Singapore International School Vs Kennedy

vpstse

Registered User
I have enrolled my 5-year-old son to these two schools for the next school year. Can anyone help to compare these two schools?
 
Hi vpstse,

These are two very different systems:

SIS is billingual (Mandarin and English) and has an excellent Mandarin programme. It is a very academic school with lots of homework and exams once a year for younger children and twice for older ones. They follow the Singaporean syllabus and the teachers are a mixture of Singaporeans, westeners and Mainland chinese.

Kennedy is an ESF school which follows the British system. It does not have the academic focus that SIS has and the Mandarin programme is not as strong. There will not be as much homework or as much pressure on the children as SIS.

It is worth thinking about the secondary school you want your child to go to as it is much easier to start off in the school that streams into this one. SIS will be starting a small secondary school in the coming years in the same building. ESF has a number of secondary schools in HK including South Island.

I teach children from many types of schools in HK so have a pretty good understanding of the systems and I have worked in the system too. Feel fee to ask questions.

Sunrays
 
Hi Sunrays

I am concerned about whether SIS kids get to have fun while having the extra pressure as well, have you taught there b4? What about children's exposure to different nationalities? I feel it is important for kids to mingle freely and be comfortable with kids of other races. Finally, I know it appears frivolous but, what is the "elite" factor seen by the general public and expats in HK between SIS and a ESF school?
 
Is it possible that a kid will be rejected during interview? How's the chances like? What happen if the kid is very quiet and shy towards stranger? Wouldn't the kid be in a disadvantage position? And if one fails in interview, what other options are there for the kid?
 
Hi zapteo and secretsquirrel,

Yes, I taught at SIS for three years and teach quite a few kids who are students there now so I know the system pretty well, but like any school it is constantly changing.

There are nearly no caucasians at SIS and the majority of students are from mainland China, Singapore, Hong Kong, or Malaysia. In that sense it is not as international as many other schools. The teaching philosophy, as I mentioned before, is exam oriented and there is more focus on exams and results than you would get at ESF.

It's hard to define "fun". They children know they have a lot of work and that the expectations are high. Those that move to ESF, recognise that it is "easier" there and a more relaxed system.

Most expats have not heard of SIS and most will go to a school that follows a western syllabus (ESF, HKIS, AIS, CIS). If you are Singaporean or want your child to get a very good grounding in mandarin then SIS is great. Also for local children who struggle to get into one of the other international schools, it can be a good stepping stone. It also depends on your child and how they learn best, some thrive in this environment and I have seen kids do really well.

If you are Singaporean your child will not fail the interview, even if shy. The success rate at interview depends on the number of spaces they have for that year. Most schools will call your child for interview. Teachers are experienced at dealing with shy kids and it is very normal, especially with the younger kids.

Try not to worry or stress as your child will pick up on this. If possible, talk to the school and find out what the interview involves and prepare your child.

Good luck and all the best,

Sunrays
 
what about chinese international & canadian international? what is the ratio of caucasian & chinese. is it true that most students at chinese intl are very wealthy & they're very stuck up? and is it true that although canadian intl the school system is very realxed, the parents still send them to tons of after school tuitions?
 
I'm not sure about the ratios at these two schools. There are wealthy parents who send their children to CIS....they have to send the children somewhere and this seems to be one of the schools they choose. I don't know about being stuck up, I teach some wealthy kids and find them very down to earth.
Sending kids to after school tuition seems to be the trend for kids going to any type of school, especially for asian families. I don't know of you will "escape" this trend in HK.
 
Hi Sunrays,

Would like to know more about Chinese Int'l vs Canadian Int'l. How do you compare these 2 schools :
1) Academically and also in terms of work loads pressure etc?
2) How are their Mandarin program?
2) Child development and general behaviour (I have heard some international schools are very relaxed, kids party a lot, start smoking at young age....I am a little old fashion)

Appreciate your feedback.

Thanks

Mrs Buffy
 
Thank you sunrays for your kind advice. I feel more relaxed now to let my girl go for the interview. Actually, I have been very tensed and nervous about her not able to get into SIS and for that matter I think I have passed on the pressure and stress to her somehow. Now I will just try and relax a bit more and take things easier. I tell myself, I can't change her quiet and timid character overnight though I have prepared her academically well enough.
 
Glad to know I helped secretsquirrel. It's normal for parents to feel anxious and sometimes the teachers will have to spend more time calming parents than their child! All the best.

I don't know so much about Canadian and what I do know about both these schools is limited to primary Mrs Buffy. I get the impression that the workload is similar but CIS is harder to get into so this would suggests that they set their academic standards higher.

CIS follows the IB programme which more schools are switching to, I'm not sure about Canadian.

Mandarin programme is stronger at CIS, this is why many SIS parents want to send their child there as few schools have such a strong programme. Canadian will give them the basics, but CIS will provide fluency although they do have remedial classes for those who do not speak Mandarin. Speaking the language is not as important a requirement at interview as English and maths and they can get in with no Mandarin.

I have heard these stories too about problem behaviour occuring in some schools. I am sure it goes in waves from one school to another depending on the children, teachers and principal at that time. In this respect, I am sure local schools are more "old -fashioned" as stereotypically Asian children are more conservative and don't mature as quickly....but then again there is no sure way of avoiding these teenage problems.

Sunrays
 
Thanks Sunrays for your great wealth of info esp on SIS. It appears that there is a lack of "internationality" for SIS due to the student mix, though I hear from some foreigner friends who are caucasians that SIS is more on their radar now, as China is such a massive economic force. Is this true? Are u still at SIS? Thanks
 
Hi zapteo,

Could be that SIS student population will change. I no longer work there, but when I was three years ago there was only one caucasian pupil. Also they are setting up a secondary school to open shortly so this also makes it a more attractive option. It is true Mandarin is becoming more important and as I mentioned before they have an excellent programme with a great teachers from the mainland. Things are constantly changing, so its hard to keep up!

Sunrays
 
Back
Top