Uganda, Kampala
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KCIS provides a holistic programme that develops students academically, socially, emotionally, physically, morally and culturally. It uses interactive, active learning to meet different learning styles and to promote independence, curiosity, self-confidence, resilience and innovative thinking. The environment is safe, supportive and welcoming. KCIS emphasises inclusion and access, removing barriers to learning so every child can belong and participate fully. A strong pastoral approach and safeguarding framework support pupil wellbeing as part of daily school life.
KCIS Inclusion and Access ensures every child is valued and supported to succeed, with reasonable adjustments to remove barriers to learning and ensure belonging. KCIS Learning includes targeted support for pupils with additional learning needs; a SENCo coordinates provision, progress reviews, and adapts support as needs change.
KCIS integrates wellbeing into its learning, aiming to nurture confident, curious, compassionate and capable global learners. The school's mission emphasises wellbeing as part of its holistic approach to education, and the 2025–2028 Strategic Plan lists wellbeing as a pillar alongside safeguarding and behaviour. Safeguarding materials describe strong pastoral systems to support pupil wellbeing as a core part of school life.
Safeguarding is KCIS's highest priority. It follows international best practice aligned with British Schools Overseas (BSO) standards, the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Children Act (Uganda). The safeguarding team includes a Safeguarding Director, a Designated Safeguarding Lead and a Deputy Designated Safeguarding Lead, with clear reporting contacts. If you are worried about a child, contact the DSL or DDSL immediately; in case of immediate danger call the police. Policies include the Safeguarding & Child Protection Policy, Complaints Policy, Relationships and Behaviour Policy, Anti-Bullying Policy, Safer Recruitment Policy, Whistleblowing Policy and Health and Safety Policy. Online safety is taught through PSHE and digital literacy, with parent workshops and guidance on online safety. The safeguarding culture is built on respect, transparency, communication, professional accountability and child-centred decision-making, and KCIS works with families, external agencies and the wider community to keep every child safe.
Kampala Community International Primary School (KCIS) offers the British Curriculum, adapting the UK English National Curriculum to reflect its international Ugandan community. It is a single‑stream primary with six academic years (Year 1 to Year 6), class sizes capped at 20 and a teacher–student ratio of up to 1:10. Classes are allocated by date of birth on 1 September, and the school aims to inspire a love of learning while equipping students with skills, attitudes and values for diverse potentials. KCIS includes 13 subjects across English, Mathematics, Science, History, Geography, French (KS2), Music, ICT, Design & Technology, Art, PE, Swimming, PSHE, Life Skills, Library Time and Current Affairs (KS2), plus Daily Exercise. Swimming is part of the curriculum, and sport is played through ISSA leagues. The school emphasizes active learning in a caring, values‑driven environment and is inspected under the British Schools Overseas framework by PENTA International. KCIS was established to provide international education at an affordable price in Kampala, Uganda.