For several months now, we here in the International School of Brussels Admissions Office have been doing an activity with prospective families during admissions interviews that allows all family members to choose from a series of 24 cards the five factors that are most important when selecting an international school (see article Rethinking Admissions as a Learning Experience by my colleague David Willows). “Language learning” consistently comes up in the top five, a good 20% ahead of the next cards: “Sports/Arts”; “Curriculum Choices”; “Friends”; “Teachers”; and “Academic Results”. But what does language learning actually mean to the people who visit our school?
Colleague Sara Sulaimani and I have reflected on it a lot based on our interviews with thousands of families over the years and the answer is not simple, as people showing interest in ISB come from a variety of backgrounds with different perspectives. In a modest attempt to begin to answer that question, here we will make some general observations from the points of view of four broad groups:
- Local Families
- Expats from non-English speaking countries
- Expats from English speaking countries
- “Mixed” families (parents with different languages)
- Nature of English Language Development (ELD – sometimes called ESL) programmes offered
- Instruction of host country language(s) to locals and expatriates, including content-based courses like science or social studies
- Other languages offered within the school day or after-school
- Availability of home language programmes for different languages (on and off campus)
- School’s position on students receiving learning support in a second language
- The school’s demographics and linguistic dynamics “in the playground” and questions of integration
- Languages and university entrance requirements
- Resources and strategies for language acquisition available to families - but with a dose of realism so as to manage expectations prudently
- Anecdotes and stories of success
