Edited by Aziza Francienne · B2C Marketing Manager
If you're researching international schools in Lebanon offering German Curriculum, this page lists every school we know of and lets you sort, filter and compare them — without school marketing in the way. The most common curriculum is IB (DP), taught by 2 of the schools below.
Compare 2 German Curriculum international schools in Lebanon. Filter by curriculum, fees, location, and more to find the right international school now.
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German International School Beirut (DISB) - Naameh Campus provides a multicultural learning experience for students from Early Years through Grade 12. The school follows the German Curriculum, leading to the Deutsches Sprachdiplom (DSD I and II), alongside the International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme. Instruction is delivered in German, English, and Arabic, giving students strong multilingual foundations. The Naameh campus is equipped with specialized chemistry, physics, and biology laboratories, as well as dedicated sports fields and courts that support daily physical activities. A truly unique feature of DISB is its "Begegnungsschule" (encounter school) tradition. This signature initiative intentionally integrates German and Lebanese cultures, fostering cross-cultural understanding. Furthermore, the school incorporates mandatory community service initiatives, such as local beach clean-ups and fundraising for children's cancer charities, ensuring students actively engage with and support the surrounding community.
German International School - Beirut Campus, established in 1954, serves students from early kindergarten through grade twelve in the Manara neighborhood. The school follows the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme alongside the Lebanese Baccalaureate and offers the German language diploma (Deutsches Sprachdiplom I and II). Instruction relies heavily on technology; all classrooms feature interactive whiteboards, and students in grades six through twelve engage in paperless learning using personal PC tablets that connect directly to classroom panels. The curriculum requires students to study multiple languages, including English, German, Arabic, and options for French or Spanish. The Manara campus houses dedicated physics, chemistry, and biology laboratories where students conduct hands-on experiments like paper chromatography. Operating as a private, non-profit institution, the school maintains no religious or political affiliations and funds its operations entirely through student tuition, receiving no government subsidies.
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