Comparing 7 schools side by side in USD.
YWIES Guangzhou is in Huadong Town, Huadu District — address: No. 9 Xue'er Street, Beixing, Huadong Town, Huadu, Guangzhou 510897. The campus is in the northern suburbs of Guangzhou (Huadu) and is reachable by car from central Guangzhou; the school website lists the full contact/address details for maps and enquiries.
YWIES Guangzhou serves Early Childhood through Upper Secondary (listed as K1 — A Level / ages roughly 1–18). The school groups its provision into Early Childhood, Primary and Secondary sections.
The school is co-educational and admits both day and boarding students; the admissions pages and fee information note options for day pupils and resident students.
The school operates a Learning Support function and provides social‑emotional learning (SEL) programmes as part of student care; the site also highlights English-language enhancement services for students who need language support. For details on individual student plans or formal SEN provision you should contact admissions directly.
YWIES Guangzhou is part of the Yew Wah / Yew Chung (YCYW) network, a group of schools originating in Hong Kong and operating across mainland China and other locations; the school is therefore affiliated with that network rather than a national government system.
The school does not advertise any religious affiliation on its public pages; its materials describe an international bilingual education model rather than a faith‑based approach.
Public sources indicate a typical school day beginning around 08:00 and finishing in the late afternoon (about 16:30), with supervised before/after‑school care available; the school calendar (term dates) is published separately on the school site. If you need exact daily timetables for a particular year group, contact the admissions office.
YWIES Guangzhou operates a school bus service (multiple external school listings and the school's campus services section note transport/bus arrangements). Routes, pick‑up points and whether a seat is available are normally handled by the school's transport office during enrolment, so ask admissions for current routes, fees and safety arrangements.
Boarding is provided on campus at YWIES Guangzhou, with accommodation available in the Residence Hall as part of the school's boarding options alongside day schooling.
A school uniform is required; students purchase the uniform during enrolment.
The school is a non-profit private school within the Yew Chung Yew Wah Education Network (YCYW). Governance is coordinated by the Huadu District Education Bureau to ensure educational quality and alignment with regional development.
Yew Wah International Education School Guangzhou offers bilingual K1–A Level education for students aged 1–18, covering early childhood, primary and secondary stages. Early childhood (approximately ages 2–6) follows a co‑teaching, emergent bilingual programme that emphasises whole‑child development. The primary programme is built on the Chinese national nine‑year curriculum as its core, supplemented by project‑based, bilingual instruction and a full subject offer (English, Chinese, mathematics, music, PE, visual arts, ICT plus specialist modules such as Chinese studies, performing arts, violin and character development). In secondary, students study Cambridge IGCSE in lower secondary and progress to the A‑Level programme in upper secondary as the formal qualifications route to university. The school also provides a Careers and University Guidance Office to support university and post‑secondary pathways.
YWIES Guangzhou describes a bilingual, whole-child early‑years programme (Emergent Programme) that explicitly develops personal, social and emotional capabilities. The site states the Chinese and Western co‑teachers collaborate to meet each child's social, emotional and educational needs through a co‑teaching approach. Staff orientation materials published by the school network show school training includes modules on student care, pastoral work and home–school collaboration. The school also references regular reports, newsletters and meetings with parents as part of supporting students' development.
The school advertises Learning Support / SEN positions that describe a Learning Support team responsible for direct instruction, co‑teaching, pull‑out programmes and Individualised Education Programmes (IEPs). Job descriptions specify modifying curriculum, differentiated instruction and planning for diverse learning needs. An independent school listing also records that the school has dedicated staff/programmes for students with special learning needs. The school does not publicly state that it is a specialist SEN institution; it presents SEN provision as part of its mainstream Learning Support services.
The school's English Language Enhancement page describes a bilingual early‑childhood setting (Chinese and English) and highlights English and Chinese literacy development within the emergent programme. The co‑teaching model is presented as a mechanism for meeting pupils' language and wider educational needs. School recruitment materials and job descriptions also reference English Support / English‑language support staff within the Learning Support structure. For admissions and programme details the site lists the school contact: enquiry.gz@ywies.com.
The school network's staff orientation and curriculum pages show training and programme elements that cover student care, pastoral work and social‑emotional development. Learning Support job descriptions include responsibilities for positive behaviour support and social‑skills interventions, indicating those functions form part of school practice. The school's Child Protection page also describes the campus as a ‘Child‑Safe School' and links to its child protection policies. The school does not publish a separate, detailed mental‑health policy or a publicly listed counselling team on the pages reviewed.
YWIES Guangzhou's Child Protection page states that the campus is a ‘Child‑Safe School' and provides a link to Child Protection Policies and Procedures on the website. The school explicitly invites readers to consult those Child Protection Policies via the linked page. Where policies are referenced, the site presents them as the primary public source for the school's safeguarding approach. For specific safeguarding queries the site lists the school contact details (enquiry.gz@ywies.com).
1. Fill in the application form. The school recommends using its online application portal (Apply Now) or downloading and returning the New Student Application Form by fax, email or post; keep a copy of the completed form and note the admissions office contact details for follow‑up. Parents should expect to create an account on the school's admissions portal if applying online and to supply accurate contact details so the Admissions Office can arrange the next step.
2. Attend the Learning Consultation (placement appointment). After you submit an application the Admissions Office will contact you to arrange a Learning Consultation; bring originals and copies of parents' and student IDs/passports, the student's birth certificate, two passport photos and school reports from the last three years. The consultation includes placement assessments (English & Maths for Years 2–9; English, Maths & Science for Year 10 and above) and a short interview with the co‑principals — plan for tests of roughly 70 minutes (Years 2–9) or about 130 minutes (Year 10+), plus a 30‑minute interview. Ask admissions in advance about language‑support testing or any required accommodations so the school can prepare.
3. Wait for the Learning Consultation Report. The Admissions Office will normally issue the Learning Consultation report and outcome within seven working days; this report explains placement and next steps. If the report requires further documentation or follow‑up (for example additional assessment or verification of transcripts), respond promptly to avoid delays. Keep copies of all correspondence and confirm the school's stated deadline for accepting any offer.
4. Pay the required tuition and ancillary fees. Once you receive the Learning Consultation report and an offer or payment notice, follow the payment instructions in the notice to secure the place (registration/deposit and tuition payments are handled per the school's fees policy). One‑time items (registration fee, refundable deposit, uniform, welcome package) are normally charged in the first year; annual tuition varies by grade and is published on the school's fees page — parents should request the current fee schedule and payment deadlines from Admissions because published figures are updated periodically. If you plan to use school transport or boarding (if available), ask for the separate fee schedule for those services.
5. Complete enrolment requirements and student onboarding. After payment, you will be asked to submit the final enrolment documents, purchase uniforms, collect the Welcome Package, select courses and co‑curricular activities (ASAs) and meet teachers and class leaders as scheduled. Make sure medical records, emergency contacts and any learning‑support or dietary information are provided at this stage so the school can make arrangements before the student's first day. Confirm the school's orientation dates and any compulsory parent information sessions.
6. Start school and follow up with administrative tasks. The student begins classes on the published school start date; parents should check the school calendar for term dates, holidays and activity timetables, and follow the school's instructions for homework expectations and daily routines. If anything changes (address, visa/residency status, health needs), notify Admissions or the School Office immediately to keep the student record up to date. For any points not covered online, contact the Admissions Office directly by phone or email listed on the school website.
YWIES Guangzhou participates in the Yew Chung Yew Wah (YCYW) Scholarship Programme run across the network; the programme offers merit‑based awards in several categories (for example the Madam Tsang Chor‑hang Memorial Scholarship, Subject & Talent Awards, and IGCSE/IB/A Level Awards). Awards typically reduce tuition by a percentage (examples published by the network range from 25% up to 100%) and the duration of support varies by award (some awards are for one year; others may be granted for two to four years depending on the category and campus implementation). Eligibility and application rules are set by the YCYW Scholarship Programme and commonly apply to Years 7–13 (external applicants are normally required to submit the school application and take required assessments before applying for scholarship consideration). Application windows, selection criteria (essential and desirable criteria) and timelines are published centrally by YCYW and by individual campuses each year — if you are interested, request the latest scholarship brochure or application pack from the Guangzhou Admissions Office so you have the precise criteria, deadlines and panel interview dates for the current cycle.
The Guangzhou campus's public admissions pages do not describe a formal, campus‑wide waiting‑list process; the published application procedure focuses on the online application, Learning Consultation and placement outcome without naming a waitlist. Third‑party school profiles that summarise the campus report no formal waiting list for Guangzhou; however, admission capacity can change by year level and the school's resources, so parents should confirm current availability with Admissions. If a year level is full, contact the Admissions Office to ask whether the school maintains an internal pool or can keep your child's application active — ask specifically about how long the school will retain an incomplete or waitlisted file and whether you must periodically update documents to remain on a list.
AISG operates two campuses: the Ersha Island campus (Early Years and Lower Elementary, in central Guangzhou's Ersha Island / Yuexiu area) and the Science Park campus (Upper Elementary through Grade 12 in Guangzhou's Science City, Huangpu District). Public transit options and ferry/metro stops serve the Ersha area and the Science Park area is within Guangzhou's technology/Science City district—ask Admissions for typical commute times from your neighbourhood.
AISG covers Pre‑Kindergarten through Grade 12: Early Years (Pre‑K and Kindergarten) and Lower Elementary (Grades 1–3) are at Ersha; Upper Elementary (Grades 4–5), Lower Secondary (Grades 6–8) and Upper Secondary (Grades 9–12) are at Science Park. The school follows the IB continuum across these divisions.
AISG is a co‑educational, not‑for‑profit international school operating as an independent institution; tuition is reinvested into the school. The school does not offer boarding — students are expected to live with a parent or guardian in Guangzhou.
AISG provides a Student Support structure that includes Counseling (available to all students), an English as an Additional Language (EAL) program (Grades 1–10) and a limited Learning Support (LS) program for students with mild learning differences, using individualized plans and a Student Support Team (SST). The handbooks describe RTI/MTSS frameworks, weekly SST meetings and individualized Student Learning Plans.
AISG is an independent international school (American in name and offering American/IB pathways) but is not an official representative or arm of any national government; it admits foreign‑passport holders per Chinese regulations.
AISG does not have a religious affiliation; its community and policies emphasize inclusivity and prohibit harassment on the basis of religious belief.
Typical start time across divisions is 7:55am (students are generally asked to arrive 7:40–7:50am). Pre‑K runs roughly 7:55–3:00pm while Grades 1–5 are 7:55–3:10pm (Wednesdays are early‑release, ending about 2:00pm); Secondary also follows the same morning start with the regular day ending around 15:10. Recesses, lunch and staggered dismissals for youngest students are described in the divisional handbooks.
AISG offers an optional contracted bus service (PK–12); the school arranges and invoices the service on behalf of the bus company and parents pay per semester. Costs are published as a guideline (approximately RMB 9,600–19,200 per school year) and specific routes are not publicly posted for child‑protection reasons—contact Admissions to confirm whether your area is served.
A daily school lunch program is available; the price range for lunch is RMB 26–37 per day.
The school is governed by a nine-member board of volunteers. The school is a not-for-profit international school in Guangzhou with 100% tuition reinvested.
AISG delivers an inquiry-based program across its divisions and is an IB World Continuum school authorized to offer the Primary Years, Middle Years and Diploma Programmes.
The Early Years (Pre‑K and K) programme is play‑based and framed by the IB PYP and the Creative Curriculum, while Elementary (K–5) follows the IB PYP and is mapped to AERO, Common Core and NGSS standards.
Lower Secondary (Grades 6–8) uses AERO and Common Core standards and its academic classes follow the IB Middle Years Programme (MYP).
Upper Secondary (Grades 9–12) uses AERO/Common Core in Grades 9–10 and moves to the IB Diploma Programme in Grades 11–12; students may pursue the full IBDP and/or the AISG Upper Secondary Diploma and may mix IBDP and AISG course pathways.
Across all stages the curriculum is complemented by arts, athletics, co‑curricular activities, English‑as‑an‑Additional‑Language support and in‑school learning support services.
AISG's guidance program emphasizes positive relationships and guided social-emotional development; the school says counselors use the International School Counselor Association (ISCA) standards and run individual, group, classroom and advisory lessons across grade levels. Early Years guidance focuses on foundational SEL skills (listening, empathy, reading facial/body cues), while Elementary uses the Second Step curriculum for scheduled SEL lessons. In Lower Secondary SEL is supported through a weekly Advisory program and health classes; Upper Secondary counseling is developmental and includes academic advising alongside personal/social support. Counselors also provide parent-education opportunities and collaborate with faculty, EAL and Learning Support teams.
AISG states it operates a Learning Support programme across Elementary, Lower and Upper Secondary for students with mild learning differences rather than as a specialist SEN institution. The Learning Support provision combines in-class inclusion, small-group instruction and individual targeted interventions, and each student in the programme has a Student Learning Plan with goals, services and accommodations. The Admissions FAQ asks families to submit existing support plans, IEPs or psych-educational reports so the school can determine if it can meet a child's needs, and it specifies the school's support services are limited. AISG prefers a least-restrictive environment and notes some services (e.g., speech/OT) should be disclosed in advance so placement decisions can be made.
AISG publicly describes an English as an Additional Language (EAL) programme that provides extra language support in the regular classroom using an inclusion model and is offered across divisions to help students access the curriculum. The Admissions process may include EAL testing for non-native English speakers, and placement in the EAL programme is limited and determined by principals and counselors. AISG notes EAL support is normally provided through in-class support and small-group instruction, with formal EAL places available through qualification and placement procedures. For Grades 11–12 the school expects students to be proficient in English for the DP; placement and availability are handled case-by-case.
AISG's Student Counseling programme frames wellbeing as integral to academic success and provides counselor-led individual and group meetings, classroom lessons and advisory activities to support students' mental and social health. The school follows ISCA-aligned, evidence-based counselling standards and offers parent-education sessions as part of its preventative approach. AISG runs an anti-bullying No Bully System (Solution Coaches and Solution Teams) and provides age-appropriate anti-bullying education and staff training to reduce harm and build peer support. The school's reporting and school-climate work (e.g., ‘Active in Care' improvements cited by the school) are presented as part of ongoing efforts to monitor and improve student wellbeing.
AISG's Child Protection statement says the school prioritises prevention and protection in line with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and PRC laws, and bases definitions on WHO guidance. The school publishes a Child Protection policy with required staff reporting procedures, annual employee training, routine background checks and a Child Protection Committee led by a Child Protection Coordinator. The site names the Child Protection Coordinator and designated officers (for example Jamie Robb; Eileen Rueth; DJ Macpherson; Tania Mansfield) and explains reporting, investigation and record-keeping responsibilities. AISG states failure to report suspected abuse may result in disciplinary action and that the school will communicate confirmed incidents to receiving schools when students transfer.
1. Prepare: Before you start the online application, review AISG's Grade Placement Guide and the Statement of Community so you understand typical age-based placement and the school's expectations; gather the Required Documents (passports, previous school records, medical records, any IEPs or therapy reports) so the Admissions Office can process your file without delay. Note AISG accepts only foreign passports (students holding Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan passports are eligible; PRC passports are not), so check passport eligibility before applying. There is a non‑refundable application processing fee (RMB2,000 / ~USD300) charged per child with each application, so have payment ready when you submit.
2. Apply: Complete and submit the online application form and upload the prepared documents; the Admissions Office will keep in regular contact and update you on each step of the process. Payment of the application fee is required to trigger further steps (for example, the school will confirm assessment dates once the application and fee are received). If your child has received learning or behavioral support in the past, include all learning support plans, IEPs, therapy reports or medical evaluations so AISG can assess whether it can meet your child's needs (the Learning Support program exists but has limited resources).
3. Review (assessments and placement): Once AISG has a complete application, the Admissions Office, the relevant grade‑level principal and counselors will review the file to determine placement; non‑native English speakers are likely to have English as an Additional Language (EAL) screening as part of the review. For applicants residing in Guangzhou, the school typically invites students with complete applications to attend in‑person admissions testing; AISG publishes recommended application timelines and typical group assessment windows by grade (for example, many grade assessments and interviews are scheduled between March and April—see grade‑specific timelines). Spaces for assessments are limited and are scheduled after your application and fee are received, so apply early if you are targeting a particular intake or assessment window.
4. Response and enrollment: After review and any required testing, AISG will inform you of its decision and next steps; AISG begins offering seats (seat assignment) in early April and monitors seat availability throughout the year. For families who accept an offer, note the financial commitments required: a non‑refundable enrollment fee is charged for new students (RMB10,000 for the 2026–2027 school year) and returning students typically pay a non‑refundable deposit (RMB30,000) by the school's specified deadlines; full tuition payment dates and deposit deadlines are listed in the school's Terms and Conditions. If you accept an offered seat, be prepared to follow the invoice/payment timelines to secure enrollment.
AISG has offered an IB Secondary School Scholarship for the 2026–2027 cohort (announcement on the school website). That scholarship is targeted at new students entering Grade 9 or 10, requires the student to reside in Guangzhou with a caregiver or legal guardian, and is limited to families who are self‑payers or partial self‑payers; applicants must meet standard AISG admissions requirements and hold a foreign passport. The program is described as merit‑and‑need based, competitive, and limited in number (the announcement stated up to five scholarships awarded annually), with a potential up to four‑year renewal based on conditions such as maintaining good academic standing; the announcement also referenced the scholarship value (noted as ¥1.3M+ when counted across the award period) and included an application deadline (the post cited Jan 30 for that cycle). The school's public materials do not present a broad, ongoing general financial‑aid program beyond this named scholarship announcement, so for current availability, application windows, selection criteria, or any other scholarships you should contact AISG Admissions directly.
AISG operates a waitlist. If your child qualifies for admission but there are no seats available in the desired grade or program, the school will place the student on its waitlist and offer seats to waitlisted students as they become available according to AISG's admissions criteria. You must submit a complete application and your child must meet admissions criteria before AISG will add them to the waitlist; if AISG cannot offer a place for the academic year applied for, families must submit a new application for the following year (with updated documents and payment of the application fee). AISG also monitors seat availability throughout the year and begins offering seats in early April, so applying earlier improves your chances of receiving an offer rather than remaining on the waitlist.
ISA Liwan International School is on Hailong Road in Liwan District, Guangzhou — the campus sits on the Guangzhou–Foshan boundary area. The school is reported to be about 800 metres from Longxi Station on the Guangzhou–Foshan metro line, and the campus is described as adjacent to a Foshan waterway and local road links. For precise commuting details from a specific address, contact the school's admissions team.
The school is described as a K–12 provision covering Early Years, Primary (IB PYP/UK EYFS-aligned) and Secondary (Middle and High School) programmes. The website presents pathways for Early Years through to senior grades and indicates international curriculum frameworks (IB).
ISA Liwan is an international, co-educational day school and is part of the ISA International Education Group. The school's published material also refers to an immersive international boarding programme available for Primary, Middle and High School students; check admissions for boarding capacity and rules.
The school's public pages do not give a detailed published special educational needs (SEN) or additional learning needs (ALN) policy for ISA Liwan specifically. ISA group schools publish Access & Inclusion frameworks (for example ISA Wuhan's Access & Inclusion policy describing tiered support), so parents should contact ISA Liwan admissions to request the school's current learning‑support policy, assessment process and examples of in‑school provisions.
ISA Liwan is an international school located in Guangzhou, China, and is operated by the ISA International Education Group; it is not presented as being affiliated to any foreign national government.
The school does not state any religious affiliation on its public pages; it presents itself as a secular international school.
The school's public website does not publish a detailed daily timetable (start/end times or exact break/lunch times) for each age group. For specific start/end times, daily schedules and any before/after‑school care options, contact the admissions team listed on the school's contact page.
The school describes an organised school‑bus service operated through a school bus centre; the site notes routes are designed so individual journeys take under an hour. The bus service is presented as a school‑managed transport option — parents should contact admissions for route maps, stop locations, costs, pick‑up/drop‑off times and safety arrangements.
ISA Liwan offers an International Boarding Community for students from primary to high school. Boarding facilities include a study area and a student lounge on each floor, with two house parents per floor to guide and support boarders. A UK-based Head of Boarding oversees the programme; security includes curfews and Wellbeing Center support, with ongoing communication with parents.
The school has a uniform. Uniforms are designed from washable materials for comfort and practicality, suitable for each season, and include formal wear, sportswear, swimwear, ties, and shoes.
The cafeteria serves Chinese, Western, vegetarian, bakery, and pastry meals, along with global cuisine. It can support events such as parties and baking and non-baking lessons.
ISA Liwan has a four-house system. The four houses are 弘毅、博学、求真、至善, and the system supports pastoral care, cross-age collaboration, competitions, and student leadership, with house points contributing to a sense of belonging.
The school is part of the ISA International Education Group (ISAIEG), a network of international schools that provides diverse pathways such as IB, CNC, A Level, AP, HKDSE and other programmes.
ISA Liwan operates a continuous K–12 programme (ages 2–18) that integrates IB frameworks with UK, Singapore and Chinese national standards and delivers bilingual English–Chinese instruction. Early Years and Primary (EY–G5) follow the IB PYP candidate framework alongside UK/EYFS and referenced UK/Singapore standards for literacy and mathematics, with immersive English plus regular Chinese/mother‑tongue lessons. Middle school is built around the IB MYP framework and a Cambridge pathway, with Singapore math/science benchmarks and elements of the Chinese national curriculum. Upper secondary provides multiple external pathways and qualifications—IGCSE for lower secondary assessment and post‑16 options including IBDP, A‑Level, AP electives and HKDSE—alongside specialist arts and elective programmes. The school also notes small class sizes, a mentor system and an extensive co‑curricular offer (60–100+ clubs/CCAs) to support pastoral and skills development.
ISA Liwan states that “Student Support” is integral to school life and lists specific pastoral systems including mentorship programmes, a house system, boarding services, parent–school communication and student management to promote a positive, inclusive community and students' wellbeing. The school says these systems are designed to nurture students' personal and social development and to provide personalised care through higher adult-to-student ratios in houses. The site also notes a Learning Support Centre that works with pastoral teams to support individual learners. These provisions are described on the school's Pastoral Care page.
The school's website describes a Learning Support Centre and a Student Support Centre that provide learning support integrated with teaching, pastoral and psychological services. ISA Liwan says these centres aim to create a positive environment and offer academic and learning support for students with different abilities. The website does not specify which particular categories of special educational needs (for example, specific learning difficulties, autism spectrum, or physical disabilities) it can support. The site also does not present itself as a specialist SEN institution; it describes mainstream student support rather than specialist special-education provision.
Early Years and primary information shows an immersive bilingual approach with English-language lessons and specific EAL provision listed in timetables, and the school describes differentiated language teaching from early years. Boarding and pastoral information also states the school runs targeted language and English-improvement courses (including TOEFL/IELTS preparation and small-group English classes) as part of its boarding learning support. These pages indicate curricular and extra-curricular English support rather than a standalone external EAL certification programme. Details about staff numbers or named EAL specialists are not published on the site.
The website describes a Wellbeing/Student Support Centre that provides group activities, group and individual counselling and preventive and intervention services, and it says boarding staff must hold a mental-health education certificate to better support boarders. The school also notes that experienced psychological experts and teachers will provide psychological counselling and wellbeing lectures. The Health Clinic page indicates on-campus medical provision and CPR/AED training that support student health and emergency response. The site therefore presents a combination of counselling, boarding-focused pastoral care and on-site health services as its mental-wellbeing provision.
ISA Liwan's website describes campus security measures (an ‘advanced intelligent campus system', 24-hour security and surveillance), boarding safeguards such as house parents, curfew and regular roll-calls, and an on-site Health Clinic with nursing cover and emergency preparedness (CPR/AED training). The boarding page states house parents are “ever present” for counselling and safety, and the Pastoral Care page describes the house system and home–school communication as part of student protection. The site sets out these operational safeguarding measures but does not publish a clearly labelled, standalone child-protection or safeguarding policy document that is publicly accessible from the pages reviewed.
1. Initial enquiry and application: Start by submitting the school's online admission inquiry or application form (the school publishes an enquiry form for grade intention and contact details). The school's published process asks parents to provide the application form plus “supporting materials” and to indicate the intended grade; the site's enquiry form shows the EY1–G11 grade choices and basic contact fields. Because the school's site does not list every required document, parents should be prepared to provide recent school reports, passport/ID and any residency paperwork the family holds and confirm exact document requirements with admissions.
2. Admissions office review: After you submit the application and supporting materials the Admissions Office reviews the file to confirm the candidate's eligibility and the appropriate entry level. The school's published outline states that this review is an early gate before arranging assessments and helps determine whether an entrance assessment or interview is needed. Expect the review to consider the age cutoff (the school uses a September 1 cut‑off for age placement) and the published approximate class sizes (around 20 pupils for EY and ~24 for primary classes).
3. Entrance assessment or interview: The school arranges an entrance examination, assessment or interview as part of the process to place the child at the correct level; this applies across age ranges listed in the admissions plan. Parents should ask admissions in advance what format the assessment will take for their child's grade (group activities for early years, literacy/math tasks for primary, subject tests for older grades). Bring originals of school reports or samples of recent work if requested — these often speed up the placement decision.
4. Placement confirmation: Following assessment, the school confirms the recommended enrollment level and class allocation; this is the point when you will know whether there is a place available for the intended intake. Because class sizes are capped (the school publishes approximate sizes), availability for a particular grade can vary and places may fill quickly for popular year groups. If you need a specific start date or have constraints (boarding, transport, bilingual needs), mention these early so they can be considered in placement.
5. Offer letter and invoice: The school issues an Admissions Offer Letter together with an invoice if a place is offered; the published procedure explicitly lists issuing an offer and invoice as the next step. Parents should review the offer package carefully for the payment deadline, whether the fee quoted is annual or first‑year only, and any non‑refundable registration charges. The school's admissions materials make clear that payment by the stated deadline is required to secure the place.
6. Tuition and fees: The school's publicly reported annual tuition range for the international stream is in the region of CNY 208,000–308,000 (figures published for the 2025/2026 academic year show per‑grade totals that vary by year). Parents should confirm which extras are not included (for example, some schools exclude transport, uniforms, exam or activity fees) and request an itemised invoice so they know what is covered by the published amount. Fees are subject to change and the published figures should be verified directly with the school before making a payment.
7. Payment and enrolment finalisation: Pay the invoice by the deadline stated on the Offer Letter; the school's procedure states “Pay fees before specific deadline” as the final step before enrolment. Keep proof of payment and request written confirmation of enrolment and start date. If your child requires a visa, boarding place or other administrative support, confirm those arrangements as payments are completed so the school can prepare arrival and orientation.
8. Practical points and follow up: Note the school's age cut‑off (September 1) and class capacity when planning application timing; late applications may require waiting for a vacancy or joining via the school's intake windows. Keep a copy of all exchanged correspondence and the Offer Letter for your records.
ISA Liwan publishes a scholarship programme for its international school students covering several categories (academic, arts, sports, science, environment, public service, entrepreneurship and business). The school states scholarship waivers range from 30% up to 100% of annual tuition and can be awarded for up to a maximum of three years; the published sections also list grade bands for eligibility (for example: academic scholarships for Grades 6–12; arts/science/sports for Grades 1–10; environment/public welfare/entrepreneurship for Grades 7–10). The school's scholarship page also indicates the programme is open to both incoming and current students and notes a large aggregate scholarship fund cited on the site; parents should request the scholarship application form, the specific eligibility criteria and deadlines (separate application and supporting evidence are normally required) and confirm whether awards are renewable and conditional on academic or co‑curricular performance.
The school's published admissions procedure (application → review → assessment → offer → invoice → payment) does not publicly describe a formal, ranked waiting‑list or pool on the pages examined. The admissions pages set out the standard steps for assessment and offer but do not state whether unfilled applications are placed on a waitlist or how such a list would be managed. Because waitlist policies and vacancy management can be handled case‑by‑case, parents should assume there may be limited immediate availability for some grades and contact the Admissions Office to ask whether they operate a waitlist, how it is ranked (if at all), and whether any preferences (siblings, entry date) affect priority. For direct confirmation, use the school's admissions contact listed by ISA International Education Group (admissions@isalwis.com).
The school listed at the website is in Shenzhen (Yantian District), not Guangzhou — its postal address is No.33 Huanmei Road, Dameisha, Yantian District, Shenzhen. It sits in the Dameisha / Dapeng coastline area (near Dameisha Beach) and is reachable by local buses and the Shenzhen Metro Line 8 (Dameisha station serves the area). For exact travel times and routes from your address, contact the admissions office as routes vary.
Vanke Meisha Academy operates as a senior high school (entry commonly from junior‑three graduates) and offers three main learning tracks: a Sino–US (AP/Post‑AP) route, a Sino–UK route (IGCSE → A‑Level), and an Arts Academy pathway that combines intensive arts training with academic courses. Course levels within the Sino–US track are described as foundation/stone, honors, AP and Post‑AP.
The school is a co‑educational, privately operated (民办) academy established by the Vanke education foundation and approved by the Shenzhen education authorities. The school operates boarding arrangements for some year groups; dormitory areas are off‑campus and specific houses/commuter shuttles are used for boarding students.
The website describes student support services including a Student Health / development centre and on‑site psychological counselling available to students. The public site does not provide detailed descriptions of formal SEN (additional learning needs) programmes or specialist resource provision, so families with specific SEN requirements should contact the admissions or student‑support team to discuss individual arrangements.
The school is a Chinese private school (run by Shenzhen/Vanke interests) rather than an overseas‑nationally affiliated school; it delivers international curricula (AP, Cambridge/IGCSE/A‑Level and an Arts Academy) and holds international accreditations/authorisations.
No religious affiliation is indicated on the school website; the academy presents itself as a secular, non‑religious education provider.
The school website does not publish a single, detailed daily timetable (start/end times and break schedule for all year groups). For precise daily schedules (arrival, lessons, lunch and end‑of‑day times) the admissions office or the grade‑level coordinator can provide the current term's timetable.
The website and FAQs note shuttle/commuter arrangements connected with off‑campus dorms (for example, a dorm area is served by daily shuttle transfers) and list a separate ‘bus/commuter fee' as an additional charge outside headline tuition. Public transport options (local buses to the ‘Vanke Centre' stop and the Dameisha Metro station) also serve the neighbourhood. For current routes, stop locations, pick‑up points and fares, contact admissions for the school's official shuttle routes and a current bus schedule.
The school offers a boarding program with three residential areas along Dameisha Beach. House parents supervise students in the dormitories, and a dormitory committee is democratically elected by students. Dorm-life includes organized after-school activities led by dorm staff.
Art School (VMAA) materials show a school uniform with a uniform fee of 2,600 RMB per set for the 2020–2021 academic year.
Healthy dietary habits are emphasized as part of residential life; no specific food options are published on the site.
There are three residential areas with house parents and a dormitory committee elected by students; dorm activities are organized by the dorm staff.
Vanke Meisha Academy is part of Meisha Education, a business area of Vanke Group. Meisha Education has expanded to Guangzhou among 11 cities.
The URL you provided points to Vanke Meisha Academy (VMA) in Shenzhen; the school describes three distinct pathways on its curriculum page: a China–US blended track, a China–UK blended track, and an Arts Academy. The China–US blended pathway is organised into four tiers—foundation, honors, Advanced Placement (AP) and Post‑AP research—so students progress from core bilingual national courses into college‑level AP options in the high school years. The China–UK pathway has students study 7–9 IGCSE subjects across the two pre‑advanced years (with exams at the end of Grade/Year 11), then proceed to 3–4 A‑Level subjects through AS and A2. The Arts Academy combines 50% cultural/academic study with 50% specialised arts training (visual arts or performing arts with streams such as piano, violin, viola, cello and vocal), and students may follow this alongside the school's academic qualifications. VMA notes it is authorised to offer AP (about 25 AP courses), is Cambridge‑authorised for Cambridge qualifications, and holds WASC accreditation; the school also delivers Chinese national curriculum content (e.g., in Grade 10) alongside bilingual instruction to prepare students for these international qualifications.
Meisha (Vanke Meisha Academy) operates a Mentor programme that provides one-to-one mentors for every student to help them identify strengths, set goals and navigate school life. The Mentor programme explicitly aims to increase students' self‑awareness, intrinsic motivation and active engagement with campus activities. The website presents this mentoring as a vehicle to move students from passive to active learning and to foster longer‑term ties to the academy. The school also describes personalised and experiential learning approaches (project-based learning and reflective practice) that support social and emotional skill development.
The academy's ‘Mission and Responsibilities' page says its counselling/college‑guidance team works with special educators and psychological counsellors as part of providing comprehensive student support. The website positions the school as an international secondary school rather than a specialist SEN institution. The site does not publish a dedicated specialist‑SEN unit or a detailed list of the categories of special educational needs it can support. If you need precise information about specific SEN provision or formal specialist programmes, the school's published pages do not provide those details.
The admissions and curriculum pages state the academy admits students who have relatively strong English listening, speaking, reading and writing skills and the curriculum includes academic English and other high‑level English courses. However, the website does not describe a dedicated EAL/ESL programme or set out targeted EAL assessment and staged English‑language support for learners whose first language is not English. Therefore the school does not publicly disclose specific EAL provision on its website. For entry and course details the site refers applicants to admissions contacts.
The school's FAQ says a Student Health Development Centre with trained psychological teachers offers one‑to‑one psychological counselling for students. The staff pages and job listings include roles related to psychological support (named psychological teacher posts) and a boarding director with graduate training in psychology/counselling. The website describes counselling as part of student support alongside boarding pastoral care and health services. The site does not publish detailed clinical referral pathways or a full list of external mental‑health providers on the public pages.
The academy's FAQ states that dorm supervisors (life teachers), a school nurse and security staff provide 24‑hour support for students in boarding, indicating on‑site pastoral and health staffing for student safety. The school's operations/administration leadership describes responsibility for campus safety, logistics and property management. The website does not appear to publish a standalone child‑protection or detailed safeguarding policy document on its public pages. For specific safeguarding procedures or to request policy documents the site lists school contact details and directs enquiries to admissions and administrative offices.
Note: the website you supplied is for Vanke Meisha Academy (VMA), located in Shenzhen (Yantian / Dameisha), Guangdong — not Guangzhou. The campus address and admissions contact numbers are published on the school site; parents should use the Shenzhen contact lines when making enquiries.
1. Register an account and submit an application. Parents/students are asked to use a computer to access the school's “申请入学 / Apply” portal, complete both student and parent information, and choose the specific admission activity (for example the “Future Leaders Training Camp”). The student written responses are required to be in English with set word counts, and the site warns incomplete or incorrectly formatted entries will be rejected — prepare translations, transcripts and any required portfolio files ahead of time.
2. Wait for the admissions office to review your submission. The school's stated review window for submitted applications is typically 2–4 working days; if the application is not approved the system will notify you and you can correct and resubmit. Parents should watch the mobile number and email they registered, and follow up quickly if any data was entered incorrectly because some front-end fields cannot be edited by applicants.
3. Pay the activity / assessment registration fee (when required). For events such as the Future Leaders Training Camp the current listed registration fee is RMB 500; after an approval message you normally have 24 hours to complete the payment and the school states the fee is non‑refundable. Keep the payment receipt and ensure the linked phone/email on the account is correct, since the payment is used to confirm your assessment place.
4. Download the event/assessment voucher and attend the on‑site assessment. The portal issues an event participation voucher (downloadable about three days before the activity) with instructions on what documents and materials to bring; the training-camp day typically includes a combined academic and, for arts applicants, a professional assessment. Parents should check the voucher for arrival time, which items students may bring, and the requirement that only the student may enter the campus on assessment day (per current notices).
5. Receive assessment results / interview outcome. The site indicates that after the assessment/interview applicants can check results online (often within about five working days). If an applicant is outstanding, the admissions committee may also make a scholarship offer at this stage and contact family by phone; keep a contact number available and monitor the application account for updates.
6. Wait for the学位确认 (seat‑confirmation) notice. After a successful outcome the school issues a separate notification for the required seat‑confirmation (学位确认费) and accompanying instructions; parents should expect this message within a few business days after results are posted. Clear understanding of the timing is important: the seat will only be held after the family completes the confirmation payment per the school's instructions.
7. Pay the seat‑confirmation fee and then the tuition. The portal instructs families to first pay the seat confirmation fee (school notes 1–2 working days for finance to confirm receipt), then follow the later tuition‑payment notice (generally in late June–early July). Parents should check that the tuition notice specifies whether the payment requested is for a semester or full year, confirm bank/payment details from the official portal (not from phone texts alone), and save receipts; the school's 2025–26 tuition figures are published on the site.
8. Note the published tuition and which extras are excluded. For 2025–2026 the site lists Academic track tuition at RMB 270,000/year, Arts track tuition at RMB 312,000/year (which includes RMB 42,000/year for art workshops), and a boarding fee of RMB 18,000/year. The school explicitly states that those headline figures do not include items such as the new‑student training‑camp fee (listed separately), uniforms, meals, shuttle bus, sports insurance, non‑national curriculum textbooks, international exam fees, off‑campus internships, and summer programs — budget for these extras.
9. Expect formal admission documents and pre‑arrival communications. After payment the school will issue an official acceptance/录取通知书 (commonly sent in late July according to the site) and tutors typically contact families in early August with pre‑arrival details and preparation. Keep an eye on the registered email and the portal account, and confirm medical, travel and boarding paperwork well before the stated registration dates.
10. Complete school registration and participate in the new‑student training camp. The site describes a mandatory new‑student training program in early August (outdoor practice, sailing/rowing, and Duke of Edinburgh–style activities); the training‑camp fee is listed separately (e.g., RMB 4,550 is shown as a separate new‑student training‑camp charge for the 2025–26 year). Parents should plan travel and packing around the camp schedule and ensure any medical/consent forms are submitted in advance.
Vanke Meisha Academy publishes that the admissions committee may award entrance scholarships to strong applicants; for arts applicants in particular the school has historically operated tiered entry scholarships judged by performance at the arts assessment. The admissions page notes the committee may offer admission scholarships to exceptional candidates during assessment activities and that families are contacted by phone when such offers are made.
Details and historical example (parents should confirm current terms): the school's arts‑academy tuition pages set out a multi‑tier scholarship scheme used in earlier cycles (examples from public materials for the arts academy include full‑tuition, 75%, 50% and 25% entrance awards, with explicit score bands for performance disciplines and rules on award limits and disbursement timing). Those older pages also note scholarship payments are made by the academy finance office (often split across terms) and that scholarship awards are not stackable with other VMA awards — the highest single award applies. Because scholarship policy and the number/value of awards often change year to year, ask the admissions office which scholarships will be available for the year you apply, how recipients are selected, whether awards are conditional on later academic progress, and how/when the funds are paid.
The school's official admissions pages do not describe a formal, published waitlist or centralized “seat pool” for standard new‑student admissions; the online procedures focus on assessment, admission decision, seat confirmation and payment. For transfer/插班 admissions the school's public notices and transfer‑term announcements indicate spaces are limited and may be filled on a first‑come, first‑served basis (“名额有限,报满即止,先到先得”), which functionally means families should register promptly when transfer rounds open. If you need a definitive, current answer about whether the school will hold a waiting list in any particular admission round, contact the admissions office directly — the site lists admissions phone lines and emails for that purpose.
Located in Guangzhou's Science City (Huangpu District), the campus sits in a suburban, green area of the city with nearby shopping and leisure amenities; downtown Guangzhou is roughly a 30–45 minute drive from the campus. For maps and contact details the school is listed at No. 8 Jiantashan Road, Science City, Huangpu District.
BASIS International School Guangzhou serves early years through upper secondary (Pre‑K / Kindergarten up to Grade 12 / Year 13), so it covers preschool, primary, middle and high school age groups. Public listings show the school running a full Pre‑K–12 program.
The school is co‑educational and part of the BASIS International Schools network. It operates as an international day school and also offers weekday boarding; published materials note boarding facilities on campus.
Public information highlights English language learner (ELL) support within the BASIS network, but the school does not appear to publish a detailed public SEN/Learning‑Support policy for Guangzhou on its main pages. Parents with specific Additional Learning Needs (ALN/SEN) questions should contact admissions to discuss individual needs and available provisions.
The school is part of BASIS International Schools, a U.S.‑founded network operating international and bilingual campuses in China (and elsewhere); it is not affiliated to a foreign government.
No religious affiliation is stated in the school's public listings; BASIS International School Guangzhou operates as a non‑religious / secular international school.
The school follows the typical international‑school model with different timetables by division (early years, primary, middle, high). The school's public pages do not publish a single, division‑wide bell schedule online, so exact start/end times, break and lunch windows are best confirmed via the school's current calendar or parent handbook.
Local listings and parent‑oriented pages indicate the school charges for and offers a paid school‑bus service (校车), though publicly available sources do not publish routes or operator details. For routes, stops, fees and registration deadlines contact the school's admissions or operations office directly.
The school offers a weekday boarding program with on-campus facilities that accommodate more than 450 boarding students.
There is a cafeteria on campus.
The school is part of BASIS International Schools.
BASIS International School Guangzhou delivers the BASIS Curriculum from Early Years through secondary (Pre‑K–Grade 12), with English‑medium instruction across core subjects — English/literacy, mathematics, science, social studies, Chinese language, the arts, and physical education. Primary (Pre‑K–Grade 5) focuses on foundational and inquiry‑based learning, while middle school (Grades 6–8) builds subject depth and readiness for upper‑school work. Upper school (Grades 9–12) moves into honours sequencing and offers Advanced Placement (AP) courses beginning in Grade 9, with students eligible for the BASIS Diploma and College Board credit/placement pathways. The curriculum is complemented by sustained fine‑arts, STEM and co‑curricular programmes, and the campus operates a weekday boarding programme. For the most up‑to‑date lists of specific AP subjects, diploma requirements and grade‑by‑grade course maps, consult the school's academic/admissions pages.
The school does not publicly disclose information regarding Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) on its official website or in publicly available materials.
The school does not publicly disclose information regarding Special Educational Needs (SEN), including which types of needs it can support or whether it is a specialist SEN institution.
The school does not publicly disclose information regarding English as an Additional Language (EAL) provision or any specific EAL programmes, staff, or initiatives.
The school does not publicly disclose information regarding mental wellbeing provision, including counselling, wellbeing programmes, or staff roles focused on student mental health.
The school does not publicly disclose detailed safeguarding or child protection policies and procedures on its official website or in publicly available materials.
1. Express interest and register: Start by completing the school's online/printed personal information or registration form to place your child in the admissions queue. Parents should confirm the correct grade-for-age cut-off (the school publishes grade/age guidance by September 1) and check whether the intake you want is open (some years/grades may be closed). Keep a copy of the completed form and note any scheduled campus tour or open‑house date that the admissions office gives you.
2. Pay the application fee: After registering you must pay the application fee (published examples show RMB 2,000). The fee is typically non‑refundable; some school communications indicate it may be credited toward fees if the student is admitted, so ask the admissions officer whether that applies in your case. Save proof of payment — the school will require it when you submit the rest of the application materials.
3. Submit required documents: Prepare and submit the documents the school requests — commonly a copy of the child's passport/ID, official transcripts or school reports for the past one to two years, and teacher recommendations. The school's admissions guidance (published examples) lists these items specifically; parents should also be ready to provide proof of residency/visa status if requested and to ask whether immunization records or translated documents are needed. Make sure all academic records are official (signed/stamped) and translated into English if requested.
4. Student assessment and observation: Assessment format depends on grade. For Early Childhood (PreK–K1/K2) the school uses group‑based play/observation and an English-language listening/follow‑instructions check; for Grades 2–9 the published process includes a written assessment, behaviour observation and a student interview. Expect assessments to check English, mathematics and age‑appropriate reasoning; families should confirm the exact testing date, location and whether any preparation materials are allowed.
5. Parent interview and school interview outcomes: A parent/guardian interview is part of the process — the school expects to discuss educational expectations and the family's support for the pupil's learning. After assessments and interviews, the school will notify families of the decision by email; the admissions pages indicate the school issues offers and then asks parents to complete enrolment paperwork. If you receive an offer, read the acceptance letter carefully for payment deadlines, required paperwork, and any conditions of admission (for example, final official transcripts).
6. Acceptance, enrollment steps and deadlines: When offered a place you will be asked to follow the school's enrolment procedure within the stated timeframe (published examples show a requirement to complete admission steps within five working days of the offer). The enrollment steps usually include signing the contract and paying the tuition/fee balance or deposit; confirm with admissions what portion of the initial fees is refundable, how and when tuition is billed, and what is excluded (meals, uniforms, school bus, activities are commonly extra). Keep copies of all signed documents and payment receipts.
7. Eligibility and grade limits: BASIS International School Guangzhou publicly states it only accepts students holding a foreign passport (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan passport holders) and notes some upper grades may not be open to new external applicants (for example, the school has stated it does not accept applications into Grade 10 or above at times). Before applying, confirm with the admissions office that your child's passport/visa status and the target grade are eligible for intake in the year you want.
8. Boarding, logistics and follow up: If you are applying for boarding, the school publishes boarding capacity and operates a boarding programme for middle/high school students; if you plan to use boarding or school transport, confirm availability and extra costs before accepting an offer. If a grade is full or you have timeline questions, ask the admissions team directly for next steps and for written clarification of deadlines, fee refund conditions and required health/administration paperwork. Always request the admissions contact name/email and keep a copy of all correspondence.
Does the school offer scholarships: Yes — BASIS schools in China run a multi‑campus ‘BASIS Global & 爱圣 International (Aisheng) Global Excellence Student Scholarship' that includes BASIS International School Guangzhou among participating campuses in some years. The programme offers competitive full and half scholarships for incoming high‑school–level students (generally for Grade 9 entry) that can cover four years of tuition and, at campuses that provide boarding, may cover boarding fees as part of the package. Exact award amounts are calculated from the school's tuition for the year the scholarship applies.
Who may apply and what the awards cover: The scholarship targets top academic candidates with leadership potential; awards are offered as full (four years' tuition and, if applicable, boarding) or half scholarships (half the tuition or boarding). Awards are limited in number and granted after multi‑stage selection. Families should note that even when tuition is covered, schools commonly expect parents to pay other charges (books, activities, travel, some administrative fees) unless the scholarship states otherwise.
Application materials and selection stages (published examples): The scholarship application typically requires an application form, standardized English scores (published guidance cites TOEFL at ~105 or Duolingo ~135 as an example requirement), two teacher recommendation letters, official transcripts for the past two years, a short self‑introduction video, and a portfolio of academic/extra‑curricular work. Shortlisted students usually sit multi‑subject written tests and take interviews (including presentations, speeches or debate elements) before a final review by a scholarship panel. There is commonly an application fee for the scholarship round (published examples show an RMB 2,000 fee that may be refundable if the student is awarded the scholarship), and timelines/deadlines are set each year by the programme. Because procedures and score thresholds are updated year to year, families should request the current scholarship brief and exact deadlines from the Guangzhou admissions office.
How to proceed: If you want to pursue a scholarship, contact the Guangzhou admissions office directly to request the most recent scholarship brief and application form, confirm eligibility, and obtain exact deadlines and submission addresses. Scholarship rules and award amounts change by year, so always rely on the official school scholarship brief for final requirements.
Publicly available admissions information for BASIS International School Guangzhou does not set out a formal, published waitlist policy on the school website or in the standard admissions guidance that we found.
Practical effect and recommended action: Because the school publishes a fixed capacity and grade intake plan, if a requested grade is full the school typically records continued interest and may place applicants on an internal waiting/interest list (this is a standard practice for many international schools; the school's admissions pages describe limited vacancies and enrolment planning but do not publish a public FAQ about waitlist mechanics). Parents should therefore ask admissions whether a formal waitlist exists, how placements are prioritised, whether siblings or current students get priority, and what the typical wait time is. (This statement about internal waiting lists is an inference based on the school's published intake/capacity information and common practice; confirm directly with the school.)
ISA Science City is in Guangzhou's Huangpu District at 66 Yushu South Road, inside the Guangzhou Science City development. The campus sits near the boundary with Tianhe District and is described as roughly a 20–30 minute drive from Guangzhou's Pearl River New Town/CBD depending on traffic.
The school is a K–12 (Early Years through Grade 12) international school, accepting children from about age 2 up to 18. The website and group listings show Early Years, Primary, Middle and High School divisions.
ISA Science City is a co‑educational international day and boarding school. The school states it operates as a mixed (male/female) day and boarding K–12 campus and advertises a boarding house capacity (around 500 boarders).
The school website does not publish a detailed SEN policy on its main pages; the ISA group schools operate a formal access/inclusion and learning‑support approach (tiered support, EAL and individualized plans) and the group's member schools commonly offer learning‑support and EAL services — prospective parents should contact admissions with specific queries about individual needs and available resources.
The school is based in China (Guangzhou) and is an international school operating within that context; it does not advertise affiliation to a foreign national school system.
No religious affiliation is stated on the school website or in its public profile; the school presents itself as a secular international IB school.
The school does not publish a full daily timetable (start/end times and all break times) on the main website; a third‑party school listing notes a short secondary pastoral/tutor time (PTT) at about 15:00–15:30, but parents should confirm exact daily hours and division‑by‑division schedules directly with admissions. Boarding students follow an established residential routine.
ISA Science City runs a professional school‑bus service in partnership with an external provider; third‑party reports say the school operates multiple routes (reported as nine–ten routes) covering several Guangzhou districts (Tianhe, Huangpu, Haizhu, Baiyun and Zengcheng), with a driver plus on‑bus supervisor, face‑recognition check‑in and WeChat push notifications for parents. The school's team pages and group admissions pages also reference school‑bus arrangements — contact admissions for route stops, costs and current route maps (routes can be adjusted each semester).
The school provides day school and boarding; a boarding house on campus accommodates up to 500 students.
The campus has a cafeteria on site for meals.
The school is part of the ISA International Education Group and is an IB World School.
ISA Science City International School (Guangzhou) is a K–12 IB World School serving students aged 2–18 and delivering the full IB continuum. Its Early Childhood Learning Centre and Primary phases follow the IB Primary Years Programme (PYP). Middle school is organised around the IB Middle Years Programme (MYP), and senior students (Years 11–12) study the IB Diploma Programme (DP) to complete university‑entry qualifications. The taught curriculum covers English and Chinese instruction plus additional world languages, mathematics, sciences, humanities, design and computing, and a formal arts programme (visual arts, drama and music), alongside extensive co‑curricular activities. Academic enrichment and research pathways are provided through the Student Enrichment Centre, and the campus includes boarding and purpose‑built facilities to support experiential learning and university preparation.
ISA Science City describes social and emotional development as part of its whole‑child approach and the Head of School states the school aims to develop students' social‑emotional skills alongside academic learning. The ISA Academic Centre also says it contributes to “wellbeing frameworks” for ISA schools. The school's leadership pages and student‑support overview note that a Student Support Team (to include pastoral care) is being developed to deliver social‑emotional and pastoral provision. The website does not publish a detailed SEL curriculum or daily programme (for example, explicit lessons or named SEL programmes are not shown).
The school publishes a Student Support team led by a Head of Student Support Services and lists a Learning Support teacher, and it says staff will provide individualised programming and learning support services. Leadership profiles note qualifications in inclusive education and experience supporting students who require individual programming. The website does not list specific categories of special educational needs (for example, particular diagnoses or levels of need) that the school will or will not support. The school is presented as a mainstream IB K–12 international school rather than as a specialist SEN institution; no public statement identifies it as a specialist SEN school.
ISA Science City's staff pages and the Student Support description state the Student Support Team will include English as an Additional Language (EAL) provision and list staff experience supporting EAL learners. Senior‑staff profiles also reference experience in supporting students with EAL. The website, however, does not publish a detailed EAL programme (for example, entry assessment procedures, lesson models, withdrawal vs in‑class support, or levels/phases of EAL instruction).
The school's published staff profiles and Student Support description show counselling and guidance are part of the intended Student Support Team (the Head of Student Support Services holds degrees in Inclusive Education and Guidance & Counselling, and other senior staff have counselling experience). The Academic Centre page states it supports wellbeing frameworks across ISA schools. The website does not publish a standalone, detailed mental‑health policy or a schedule of counselling services (for example, numbers of counsellors, referral routes, or session formats are not publicly listed).
1. Online application and documents — Start by completing the school's online application and uploading the required documents listed on the ‘Apply Online' checklist (for example: previous school reports, passport/ID, and any medical or residency documents the school requests). Parents should check the checklist carefully before submission — missing documents slow the review and may delay assessment. If you are applying from abroad, prepare clear certified copies and allow extra lead time for document translation or notarisation.
2. Pay the application fee — After you submit the online application you must pay a non-refundable application fee of RMB 3,000 for the admissions team to review the file. Make sure you keep the payment receipt and reference number; the school will not begin a full review until payment shows against the application. Note that application fees are routinely non-refundable at many international schools, so confirm the payment method and currency before you pay.
3. Documentation review and conditional offer — The admissions team reviews submitted documents and then the appropriate Division Principal or Head of School gives final sign-off. If the paperwork meets requirements the school will issue a conditional letter of offer; if more information is needed they will contact you to request it before issuing a conditional offer. Parents should watch their email closely during this stage and be ready to supply school reports, transcripts, or clarity about previous curricula.
4. Assessment and family meeting — For Early Childhood learners the school uses an observation by an education leader; Primary and Secondary applicants typically sit screener assessments in English, Mathematics, Chinese and General Reasoning, with other components added as required. All families are invited to a meeting with a member of the education leadership team so the school can better understand the child's background, learning needs, interests and any support required. Parents should prepare to discuss learning history, any SEN (special educational needs) support, and to ask about curriculum, language support and pastoral care during this meeting.
5. Offer acceptance and enrolment payment — Once assessments and meetings are completed the school issues an unconditional offer (subject to the family returning the signed acceptance and family contract). To confirm the place families pay an admissions/enrolment deposit of RMB 30,000 (the school's published information describes this as refundable when accepted according to their terms). Before you pay this deposit, check the contract carefully for timelines, refund conditions, and any deadlines for accepting the offer.
6. Tuition, boarding and payment schedule — Published sources for recent academic years show annual tuition in the range of approximately RMB 220,000 (Early Years) up to about RMB 328,000 (senior grades), and the school operates a boarding facility for secondary students (capacity published as around 500 boarders). Parents should request the current official fee schedule from admissions because published ranges vary by year, grade and program (and may not include additional charges such as uniforms, transport, meals, exam or activity fees). If you need instalment options, sibling discounts or an exact cost breakdown (tuition vs boarding vs one-off levies), ask the admissions office and request the written fee policy for the year you plan to start.
If you want, I can draft an e-mail you can send to the school's admissions office asking for the latest fee schedule, payment terms, refund policy and exact list of documents required for your child's year group.
ISA Science City publishes an internal programme called ISA Global Pioneers (run via the Student Enrichment Centre) that selects students (notably in Grades 9–11) by academic and comprehensive assessment to receive scholarships to participate in ISAIEG academic programmes and enrichment activities. The Student Enrichment Centre page describes the ISAGP selection process (academic assessment and comprehensive assessment) and notes that selected students are offered special scholarships to participate in those programmes. Separate public-facing articles and school communications for 2025 reference scholarship opportunities connected with ISAGP and promotional scholarship campaigns; however, detailed eligibility rules, the value of awards (for example partial vs full tuition), availability by year group, and application deadlines are not published in full on the school's basic admissions pages. For a clear answer about what scholarships are currently available, how they are awarded, what they cover (tuition or programme fees), and the application timetable, contact the school's admissions or the Student Enrichment Centre and request the scholarship policy and application form.
The school's published admissions pages and public enrolment guidance do not describe a formal waitlist or wait-pool system. The application-process page sets out application, assessment and offer steps but does not explain how the school manages oversubscription or waiting lists; because many international schools use waitlists differently from year to year, the safest option is to ask the admissions office directly whether a waitlist is used for your child's year group and, if so, what (if any) deposit or timeline is required to hold a place. Contact the admissions office to confirm current practice and any priority rules (for example sibling priority or returning students).
ULink College Guangzhou is located at 8 Wei Li Road in Nansha District, Guangzhou, on a riverside campus surrounded by green hills and parks, close to Nansha Marina and Nansha Binhai Park. The school website notes the campus sits in the Pearl River Delta and is roughly one hour from major city centres and the region's airports (Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Hong Kong).
ULink College follows the Cambridge/CAIE pathway: IGCSE for Grade 9–10 and A Level for Grade 11–12, with more than 30 subject options listed. The curriculum pages and subject lists describe core and optional subjects for each grade band.
The school is presented on its website as an international boarding college offering IGCSE and A Level qualifications; the site includes a detailed boarding programme and residential provision. The website does not state a single-sex intake; boarding facilities and student life pages describe dormitories, residential advisers and life coaches.
The website describes an EAL (English as an Additional Language) programme for incoming English-language learners and a Learning Center that provides IELTS/TOEFL/SAT preparation, individual tutoring and out-of-school programmes. Student-support listings also include personal counselling and college-planning services; the site does not describe a separate, dedicated SEN department, so parents with specific additional needs should contact admissions for details.
ULink College is funded by Guangdong ULink Education Group and is authorised by Cambridge Assessment International Education (CAIE) and Edexcel; it is based in Mainland China.
The school website does not indicate any religious affiliation. For confirmation about religious or values-based programmes, contact the admissions office.
The site has a “Daily Schedule” page and describes student life routines, but it does not publish fixed start/end times or specific break/lunch times online. The admissions or student-life office can provide the current term timetable and daily hours on request.
Living-on-campus information states the school operates a dedicated shuttle team and provides shuttle/transport services for students and staff, with regular vehicle inspection and maintenance; however, specific routes, stops and external provider names are not listed on the site. Parents should request route maps, pickup points and costs from admissions or the transport office when enquiring.
ULink College Guangzhou offers on-campus boarding. Rooms accommodate four students. Two boarding options exist: RMB 45,800 per school year for a room of four without weekend stay, and RMB 55,700 per school year for a room of four with weekend stay.
Dining on campus is provided by COMEMOS, SunGlint's catering brand. COMEMOS offers Chinese and Western cuisines, noodles, vegetarian meals, and over a hundred varieties of dishes weekly. The dining area is located on the southwest side of the campus with a riverfront view.
The school is funded by Guangdong ULink Education Group. ULink College Guangzhou is accredited by the Council of International Schools. It is a member school of International Schools Services (ISS), Search Associates, and The Principals' Training Centre. Cambridge Assessment International Education CAIE and Pearson Edexcel provide and support IGCSE and A Level courses; the school is an official CAIE professional development centre.
ULink College Guangzhou delivers Cambridge-authorised IGCSE and A Level programmes for senior secondary students. IGCSE is offered as a two‑year programme for Grades 9–10 with compulsory courses (Mathematics, Chinese, English, Physics, Chemistry, PE, PSHE, project work and university‑preparation lessons) and a broad set of option subjects including Accounting, Art & Design, Business Studies, Sociology, Geography, History, Economics, Biology, Computer Science, Music, Spanish, Japanese, French, Drama and Design Engineering. The school also provides a one‑year IGCSE pathway for Grade 10 with core subjects (Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Chinese, English, PE, PSHE and university‑preparation) and limited electives (Economics, Biology). The A Level programme runs for two years (Grades 11–12); core elements include Mathematics, English, PSHE and university‑preparation lessons, and students may choose from more than 30 A Level options such as Further Mathematics, Psychology, Physics, Chemistry, Accounting, Economics, Computer Science, Biology, Art & Design, Business, Sociology, History, Geography, Japanese, Music, Drama and the Cambridge International Project Qualification (IPQ). The curriculum also emphasises PSHE (personal, social and health education) and weekly university‑guidance lessons alongside project and admissions activities to prepare students for overseas study.
ULC describes a formal Growth Counselling (成长辅导) programme aimed at supporting students' social, emotional and academic development. Growth mentors provide individual and group counselling on issues such as interpersonal skills, stress management, bullying, friendship, low mood, emotional control and eating disorders; sessions are confidential except where there is a clear safety risk. The school also operates a dual-homeroom system (one local, one foreign) and weekly grade-level meetings coordinated by a Grade Level Coordinator to monitor academic and pastoral needs. Teachers, parents or students can refer issues to the Growth Counselling office and there is a documented referral process for teachers and parents. These arrangements are described on the school's student-support pages.
ULC's published admissions policy states the school does not have the hardware or software facilities to accept students with special physical conditions, emotional needs, or learning disabilities, and that such applications are not accepted. The site separately describes academic support through a Learning Center (standardised-test preparation and subject tutoring), but the admissions statement makes clear the school is not a specialist SEN institution and does not admit students whose needs require specialist facilities. The admissions policy is explicit about this restriction rather than describing specific SEN support services. For clarification or case-specific questions the school's admissions office is listed on the website.
ULC states that Grade 9 entrants are placed into intermediate or advanced English classes based on entrance English scores and that an EAL teaching team provides support for Grade 9 intermediate students. The school says EAL teachers work closely with subject teachers inside and outside lessons to support access to curriculum, joint planning and assessment, and lists specific measures such as peer tutoring, dedicated reading time and drama classes. The school's Learning Center additionally offers IELTS/TOEFL/SAT preparation and individual tutoring, which the site presents as broader language and academic support. These EAL arrangements are described on the curriculum and learning-support pages.
The Growth Counselling page describes individual and group counselling that explicitly covers stress management, mood concerns, peer issues, and eating-disorder related support; sessions are provided during school days and students may self-refer or be referred by teachers or parents using the stated referral process. The school's Child Protection Policy (public PDF) further describes staff training, student education on safety and reporting procedures, and the school's responsibilities for creating a safe environment. The counselling page also states confidentiality is maintained unless there is a clear risk of self-harm or harm to others, in which case staff follow referral/reporting procedures. These provisions are documented on the counselling page and in the published child-protection policy.
ULC publishes a detailed Child Protection Policy (downloadable PDF) that sets out the policy statement, definitions of abuse, reporting procedures, a flowchart for suspected incidents, staff code of conduct, recruitment checks, and required training for staff and students. The policy references Chinese law and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, states the school will provide parent briefings and distribute the policy to parents at the start of each school year, and names the principal and Growth Mentors as contact points for child-protection matters. The full policy and procedures are available for download from the school website.
1. Learn about the school and make an appointment. Start by visiting the ULink College website, following the school's official WeChat account (ULC剑桥国际高中) and, if useful, viewing alumni or news pages to see recent developments. The school encourages campus visits and provides an online reservation system; the admissions office is available Monday–Friday 9:00–17:00 for questions. Parents should note the admissions phone number and email and prepare any questions about grade placement, boarding, or special programs before the visit.
2. Register for the entrance assessment. All applicants must complete the school's registration form and sign up for the centrally organized entrance exam (the site points families to a QR-code/WeChat registration via the ULink admissions service account, ULinkEducation). Follow the registration instructions carefully and keep any confirmation or reference number the system issues. Parents should check registration deadlines and save screenshots or emails showing the student is scheduled, because space can be limited.
3. Take the entrance exam (and understand the intake principle). ULink College uses a centrally administered entrance exam and applies a ‘selective and first-come, first-served' admissions principle; if the intake is full the school may close admissions for that intake. The site also states that, where applicable, mid-term transfer seats are limited or (on some pages) not offered—so timing matters. Parents should plan for the scheduled exam date, arrive with identification and past school records, and be prepared that available places can fill quickly.
4. Know what the school assesses and the retake policy. Admission requires meeting standards in English and mathematics and passing an interview; applicants who fail a subject may be permitted to retake that subject, and the site states each student may have up to two attempts in the same admission year. Ensure your student's recent school reports and any English-test results are ready to upload or present, and be aware that the interview assesses communication and suitability for the CAIE (IGCSE/A‑Level) pathway. If your child has significant learning differences or medical needs, note the school's published position that it does not have the facilities to accept students with certain special educational or significant medical needs.
5. Placement rules, special programs and grade exceptions. If a student passes the exam for the requested grade they will be placed in that grade; students who pass a higher‑grade exam may choose to advance one year (G11 entrants are an exception to the jump‑grade policy). For G9 students entering the autumn intake, the school requires participation in an overseas program at a sister school in Australia (about one month) to support transition into an English‑immersion curriculum. Parents should confirm these program requirements (and any travel logistics or costs) before completing registration.
6. Accept the offer and complete registration on time. When a student receives an offer (an admission letter), the family must complete the school's seat‑registration steps within the stated deadline; the site warns that offers are valid only for that admissions season and unregistered seats will be released. Before registering, review the published tuition, boarding and other fees for the relevant school year so you understand the payment schedule and refund/forfeiture conditions. If you need to defer or have timing questions, contact admissions immediately — contact details (phone and admissions email) are listed on the site.
The ULink College Guangzhou public website does not list scholarships, merit awards, or a formal financial‑aid program for the Guangzhou (ULC) campus. The tuition and boarding pages publish the annual fees for new students (the site shows figures labelled for the 2025–2026 school year), but there is no published page describing scholarships or how to apply for them. If you are interested in fee reductions, merit awards, sibling discounts, or other forms of financial support, ask admissions directly by phone or email; they can confirm whether any campus‑specific scholarships exist and provide application criteria, deadlines, and documentation requirements. (Note: other campuses or schools under the ULink group have, at times, published entrance‑scholarship programs — that does not mean ULC Guangzhou has the same arrangements; verify with the Guangzhou admissions office.)
ULink College's public admissions pages do not describe a formal waitlist or pool that is maintained after an intake fills. The school's stated policy is that recruitment is ‘first‑come, first‑served' and that once planned intake numbers are reached, recruitment for that intake is finished. At the same time, there are mixed statements on different pages about mid‑term transfer (插班) availability: one page indicates no mid‑term places are available for a given intake while another page says transfer applications are accepted year‑round but places are limited and handled case‑by‑case. Because the site does not publish a clear waitlist procedure, parents who want to be placed on a potential list or notified of future openings should contact the admissions office directly (phone or admissions@ulinkcollege.com) to ask whether the school will hold names for future openings and how that process is managed.