China, Guangzhou
Let the school know you're thinking of applying — they can share their prerequisites and help you through the process.
It's best to ask — circumstances can change at any time.
The school publishes a named Huamei “characteristic SEL Social Emotion Course” as part of its primary curriculum. Huamei runs a campus Psychology Festival that includes psychology lectures, interactive booths (e.g., an intelligent “confession” booth), art-based self-exploration activities and psychology teacher–led sessions, showing one channel the school uses to deliver social–emotional learning. The school also lists a Student Development Centre with a director and deputy, indicating an institutional pastoral team responsible for student development. School timetables for younger students show regular mental-health education and biweekly group psychological counselling sessions during evening study. Together these items indicate SEL is delivered through curriculum‑linked courses, schoolwide events and an internal student development team.
The school's English-language website does not publish a dedicated Special Educational Needs (SEN) policy or a clear list of specialist SEN provisions. There is no public description of the types of SEN the school can support or of a specialist SEN department. For families needing confirmed SEN provision or formal learning‑support arrangements, the school's published materials direct enquiries to its contact channels.
Huamei describes explicit English‑language provision across age groups: an English IB integrated kindergarten class led full‑day by native English homeroom teachers with TEFL/TESOL qualifications. The primary curriculum advertises immersive English lessons (for example, weekly immersive English lessons and bilingual classroom use). The junior‑high and senior‑high materials list ESL/bridge courses and foreign‑teacher oral English classes (ESL bridge and ESL courses are named in curriculum overviews). The International Students Division also states it educates pupils from many countries, which supports the presence of English‑language support within that division.
The school runs an annual Psychology Festival that includes psychology lectures for students and external experts (for example, a public lecture by Professor You Jia Ning was advertised). School schedules note regular mental‑health education and biweekly group psychological counselling for younger boarders. The Student Development Centre is listed in the school's leadership structure and appears to provide pastoral oversight. The campus also reports on‑site medical provision and a staffed clinic which the school presents as part of its around‑the‑clock health services.
The school's English pages do not publish a formal, standalone child‑protection or safeguarding policy for public download. The site does, however, describe practical safety and welfare arrangements for boarders including life‑care teachers who supervise daily life and escorted weekend shuttle services with school guards. The school also states health professionals from an affiliated hospital are stationed on campus to provide 24‑hour medical services. A campus service hotline and main contact details are published for enquiries. If you need the school's formal safeguarding policy or named child‑protection contacts, the website suggests contacting the school directly via the published phone or email.
Guangzhou Huamei International School was founded on June 19, 1993 and is located on Huamei Road in the Tianhe education core area. The campus covers about 160,000 m² at the foot of Phoenix Mountain and describes itself as a full-time boarding international school serving kindergarten through high school; the website highlights bilingual programmes and a range of international pathways (AP, A-Level, Canadian OSSD and IB-related offerings at kindergarten). The school publishes a student population figure of about 5,100 and lists on-campus services including daily school-bus pickup/drop-off and on-site medical provision. Distinctive features cited on the site include the school's “forest” campus and an English IB integrated kindergarten class; the site also describes STEM, sports and international exchange activity across year groups. (All items above are taken from the school website.)