Vietnam, Hanoi
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HIS states that its Student Support & Well-Being programme emphasises social-emotional learning by promoting transferable skills and a reflective approach to building independent learners. The school highlights its use of homeroom, counselling, and pastoral care in the MYP and DP phases as part of this support system. Homeroom teachers meet students regularly—each student in MYP/DP is allocated a homeroom teacher who begins each day with a ten-minute check-in and one weekly homeroom period. The school says this daily contact supports students’ sense of belonging and awareness of life-skills issues.
Additionally, the statement emphasises that teachers aim to scaffold individual student learning and self-identity, and the school values parent-school partnerships in working on social-emotional matters. This support is embedded across the school continuum—not just for academic skills but for self-management, organisation, and emotional wellbeing.
HIS publishes an Inclusion; Supporting Learning Diversity policy which states the school welcomes “students from diverse backgrounds and strengths” and offers support to meet individual needs—including students who are challenged or gifted. The policy clarifies that the school “currently does not usually accept students with physical disabilities due to the nature of our facilities.” It also describes a graduated approach involving Individual Education Plans (IEPs) or Student Support Plans (SSPs) for students with identified needs. Thus, HIS is not a specialist SEN institution but a mainstream international school that offers additional learning support for a range of needs, with assessment, monitoring, and differentiated teaching and reporting to parents.
HIS states that it provides “English Language Acquisition” support as part of its student support services in MYP/DP, and in the Elementary phase, the class teacher is responsible for “helping students who need to affirm their self-identity” and developing skills in language, writing, reading, etc. The website notes that identification of EAL needs may occur during admissions or during attendance, and then provision is made via in-class scaffolding, small groups, and co-teaching. Therefore, HIS does support EAL students with dedicated programmes, though the details of hours or cost are not fully published.
The school presents its Student Support & Well-Being page with language that reinforces the importance of happiness, balance, and students knowing they are valued. HIS says it provides counselling, homeroom support, and pastoral care to promote these aims. However, the website does not publish a detailed separate “mental health programme” (e.g., full-time on-site psychologist, peer mentoring, etc.) with full staff listings or protocols.
HIS indicates that it operates under the standards of the Council of International Schools (CIS) accreditation and publishes a general “Rules & Regulations for IB Schools” policy, which together point to its safeguarding, child-protection, and ethical frameworks. The school’s mission includes respect for the rights of children and reference to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC). Yet the website does not present a detailed public-facing “Child Protection Policy” document (with full reporting procedures) on the main pages.
Hanoi International School (HIS) is an English-medium, co-educational IB World School for students aged 4–18 in Ba Đình District, Hanoi. The full IB continuum—PYP, MYP, and DP—frames learning across subjects and phases. Campus life features strong arts offerings (Music, Theatre, Visual Art) and sports with fixtures through the Mekong River International Schools Association (MRISA). Daily Co-Curricular Programme (CCP) activities run after school, with an additional 4:00 pm bus on CCP days. Student support includes EAL delivered through co-planning and in-class small-group work, and a published Child Protection programme with age-appropriate assemblies. HIS lists 2025–26 tuition from VND 418.4m (PreK/K) to VND 767m (G11–12), with options to pay annually, by semester, or quarterly. The community numbers around 300 students, offering a small-school feel within central Hanoi.