Switzerland, Zug
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.
Diego De Nicola founded School of Tomorrow. He dreamed of a new kind of school for almost a decade after extensive research, worldwide visits, exchanges with experts, and discussions with parents and children. The school follows Swiss Lehrplan 21 and includes a comprehensive English curriculum, with roughly half the staff German-speaking and the other half English-speaking. It operates across multiple campuses in Zurich and Uster, including Schloss Sihlberg Enge, Augustinerhof in Zurich City, and Gerichtsplatz in Uster. The educational approach centers on personalized, project-based learning and the development of 12 core competencies.
The School of Tomorrow is a bilingual private school in the heart of Zurich and Uster, offering Kindergarten, primary and secondary education across campuses Schloss Sihlberg Enge, Augustinerhof Zurich City, and Gerichtsplatz Uster. Lessons run from 8 am to 6 pm with a four-day week for Kindergarten and Primary, Fridays optional, and Entrepreneur Friday on the Secondary level. The curriculum follows Swiss Lehrplan 21 with a comprehensive English program, and classrooms are mixed-age with project-based learning designed to develop 12 core competencies. The school hosts family-oriented events such as Open House sessions on March 17, 2026 across campuses and SOT Nights every 1-2 months to engage parents, with parent feedback describing the community as welcoming.
School of Tomorrow - Schloss Sihlberg is a bilingual day school located in a 19th-century castle in Zurich’s Enge district. The school follows the Swiss Lehrplan 21 while integrating a comprehensive English-language program, preparing students for both local and international pathways, including the International Baccalaureate Diploma. Learning is organized into mixed-age groups rather than traditional grade-level classrooms, utilizing "Homebases" and specialized "micro-environments" for project-based work. The campus features dedicated spaces for digital literacy where primary students use personal iPads for research and coding. A distinctive feature of the school is its "Entrepreneur Friday" for older students and the "Friday Club" for younger ones, which shifts the focus from standard academics to practical projects and community activities. Instruction is delivered simultaneously by English and German-speaking educators in the same room, ensuring constant immersion.