Yes, it's a major city in a middle income country - not in China or the ME. Lots of tourists, although not a lot of expats. Cost of living similar to Mexico City.
Unusually few int schools for the size of the city (1 US, 1 Brit and 1 IB. This school would count as the IB school. All of them about 500 students.)
Search found 3 matches
- Wed Jan 06, 2016 10:20 am
- Forum: Forum 1. From Questions About ISS & Search to Anything and Everything About International Teaching
- Topic: Which tier - 2 or 3?
- Replies: 10
- Views: 15169
- Wed Jan 06, 2016 3:02 am
- Forum: Forum 1. From Questions About ISS & Search to Anything and Everything About International Teaching
- Topic: Which tier - 2 or 3?
- Replies: 10
- Views: 15169
Re: Which tier - 2 or 3?
Indeed. The reason I asked is because many of the things that make up the school would mark it up as a higher tier school.
a) The students are all (or at least mostly) genuine international students.
b) The teachers are all certified and experienced.
c) It runs proper IB programs, and relatively successfully. (and it is CIS / NEASC accredited)
d) The admin up to HoS level are all OH, not locals.
All of these are things that when looking at PsyGuy's / other people's tier definitions, would be positives.
a) The students are all (or at least mostly) genuine international students.
b) The teachers are all certified and experienced.
c) It runs proper IB programs, and relatively successfully. (and it is CIS / NEASC accredited)
d) The admin up to HoS level are all OH, not locals.
All of these are things that when looking at PsyGuy's / other people's tier definitions, would be positives.
- Sun Jan 03, 2016 9:44 am
- Forum: Forum 1. From Questions About ISS & Search to Anything and Everything About International Teaching
- Topic: Which tier - 2 or 3?
- Replies: 10
- Views: 15169
Which tier - 2 or 3?
I was wondering which tier Psyguy or others might give to the following school? (I will not give its name or location).
School of just under 500 students PreK to 12 in a city center. (Popular city with lots to do - not cheap, but not expensive).
Officially no local students, although some (about 30%) dual nationals. Students come from businesses, NGOs, UN agencies and embassies / consulates.
Teachers / Admin - almost all (90%) OH, and all certified with 4+ years experience. Mainly US / Can / Aussie mix.
Runs PYP, IGCSE and IBDP. DP APS = 31/32 most years. CIS and NEASC accredited.
IT Package: 33-44k net, plus housing (ok but not great), local private healthcare (v. good, but local), flight home every 2 years + other small benefits. No retirement.
Claims to be non profit, but owned by a larger corporation, and very much feels for profit. PD available for IB programs, otherwise all in-house. The admin try hard, but the corporation thing means that turnover is about 1/3 faculty & admin each year. Faculty & Admin, when they leave, often go on to great tier 1 / Elite schools (going by posts on this board).
School of just under 500 students PreK to 12 in a city center. (Popular city with lots to do - not cheap, but not expensive).
Officially no local students, although some (about 30%) dual nationals. Students come from businesses, NGOs, UN agencies and embassies / consulates.
Teachers / Admin - almost all (90%) OH, and all certified with 4+ years experience. Mainly US / Can / Aussie mix.
Runs PYP, IGCSE and IBDP. DP APS = 31/32 most years. CIS and NEASC accredited.
IT Package: 33-44k net, plus housing (ok but not great), local private healthcare (v. good, but local), flight home every 2 years + other small benefits. No retirement.
Claims to be non profit, but owned by a larger corporation, and very much feels for profit. PD available for IB programs, otherwise all in-house. The admin try hard, but the corporation thing means that turnover is about 1/3 faculty & admin each year. Faculty & Admin, when they leave, often go on to great tier 1 / Elite schools (going by posts on this board).