The British School in Tokyo

The British School in Tokyo
Location
Tokyo, Japan
Shibuya Campus
35°39′50.2″N 139°42′11.6″E / 35.663944°N 139.703222°E
Showa Campus
35°38′38.4″N 139°40′37.1″E / 35.644000°N 139.676972°E
Information
Type COBIS high school
Established 1989
Head of School Brian Christian
Website bst.ac.jp

The British School in Tokyo (BST; ブリティシュ・スクール・イン東京 Buritishu Sukūru in Tōkyō) is an international school in central Tokyo with over 850 students from over 50 nationalities. BST takes students aged 3–18 that have been rated "Excellent" in all eight areas examined by the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI).[1] A third of BST students are neither British nor Japanese and there are no entry requirements other than fluency in English. The curriculum follows the National Curriculum.[2]

The school is based on two sites with students aged 3–8 based at the Shibuya campus and students aged 9–18 based at the Showa campus.

History

Established as a trust in 1988 to meet the needs of parents who wished their children to receive a British style education in Tokyo, BST was officially opened by Margaret Thatcher in Sept 1989 with just 63 students and rapidly expanded. By 1993 there were 200 students.

The existing site could no longer accommodate the growing demand for places and a modern building with improved facilities (the current BST Shibuya site) was opened in Shibuya on 14 May 1998 for over 300 children aged three to eleven. In 2000 the School opened a second site at the municipal Shibuya Elementary School (SES) to accommodate a small number of older students up to age thirteen; the Upper School. In 2003 SES was demolished and the Upper School had to be moved to another municipal facility on the far side of Shibuya Station, the Owada Junior High School. The School continued to attract strong interest, though facilities, particularly for the Upper School, were less than ideal.

To address the issue of inadequate facilities, part of the school was moved in August 2006 to newly renovated accommodation on the campus of the Showa Women's University, located 10 minutes bus ride away to the west of Shibuya station. The original site, BST Shibuya, now accommodates 350 Nursery to Year 3 pupils in refurbished facilities suited to the needs of this age group. BST Showa offers educational provision from Year 4 to 13 for 300 students with excellent sports and other specialist facilities along with provision of Key Stages 4 and 5 including 'GCSE', 'AP' level and A-Levels, AQA Bac and the International Duke of Edinburgh Award.

Locations

BST has two campuses: Nursery through Year 3 attend the Shibuya Campus in the Shibuya area of Shibuya Ward, and students in Year 4 through Year 13 attend the Showa Campus in Building 5 of Showa Women's University in Setagaya Ward.[3]

The Showa campus opened on 28 August 2006.[4]

Curriculum

Throughout the whole school, BST offers the full range of core subjects – Literacy, Numeracy, ICT and Personal, Social and Health Education (PSHE), and foundation subjects History, Geography, Art, Design Technology, RE, Music and Physical Education. In addition, two Modern Foreign Languages are offered – Japanese from Nursery and French from Year 3.

Accreditation

BST is accredited by the Council of British International Schools (COBIS)[5] and has been inspected by ISI. It is also a member of Kanto Plains Schools Association and the Japan Council of International Schools (JCIS).[6]

Sports

Sports include

References

  1. http://www.isi.net/home/
  2. http://www.education.gov.uk/
  3. "Facilities and Location." British School in Tokyo. Retrieved on 8 March 2015. "BST Shibuya Campus – (Nursery to Year 3) Address: 1-21-18 Shibuya Shibuya-ku Tokyo 150-0002" (Map) and "BST Showa Campus – (Year 4 to Year 13) Address: Showa Women’s University 5th Bldg. 1-7-57 Taishido Setagaya-ku Tokyo 154-8533"
  4. "ブリティッシュ・スクール・イン・トウキョウ昭和." Showa Women's University. Retrieved on 9 March 2015. "2006年8月28日、学校法人昭和女子大学は、イギリスの義務教育課程の学校「ブリティッシュ・スクール・イン・トウキョウ昭和」を開校しました"
  5. http://www.cobis.org.uk/about/about-cobis.html
  6. http://www.jcis.jp/

External links