China, Wuhan
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Wuhan Australian International School (WAIS) is reported to deliver the International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme (PYP), which the IB describes as including learning about health, well‑being and personal/social development as part of its curriculum framework. The school's public profiles state it combines the Chinese national curriculum with IB PYP elements, which typically embed social and emotional learning through inquiry and personal, social and physical education. WAIS's own online listings emphasise an inquiry‑based, bilingual learning environment but do not specify named SEL programmes, dedicated SEL staff, or school‑wide SEL initiatives on their public pages. For detailed, school‑specific SEL staff roles or programmes the school would need to be contacted directly.
Several public listings state WAIS uses a bilingual approach and that some subjects are taught in both Chinese and English, describing an immersive bilingual environment rather than a named EAL programme. Those listings do not, however, describe a dedicated EAL department, a named EAL curriculum, or specialist EAL teachers on the publicly available pages I reviewed. Consequently, the school does not publicly disclose detailed information about a formal EAL programme or specialist EAL provision. For families seeking precise EAL support (assessment, withdrawal, or in‑class EAL support), contacting the school's admissions or academic office is recommended.
Public information about WAIS (profiles and news listings) highlights general pastoral emphasis through curriculum choices (IB PYP) and campus life but does not publish specific mental‑health or counselling programmes, named counsellors, or a student wellbeing team on the pages I could access. There is no publicly available description of formal mental‑health services, referral procedures, or wellbeing programmes for students in the sources reviewed. Therefore the school does not publicly disclose detailed mental‑wellbeing provision on its public listings. If you would like, I can try to obtain up‑to‑date details from the school directly.
A China Daily profile of Wuhan Australian International School notes the campus operates a ‘closed management and security monitoring system', and several school listings provide the campus address and contact details, indicating on‑site security arrangements. I did not find a publicly posted child‑protection or safeguarding policy, nor named designated safeguarding leads, on the publicly accessible pages reviewed. Therefore the school does not publicly disclose a full safeguarding/child‑protection policy or designated contacts on the pages I checked. For formal safeguarding documentation or named safeguarding officers, please request these directly from the school; I can help draft that request if you wish.