support across the campus. The K-12 SEL framework covers four domains: academic, personal/social, intercultural competence, and college/career readiness, with structured, grade-specific lessons. Early Years use Zones of Regulation and age-appropriate wellbeing activities, and wellbeing assessments are used in Secondary to monitor progress. This is described on the Counseling and Student Services page and in safeguarding communications.
DAIS provides learning support through a Whole School Learning Support Coordinator and Learning Support staff. The team includes Lydia Donahue as the Whole School Learning Support Coordinator (with background in Elementary Education and Special Education) and Jade Wu as Learning Support (with training in ASD and IEPs). Counseling and Student Services offers social and emotional learning, academic and learning support for all students as part of a developmental, year-to-year program. The school references a Learning Support Philosophy in its admissions materials, indicating a formal framework for how learning support is provided. DAIS is not described as a specialist SEN institution; rather, SEN support is integrated within the broader all-through program. For specifics, the Counseling and Student Services team is the point of contact.
EAL support in DAIS is described explicitly for the Early Years, where every student receives EAL support tailored to the individual level to promote success in English and in the home language. The Early Years Curriculum notes EAL support is provided and adjusted to each child's level. A 2021 Welcome Back post references EAL program models as part of the school's language support framework. Current official Counseling pages do not explicitly document EAL provisions beyond Early Years. Based on available sources, EAL appears to be described primarily for Early Years, with no publicly documented EAL program details for other grade levels.
Mental wellbeing is supported through the Counseling and Student Services program, which emphasizes social and emotional learning, health, and wellbeing as core components of student support. The Counseling page details a comprehensive, developmental SEL program and a range of services for personal and school success. Staff include a Director of Counseling and Student Services and a team of counselors who provide college and career readiness, social emotional learning, and responsive services. The program emphasizes advisory groups, individual meetings, and after-school programming to support wellbeing. Zones of Regulation and wellbeing assessments are used in the school's safeguarding materials to promote emotional safety and self-regulation.
DAIS adopts Nord Anglia Education Guidance and Procedure for Safeguarding, Protecting and promoting the welfare of students. The policy includes rigorous staff recruitment, ongoing safeguarding training, secure campuses, and clear reporting mechanisms. A Designated Safeguarding Lead (Mr. Stephen Cairns) is available to address safeguarding concerns, with staff and posters or anonymous QR reporting as channels. Emotional safety is addressed through age-appropriate education and opportunities for students to voice concerns and seek guidance from trusted adults. The school's Parent Essentials page confirms safeguarding commitments and the Nord Anglia framework.
1. Eligibility and initial considerations. Dalian American International School (DAIS) accepts students aged 4 to 17 and requires a valid foreign passport. Applicants must reside in Dalian, China, or a neighboring area to be eligible. Each year, admissions deadlines are set by the Education Bureau. This sets the framework for when applications can be submitted and how timelines align with local requirements.
2. Online application and supporting documents. Start with the online application form and engage with the Admissions Team, who will answer questions and guide the process. After you submit the application, you will receive a comprehensive list of supporting documents to provide. The Admissions Team remains available for questions throughout, ensuring you understand what DAIS needs to evaluate your child's candidacy.
3. Admissions assessment and language testing. Following application review, you will be invited to a family meeting, an admissions interview, and an age-appropriate academic assessment. Non-native English speakers in Grades 2–12 must take an English Language Proficiency assessment consisting of reading, writing, and oral components. Additional testing may be requested to determine appropriate placement and to support learning needs.
4. Offer and communications. If the application is successful, an official offer is sent by email. This offer specifies the next steps and timelines for enrollment. DAIS maintains regular communication to ensure families understand the terms of the offer and any required follow-up actions.
5. Acceptance, deposits, and final steps to enroll. To accept, confirm your child's attendance and secure their placement by paying the enrollment deposit (RMB 10,000) and the tuition.
DAIS does not publish a school-operated scholarship program in its admissions or tuition materials.
DAIS does not publish a waitlist or pool system in its admissions materials.
No.1 Yumin Road, Houshayu, Shunyi District, Beijing — the campus is in the suburban Shunyi area (postcode 101300). The school is reachable by car and local buses (routes 933, 855 and Shun 22); the nearest subway access is Line 15 (Houshayu Station) combined with a short bus or taxi ride.
BIBA serves from Early Years (kindergarten/early childhood) through Primary (KG–G5), Middle (G6–G8) and Upper/High School (G9–G12). High‑school students follow a mix of IGCSE (G9–10) and IBDP or A‑Level options (G11–12).
BIBA is a co‑educational, bilingual (Chinese–English) international school. The school offers optional boarding for secondary students (grades 6–12).
The school describes a schoolwide approach to tailored support: differentiated/tiered instruction, inclusive classrooms, personalized mentoring and targeted language support (for example specialized English coaching in the secondary years). Early Years and primary pages note individual portfolios, parent–teacher collaboration and regular developmental reporting. For specific formal SEN (additional‑needs) provision or case‑by‑case admissions decisions, contact Admissions directly.
BIBA is based in China and describes itself as rooted in China while operating as an international bilingual school; it is authorised by international bodies such as the IB and WASC. It does not present a formal affiliation to another country's national school system.
The school website does not indicate any religious affiliation; BIBA presents itself as a secular, bilingual international school.
Published local school guides report a typical school day start around 08:20 with classes ending about 15:50 and optional ECAs running until about 16:50; exact daily timings and ECA schedules are set by division and can vary by year group and season, so check the school calendar or ask Admissions for current division timetables.
BIBA runs an optional paid school bus service (school lists an annual bus fee range and a Bus Application Form in its downloadable resources). Bus fees and routes vary by year and pickup area (fees are listed as a paid optional service on the school fee page), and parents must apply for bus service via the school's Bus Application Form. Contact Admissions or the Finance Office for current routes, stops and pricing for your address.
Uniform: The school has a uniform; a School Uniform Store is available for uniform purchases.
House system: The Middle School Student Council leads House activities.
Governance and ownership: The Board is chaired by Dr. Wang Wei, who also chairs EduChina Group and the BIBA Board. The leadership includes Chief Director Dr. K.C. Pang, Principal Ouyang Hua, and Co-Head of School Dr. Michael Bevis.
Beijing International Bilingual Academy (BIBA) offers a continuous curriculum from Early Years through Grade 12 that integrates Chinese national standards with international programmes to provide bilingual instruction and an international perspective. Early Years (ages 1–5) combine play-based learning with Montessori practices, and Elementary (KG–Grade 5) follows Chinese–American standards with bilingual emphasis and Chinese cultural study. The Middle Years integrate the Chinese national curriculum with the IB Middle Years Programme (MYP) framework to develop inquiry, research skills and global perspectives. In High School, students study Cambridge IGCSE in Grades 9–10 and most students move into the IB Diploma Programme in Grades 11–12, with UK A-level courses also available as an alternative. The IB Diploma subject offerings cover sciences, mathematics, languages, arts and humanities, and the school supplements academic programmes with STEAM, community service and other enrichment alongside national coursework.
BIBA describes SEL as embedded across its bilingual IB-based curriculum through character education, virtue education and the school's “4R” (Respect, Responsibility, Rigor, Relationships) character system. Early Years and Primary pages describe classroom approaches that develop social and emotional skills through play-based inquiry, paired Chinese/English teachers, monthly themes and regular home–school collaboration (parent workshops, portfolios and conferences). The school also cites whole-school initiatives such as a House System and extensive extracurricular activities (200+ ECAs) that the school says foster collaboration, resilience and leadership. These provisions are described on the Early Years and Primary sections of the school website.
BIBA's public pages describe tiered and personalised support strategies—for example ‘flexible tiered instruction, inclusive classrooms, and personalized mentoring' and targeted academic coaching in secondary years—but they do not list specific categories of special educational needs (e.g., dyslexia, ASD, ADHD) or specialist SEN staff on the website. The Middle/High School and Primary curriculum pages reference data-driven assessment and personalised learning pathways as part of their support approach. The school's site does not publicly specify which distinct SEN diagnoses it supports or claim to be a specialist SEN institution.
BIBA publishes an English Language Development (ELD) programme for multilingual learners that uses formal assessments (MAP and WIDA) to create personalised learning goals and growth pathways. The Primary and school curriculum pages describe ELD as integrated across subjects through project-based learning and a full-cycle support system from classroom teaching to extracurricular activities. The school also offers Chinese-as-a-second-language provision (CSL) alongside ELD as part of its bilingual model. These details are provided on the Primary/Academics and ELD pages of the school website.
BIBA's site states the school promotes students' physical and emotional wellbeing through its curriculum emphasis on balanced body and mind, character education and school health measures. The Early Years page notes an on‑campus nurse, a health and safety management system, and nutrition provision; Primary and Middle School pages reference character education, the House System and personalised mentoring as supports for psychological safety. The Child Protection page frames wellbeing alongside safeguarding as part of the school's approach to preventing and responding to harm. These provisions are described on the Early Years, Primary and Child Protection pages.
BIBA's Child Protection page defines safeguarding and child protection, explains the distinction between them, and indicates the school has designated Safeguarding Leads and Child Protection Officers. The Primary School site also lists ‘Child Protection and Psychological Safety' within its Student Well‑being and Values framework. The Child Protection page is the main public source for these statements; the site does not publish detailed named contact lists or a full public child‑protection policy text on the pages accessed.
1. Submit an online application. Parents should use BIBA's official application channels (the school website / WeChat and the OpenApply portal linked from the site). Make sure you fill in the application form completely and upload any immediately requested documents — an incomplete online application will delay the next steps.
2. Prepare and submit supporting documents. The school asks for the completed application plus required documents (examples available in the site's Download Resources such as the School Recommendation Form and the Age/Placement guide); typical documents families should have ready are recent school reports, passport/ID, and any previous testing or language records. If you are uncertain which documents are required for your child's year level, confirm with Admissions before attending testing or interview.
3. Attend interview and/or testing. After the school receives the completed application and documents, Admissions will schedule the student's interview and any grade-appropriate tests; testing and interview are required for all applicants. Parents should expect subjects and formats to vary by grade (for example, BIBA requires a Chinese writing test for applicants in Grades 2–12 who have attended a Chinese school or are native Chinese speakers). Be prepared to bring originals of school reports and ID to the interview/testing session if requested.
4. Receive an enrollment decision and notice. The school will notify families in writing if a place is offered or if further steps (such as re-testing) are required. Note that acceptance is conditional on meeting any stated requirements (for example additional testing or documentary checks). If a place is offered, read the offer letter carefully for the payment deadline and other conditions.
5. Complete fee payment to confirm placement. BIBA requires tuition/payment to be made by the date shown on the invoice; placement is not guaranteed until the Finance Office confirms payment. Check the Tuition & Fees page for the current fee schedule, payment methods, and the school's refund/withdrawal conditions so you know the deadlines and the consequences of late payment.
6. Submit the health check / medical paperwork. After payment and acceptance, the school requires a health-check report (the site lists submission of a health check report as a final administrative requirement). Make sure any immunization/medical documents follow the format or content BIBA specifies (ask Admissions for the exact health form or any medical checklist).
7. Prepare for start of school. Follow the orientation instructions in the enrollment notice (uniform orders, bus registration and lunch/meal options are handled separately and often have their own forms). Note optional costs (uniforms, lunch, bus and boarding) and the school's stated refund schedule for withdrawals made after the school year starts. If you have additional logistical questions (transport, sibling discounts, or division-specific placement) contact the Admissions or Finance Office directly.
BIBA publishes a scholarship programme for current and prospective students with three broad categories: Academic Scholarships, High-Achiever (talent) Scholarships, and Minor/Contribution Scholarships. The school's materials describe eligibility windows (scholarships commonly targeted at students entering certain grades such as Grade 6, Grade 9 and Grade 11) and that awards are competitive, conditional on continued progress and participation, and regularly reviewed. The school's published scholarship descriptions (and secondary summaries of the programme) show different award formats: some pages describe scholarship amounts (examples on the school's scholarship page include tiered RMB awards for academic winners and fixed annual awards for talent/minor categories), while earlier summaries and announcements describe tuition remissions as a percentage for top academic awards — because the site has multiple historic summaries, the precise award levels and validity periods can vary year-to-year. For those reasons, confirm the current award types, amounts, application timing and conditions directly with BIBA Admissions (the school's scholarship page and public summaries explain the application components — exam/interview, reports, auditions or portfolios — and state that the final decision and duration of the award are at the school's discretion).
BIBA's Admissions Policy indicates the school operates a waiting-list practice and gives admissions priority to siblings of current students or graduates and to those on the previous year's waiting list. Placement is described as first-come, first-served and also depends on the candidate's overall assessment (interview/testing) and timely payment; the school therefore uses both assessment results and chronological order when allocating limited places. The website does not publish a step-by-step public procedure for joining or tracking a live waiting list (for example, how/when the school notifies families on the list), so if you need a seat and the grade is full you should contact Admissions to ask how to be added and what the expected turnaround time is.