Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3...
Missing a lot
I was just giving A (single) defining example within the same geographical location. I wouldnt disagree with any of your groupings, and we just have a different naming convention (elite vs. sub tier 3).
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I wouldn't count the % of local students or 1 dominating foreign student group as necessarily a negative. Most schools (like mine for example) in a remote post have this issue even if they are the official school that all the UN embassy employee children attend/US Department of State supported school.
What you have to really look at is how the school is addressing this - are they willing to think outside of the box to tackle "lostintranslation" type issues?
Furthermore - I agree with the other posters - most students attending an int'l school are looking to get into European or US universities. After speaking to our college counselor - the process really isn't that much different from the States and you learn a lot on the go. The real difficulty is often times dealing with students/parents who have an inflated image of themselves (ie. low to middling grades and applying to Harvard)... ;)
What you have to really look at is how the school is addressing this - are they willing to think outside of the box to tackle "lostintranslation" type issues?
Furthermore - I agree with the other posters - most students attending an int'l school are looking to get into European or US universities. After speaking to our college counselor - the process really isn't that much different from the States and you learn a lot on the go. The real difficulty is often times dealing with students/parents who have an inflated image of themselves (ie. low to middling grades and applying to Harvard)... ;)
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