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Swiss International Scientific School Dubai

Swiss International Scientific School Dubai is a co-educational, IB day and boarding school for students aged 3 to 18, with English only, English-French and English-German bilingual programmes.

  • Swiss International Scientific School Dubai
    Dubai Healthcare City
    Phase 2
    Al Jaddaf
    Dubai
    UAE
  • T +971 (0) 4375 0600
  • E [email protected]
  • W www.sisd.ae
  • School Ages: 3-18
  • School Gender: Mixed
  • Total School Numbers: 2,069
  • Teaching Language(s):
    • English
    • French
    • German
  • Bilingual Programme(s):
    • French/English
    • German/English
  • SEN: Mainstream with SEN support
  • Boarding: Available
  • Uniform: Yes
  • School Year: Two semesters: August-January, February-July
  • School Hours: Monday-Thursday 8.00am-3.30pm; Friday 8.00am-12.00pm
  • Annual Fee Range: Day AED 82,499 - AED 102,749; Boarding AED 188,618 - AED 243,449
  • Fee Information: Application fee: AED 525 Registration fee from AED 6,250 to AED 9,900; sibling discount: 5 per cent for 2nd and 3rd child, 20 per cent for 4th child and 50 per cent for 5th child.
  • Religion: Non-denominational
  • Memberships: Nord Anglia Education
  • State/Independent: Privately owned

Curricula:

  • International Baccalaureate (IB) Career-related Programme (CP)
  • International Baccalaureate (Diploma)
  • International Baccalaureate Middle Years Programme (MYP)
  • International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme (PYP)
  • BTEC (Business and Technology Education Council) Level 3 Extended Diploma
  • BTEC (Business and Technology Education Council) Level 1 & 2
  • Swiss Lehrplan 21

Accreditations/Inspections:

  • Council of International Schools (CIS)
  • Dubai Schools Inspection Bureau (DSIB) of KHDA

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What The Good Schools Guide International says

Principal

Since 2021, Ruth Burke BEd MEd. Attended Trinity College, Dublin and later University of Bath, completing her master’s in educational leadership. ‘My mum always tells the story that on my first day of school I came home and declared I was going to be a teacher. I never deviated from that,’ she says with a smile.

Her teaching career started in Ireland, and then moved to the UK where she got stuck in with early years education in Melksham school, Wiltshire and Westlea school, Swindon. In 2007, her husband’s job moved them to Dubai, two small children in tow, and she joined JESS Jumeirah working up the ladder to head teacher over an eight-year tenure. She then spent three years as principal at GEMS Wellington International school and two years as director at Deira International school before taking up the helm here.

‘The bilingualism was the biggest attraction for me, having been brought up in a bilingual home in Ireland,’ she says. Parents agree she is a great fit for the school, as while she doesn’t speak French and German fluently (French to A level though!), she understands what a multilingual education looks like, having completed her degree in both English and Irish.

Vivacious in character, giving a firm nod to a stereotypical Irish national, we found a passionate head, energetic about the journey the school is on and always thinking about the next step in its development. Diplomatic and kind, according to parents, she also likes to engage with the students: reading in KG, dropping into PE classes and offering principal award stickers.

Married with three children (two grown up, living in London and New York), and one grandchild, she proclaims she’s a football mum (to the youngest who lives with them in Dubai) and spends most of her free time outdoors. When sport isn’t at the forefront, they love beach time and trips to the picturesque mountains of Hatta for some well-deserved relaxation.

Entrance

School has capacity to reach 2,450 students, but with pockets of space. Secondary places generally easier to come by.

Entry assessment is play based for early years (‘It’s great that the room has glass walls so the kids can still see us,' say parents), primary children have a written maths, English and language (French or German) test, and secondary students undergo a standard CAT4 test (and supply school reports). For those entering grades 10 and 11 there is a short interview with the IB academic head, and boarders meet with the head of boarding, mainly to validate that they are fit for boarding emotionally but also to explore personality and check in on food/medical issues.

Exit

Early exit is due primarily to relocation. There are no other schools in the city with a comparable quality of bilingual programme (and that offer boarding). Careers planning starts from grade 6. The university counsellor is diligent in organising coffee mornings, uni fairs etc, creating a buzz among students.

‘We are hearing from employers that languages will take these children far,’ says head confidently. And if university choices are anything to go by, they are certainly on track. Many choose British and European universities with University of Bristol, University of Edinburgh, University of Groningen and Stockholm School of Economics all popular destinations, but school has seen recent expansion towards Canada and America too eg Columbia, UCLS, and University of Pennsylvania. A number also stay in the Middle East.

Latest results

In 2023, the average IB diploma score was 32, with a highest score of 42. The average middle years programme (MYP) score was 41 with a 100 per cent pass rate.

In 2022, the average IB diploma score was 34, with a highest score of 41, and the average MYP score was 41, up from 2021, when the average was 33 and 40 respectively.

School is fully inclusive and encourages all students to take the IB as they see it as ‘the gold standard of education’.

Teaching and learning

Three learning streams on offer in early years and primary: English/French bilingual programme, English/German bilingual programme, and (in primary only) the IB STEAM programme which sees young children learn predominantly in English (building knowledge using STEAM subjects to enhance critical thinking) with four hours a week of either French or German (delivered through two teachers in the classroom co-teaching in their respective languages).

Feedback is that children gain confidence in languages and embrace the curriculum with inquisitiveness and freedom to choose how they learn and explore. Class sizes are 24 at capacity, which didn’t feel too big, especially with two teachers working in groups; only snipe from parents is that they would like all the teachers to be native speakers which isn’t always the case. We loved the external opportunities too: giant chess, mud kitchens with planting troughs and even an outdoor classroom used for physical development or glockenspiel music lessons.

In secondary, students can continue to follow their bilingual pathway (or English only) with an option to study three subjects in French or German. They work through the IB middle years programme in grades 6 to 10 and onto the IB diploma in grades 11-12, or choose a more vocational pathway with the IB career pathway and BTEC options. The main school building is contemporary and colour-coordinated by subject on each floor, with sixth form at the top. As you might expect in a school with science in its name, there are many (11 at the last count) science labs to support the popular subjects of physics, biology, chemistry and environmental science, and head tells us that economics, business and psychology have also taken off.

Libraries in both primary and secondary shelve English, French, German and Arabic books, the latter with modern study booths and study rooms attached.

Homework in younger years is reading and times tables with French/German language learning for bilingual pupils. From grade 3, there is usually a handwritten piece and tasks via an app. Weekly communication to parents in English and complemented with (much appreciated) social media key reminders and events. Universal praise for the yearly calendar of events which helps families with organisation.

Learning support and SEN

'Wonderful' head of inclusion, say parents, committed to educating community and parents on what it means to be an inclusive school. She manages a large team who work on identification, observation and assessment of students. Around 11 per cent of students are on the SEN register (ranging from level 1 to 3) with moderate to more severe learning difficulties, including dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyscalculia, ASD, ADHD, non-verbal (these children use basic communication with prompts and have a modified curriculum based on life skills) and physically disabled students. Push-in and pull-out support offered depending on the lesson and child’s needs.

School uses a self-guided, online therapy programme in French and English and can also bring in external therapists, including speech and occupational therapists.

Fully accessible campus with lifts (including in the boarding houses). Flexible seating in all classrooms and a sensory room with calm music, softer lights and even a physio bed. A new inclusion room is being designed with a Lego station, climbing wall and a swing – all brilliant additions!

Language support

As children are bilingual (most actually multilingual with 40 languages spoken in family homes), good language support is essential, and the school does not come up short. Around fifteen per cent of students receive extra help from the language support team. There is one lead for each language in both primary and secondary and a wider group of staff members working under them. Students get outside support in small groups of six to ten over a period of six weeks before reintegration into the classroom.

Mother tongue lessons (eg Russian, Spanish, Italian and Mandarin) are offered with an outside provider during timetabled Islamic lessons.

The arts and extracurricular

Art spreads deeper than just fine arts and we really enjoyed exploring the grades 8-11 Junk Kouture projects (department lead is ‘mad about sustainability’), with its competition-worthy designs including dresses made of Halloween sweet wrappers, carrier bags and café receipts – fantastic!

Performing arts is growing, with a annual end-of-year show and dance programme. The barre studio and black room were both full of life on our visit. Parents enthuse that the school’s recent acquisition by Nord Anglia will avail more opportunities, especially with their link with The Julliard performing school in New York.

Reasonable opportunities for the musically talented. Instruments are explored in primary, along with individual music lessons and twice-yearly concerts. While there is a choir (Super Singers) there is no school orchestra, though ‘tuneful Tuesdays’ allow students to perform, and there is a live lounge on the roof top after school.

ECA’s are allocated on a first come first served basis, with plenty of language options eg German creative writing club, French book club and many clubs in English such as gardening, Lego etc. Some mutters that there isn’t enough availability for the one to two free clubs in primary, but the secondary offering seems broader with photography, art and junk kouture alongside sports and enriching council groups eg digital, bilingualism and sustainability. Bright students can join the maths club for extra challenge - there is no segregation of kids in lessons. Many paid activities on offer and school is open to student requests eg adding extra piano, a water polo club and the crochet club in the lunch time opportunity hour.

Sport

Teams participate in Dubai's DASSA league in six main sports: basketball, golf, tennis, swimming, football and athletics. Top notch facilities with two full sized tennis courts, basketball courts, large football pitches and both indoor (280m) and outdoor (400m) running tracks. No rugby or netball but we are told there is ‘no audience for it’. Athletes from grade 6 upwards are supported with a well-stocked weights room, circuit training sessions and a cardio suite (treadmills have a beautiful bird’s eye view onto the pitches and the Dubai city skyline in the distance). Squads in general are evolving; tennis performance already strong and encouraged as an after-school activity too. Students incorporate sport into their everyday life here – it’s not all about winning cups. Beyond the main sports, children also play padel, beach volleyball and table tennis with fabulous amenities, and the large indoor sports hall has climbing walls.

One of only a few schools in Dubai with an impressive 10-lane Olympic size (50m) swimming pool so you would expect swimming teams to compete at the highest level, but parents say its work in progress. An external club offers early morning swim training - students eat breakfast with the boarders which swim parents say is a bonus. A partner athletics academy will soon offer morning and after-school training too.

Primary has a small ‘learn to swim’ pool, and in the warmer months an indoor assault course is built in the corridor between the playground and pool which the children say they love. They also have skipathons and Zumba – sounds fun!

Boarders

Only 15 minutes from Dubai International airport, the two boarding houses, aptly named Geneva (boys) and Zurich (girls), sit nearby the sports facilities and lodge just over 50 students each (from grade 6 and above, though majority are grade 8 upwards). Mainly full boarders with around 20 per cent weekly and a handful of flexi boarders; 35 different nationalities. The weekly/flexi boarders tend to live a little further out in say Ras Al Khaimah (RAK) or The Palm or are sporty kids who use the facilities late or have early morning squads. There are five members of staff in each house and no day students are allowed inside. Boys and girls houses can mix on the ground floor only.

Dorms (if you can call them that – two bedrooms in grades 6-9 and single beds for grades 10-12) are modern with built-in shelving and desks - all have ensuite bathrooms.

We spied a box in the common room full of mobile phones (not locked up – this is Dubai you know) alongside organic juices. Boarders check in and out using an app which parents can also access to eg grant permission for their child to leave on the weekend with a friend. There are no fixed exeats.

Secondary staff lean into boarding life and join students for help with studies. Prep time is between 5pm and 8pm and is supervised in the common room for the younger students, whereas seniors can retreat to their bedrooms. All meals are eaten in the canteen (with buffet breakfast and dinner, and live cooking stations) and the boarding house kitchen, fridge and pantry are fully stocked.

Parents of non-boarders say their kids are ‘a little jealous’ and that they are treated as a separate group, firmly labelled ‘boarders’. And we totally understand why they would be! Weekend time is busy with a fun Friday pool party and movie night, a Saturday excursion and Sunday chill day. Trips, organised three weekends a month and incorporated in the fees, include visits to Ferrari world, Atlantis and Ski Dubai. Experiencing the UAE and its culture is important too so organised hikes in RAK and visits of the Old Souk also feature.

Ethos and heritage

Founded in 2015, by Omar Danial, a Swiss national (hotelier and financier) who moved to Dubai in 2010 and, as a parent of six children, realised there was no bilingual school option for them.

Every part of the school has words written in three languages with a firm nod to its values and desire to be an authentic bilingual school. Parents say the main reason for choosing the school is the language offering and most also appreciate the ‘freedom’ (from exams) that comes with the IB curriculum, even if some would like a bit more structure.

Its 2023 acquisition by Nord Anglia Education is largely seen as positive due to the global infrastructure that the school can benefit from. These links have started already eg grade 2 pen pals with College du Leman students. Teachers are also obtaining more training via workshops, and children are excited about upcoming links with MIT and Julliard.

Located in Al Jaddaf, the large campus overlooks Dubai Creek and while not in a residential area, access is plentiful with almost 40 bus routes.

Strict uniform in primary: ‘If you don’t have the right hoodie you would be cold in class,’ however in secondary, students can express themselves with their extremities – think cool footwear (the Doc Martens and Jordans were out in full force) and coloured hair accessories. Dress down Friday’s see everyone in house shirts and teachers in red polo shirts.

School feels energetic. On our visit the auditorium stage was decorated and fully alive with children singing and playing instruments for the German Fest. The feeling of harvest really resonated through the performance and carried through to the cafeteria, complete with trays of food by parents wanting to share fruits of their land. The canteen is open seven days a week providing hot and cold meals; the tuck shop too.

Students join one of four houses, Geneva, Lugano, Bern and Zurich and house spirit is strong. House points are given for academics, behaviour, participation, and sporting events. Leadership opportunities wide. Yes, they have the typical house captains in both primary and secondary and a student council made up of grade 12 students, but they are also open to student-led initiatives - the green, inclusion and animal welfare committees are strong.

Pastoral care, inclusivity and discipline

Huge diversity with students from a variety of cultures and speaking different languages - everyone enjoys mutual respect. When problems arise, school adopts a restorative justice approach. ‘It’s an opportunity for the student to learn and reflect,’ says principal. School has a full time, multilingual counsellor in both primary and secondary (who visits the boarding house twice a week). In primary the class teacher, parent or leadership refer pupils; in secondary students reach out independently.

School seen as brilliant with feedback eg putting together a fun programme for secondary students to enjoy their school life, including non-uniform days and pool parties.

Classroom and community

Over 100 nationalities; with French, German and Swiss the top three. On walking around the playground, it was clear that children switch languages naturally. No huge segregation though; with few cliques and children seen as accepting and open minded.

Some parents get very involved, playing a huge part in the day to day at school. They decorate class doors, volunteer at events, and talk careers to the class. It’s apparent that the bulk of students here are very entrepreneurial and come from innovative households.

Money matters

Fees high (one of the most expensive in Dubai) and comparable to popular UK public schools. Parents moan about the additional costs (donations, resources, trips etc) but improvements are constantly being made around campus. Academic, sports and boarding scholarships offered.

The last word

The ‘Little people, big dreams’ books spotted in reception sums the school up perfectly. This is a school dedicated to enabling students to explore what they enjoy, in their languages of choice, while learning skills and gaining good results along the journey. With a growing boarding programme and more opportunities ahead under the Nord Anglia Education umbrella, its future looks promising.


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