malcontent wrote: ↑Sat, 24 Aug 2024 9:52 amYou mentioned that you were an Asian family, but there are Asian Americans, Asian Australians, etc… and even if you are from Asia, there are vast differences across Asia and across ASEAN. Even within Singapore there are large differences between heartlander and cosmopolitan demographics.
It also seems unclear whether you want a more conservative or liberal, academic or free wheeling environment for your child.
If you want conservative, you should consider ICS which you can think of as the Christian American School. If you want strong academics, you can consider SJI which you can think of as the local International School. OFS has long been known here as the best choice for academically weaker and students who are more slack. SAIS is relatively new but from what I’ve heard, it’s less of an American school and more of an International school using American curriculum.
You didn’t mention it, but the more important consideration for your 8th grader is where they will go to college. US system (AP) is best only if they are US bound. The Swiss IB system is harder, but more broadly accepted around the world. The UK (A-Level) is best for college acceptance in counties with British patterned education, including Singapore.
If aiming for NZ (why? It only has one or two internationally 'good' universities) make sure you truly understand the admission requirements. I would probably recommend Australia over NZ if you want to go South but honestly these days I'd throw Malaysia, Phillipines and Indonesia into the mix as well.PNGMK wrote: ↑Sat, 24 Aug 2024 4:17 pmOFS is not a good school. SAIS is a for profit school.
In general I recommend not for profit over for profit schools. At present these are ICS, SAS, Tanglin, Nexus (I think) as well as the ones you cannot get into I suspect such as SJI (St Joseph Internationa) and HCI.
If you can get your child into a local school that would be best but is probably impossible.
I was wondering the same, but then thought… it has to be potential immigration benefits. Can’t be for the sheepPNGMK wrote: ↑Sat, 24 Aug 2024 4:19 pmIf aiming for NZ (why? It only has one or two internationally 'good' universities) make sure you truly understand the admission requirements. I would probably recommend Australia over NZ if you want to go South but honestly these days I'd throw Malaysia, Phillipines and Indonesia into the mix as well.PNGMK wrote: ↑Sat, 24 Aug 2024 4:17 pmOFS is not a good school. SAIS is a for profit school.
In general I recommend not for profit over for profit schools. At present these are ICS, SAS, Tanglin, Nexus (I think) as well as the ones you cannot get into I suspect such as SJI (St Joseph Internationa) and HCI.
If you can get your child into a local school that would be best but is probably impossible.
malcontent wrote: ↑Sat, 24 Aug 2024 11:28 pmI was wondering the same, but then thought… it has to be potential immigration benefits. Can’t be for the sheepPNGMK wrote: ↑Sat, 24 Aug 2024 4:19 pmIf aiming for NZ (why? It only has one or two internationally 'good' universities) make sure you truly understand the admission requirements. I would probably recommend Australia over NZ if you want to go South but honestly these days I'd throw Malaysia, Phillipines and Indonesia into the mix as well.PNGMK wrote: ↑Sat, 24 Aug 2024 4:17 pmOFS is not a good school. SAIS is a for profit school.
In general I recommend not for profit over for profit schools. At present these are ICS, SAS, Tanglin, Nexus (I think) as well as the ones you cannot get into I suspect such as SJI (St Joseph Internationa) and HCI.
If you can get your child into a local school that would be best but is probably impossible.![]()
malcontent wrote: ↑Mon, 26 Aug 2024 1:10 amMy kids are just entering college now, so I can tell you that 8th grade is definitely the time to start thinking seriously about what path you want your child to pursue — the last four years is what most colleges look at in terms of academic and nonacademic achievements. IB is the most widely accepted globally, so it’s probably the best choice unless you are going for American or British systems.
Indonesia isn’t a bad option to do the IB, I’ve got several nephews and nieces there who are doing that right now, definitely cheaper than Singapore.
NYY1 wrote: ↑Mon, 26 Aug 2024 6:11 amIf you like the outdoors/nature, you can also consider the Bay Area/Northern California or Seattle in the US or Vancouver in Canada. All are expensive (or far from cheap), and the opportunity set varies quite a bit.
In reality, these days any place with a large opportunity set or nice amenities (weather, entertainment, etc) is going to cost a fair amount when one is just starting out.
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