Norway, Oslo
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.
There is no on-site cantine. Lunch is provided by the parents.
House system named after Norse gods: Buri (blue), Heimdal (yellow), Skadi (red) and Tyr (green). Houses will be led by student leaders; in the first year members and leaders will be assigned to establish routines. The house system provides opportunities to interact across grades and to showcase students' strengths.
AIS is governed by a School Board. The board was elected in June 2025 and includes Chair Anders Sjøløkken, Vice Chair To be confirmed, and board members Per Goffeng-Nielsen, Bente Gulliksen Solbakken, Dinesh Karunakar, Jane Awuh, Steinar Bustad and Mya Esplin; non‑voting members include Parent Council Representative Erane Hobbs, Teaching Staff Representative Annie Locke, Non‑teaching Staff Representative Chantale Williams, and Student Council Representative Reeva Sharma.
Asker International School is an IB World School in Asker, Norway, serving learners aged 6–18. The school delivers IB-structured curriculum: Primary Years Programme (PYP) and Middle Years Programme (MYP), with English as the language of instruction. It is an authorised World School for PYP and MYP and is progressing toward Diploma Programme authorization, with first DP teaching planned for August 2027. Opened in 2013, AIS educates around 600 students from 40 nationalities. In the MYP, students study Mathematics, English, Norwegian, Sciences, Individuals and Societies, Physical Education, Performing Arts, Design, Spanish and Mandarin; in the PYP four languages are taught (English, Norwegian, Chinese, Spanish in MYP; two in PYP). The campus features Block C renovations including four new classrooms, a theatre, redesigned nurses' offices and a fenced playground. After-school Services broaden learning with coding, music, dance, and clubs such as Model UN and robotics, reflecting AIS's arts, language and STEM culture.