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Beijing World Youth Academy

China, Beijing

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Wellbeing and Support

How students are nurtured, understood, and kept safe

Social and Emotional Learning (SEL)

BWYA implements the IB Learner Profile across the school and embeds attributes such as “caring,” “balanced” and “reflective” into its curriculum, which supports students' social and emotional development. The Primary Years Programme highlights Physical and Health Education and transdisciplinary Units of Inquiry that address personal and social well‑being. The Middle Years Programme explicitly uses Approaches to Learning (ATL) to develop social and self‑management skills. The school also cites Service & Action and Classroom Without Walls as programme elements that build empathy, responsibility and community engagement.

Special Educational Needs (SEN)

BWYA's admissions information states the school offers limited support and “a variety of learning tracks for school completion” to address the needs of students with mild learning difficulties. Placement and course levels are determined via assessments and are adjusted during the year according to progress. The website does not present a dedicated specialist SEN centre or detailed lists of the specific types of SEN supported, so it should be treated as a mainstream school offering limited/mild‑level learning support rather than a specialist SEN institution. For full details or case‑by‑case arrangements the school asks families to contact admissions.

English as an Additional Language (EAL)

BWYA's curriculum pages show English Language Arts in the PYP and a Language Acquisition subject in the MYP that phases learners from emergent to proficient levels, indicating formal in‑programme language learning provision. These pages describe language learning expectations and phased progression but do not describe a named, separate EAL department or list specific EAL staffing or standalone intervention programmes on the public website. If you need confirmation of specialist EAL support (staffing, pull‑out programmes or assessments), the school's admissions or academic office should be contacted directly.

Mental Wellbeing

The school presents curriculum examples that explicitly develop emotional awareness and resilience (for example, literature lessons that explore grief and resilience), and classroom practices that encourage reflection and empathy. MYP and PYP documents emphasise self‑management and balanced development as part of the IB Learner Profile and ATL skill sets, and Physical and Health Education is listed as part of the programme to support students' physical and personal well‑being. The website does not, however, publish a detailed counselling or mental‑health services team page, so information about dedicated counselling staff or external mental‑health partnerships is not publicly available there.

Safeguarding

BWYA's homepage states that safeguarding, health and safety are priorities and describes a school culture focused on awareness, supervision and safe working methods. The admissions section describes an induction process for new students and parents and indicates ongoing communication through school channels to support student integration. The public site does not publish a full child‑protection policy text or named safeguarding leads on the pages reviewed, so for policy documents or named safeguarding contacts you should request them directly from the school.

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The school at a glance
Instructs in English, Mandarin
Fees RMB 263,000 - 280,000
Ages 6 - 19 years
Pupil numbers 1241
Type Co-educational
Opened 2001
Bus Service No
Availability Are there places?

Beijing World Youth Academy (BWYA) is a K–12 day school established in 2001 that offers a mix of international and Chinese programmes, including the IB Primary Years, Middle Years and Diploma Programmes, Cambridge IGCSE courses and the Chinese National Curriculum. The school reports more than 1,200 students from 30+ nationalities and highlights campus facilities such as a four‑lane swimming pool, an auditorium (450+ seats) and maker spaces. BWYA runs a broad extracurricular programme — it lists over 80 clubs, a Model United Nations programme that organises the student‑led World Youth MUN, and participation in the Duke of Edinburgh International Award — and notes a focus on developing students' abilities in both Chinese and English. The admissions page and club guides are the place to find details about tuition, club timetables and application steps. (All items here are taken from BWYA's official website.)

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