My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Whether you're considering emigrating or an expat abroad, you'll find likeminds on this forum.

Living overseas

Schools in Lyon

3 replies

Jazz18 · 01/02/2018 11:51

Calling all international mommas in Lyon!! We are currently expats finishing a 4 year contract and moving to Lyon on a local contract. That said it may not be the end of our travelling but hopefully we will settle for 5-6 years. Having a real dilemma about schools. A friend of mine from Lyon rated CSI really high and Ombrosa as a disaster but hearing mixed views on other boards. ISL is international but not really suitable for longer termers? Any suggestions - I like the idea of CSI but it also seems huge and I am wondering if state run does it have good funding for facilities etc....

OP posts:
Report
RiverSparkleFairy · 15/02/2018 21:10

Hi Jazz, this may be too late but I looked at all three schools before we moved to Lyon. My kids are at Ombrosa and we are very happy with it.
Frustratingly, you'll hear mixed things about each school - I've heard of people hating CSI and opinions on schools are VERY subjective and also rumour-driven! Describing Ombrosa as a 'disaster' seems very odd - it's a large school of over 1000 pupils from 3-18 and it's well-established. It's NOT an international school, though, and I do suspect that a few American families put their kids in, thinking it's an international school (and MUCH cheaper than ISL) then get a big shock that it's actually a predominantly French school but partly bilingual.
Let me know if you'd like our thoughts on the three schools but really the best thing you can do is visit all of them and make up your own mind.

Report
Jazz18 · 22/02/2018 12:57

Thanks so much for your feedback! In fact timing is excellent as I just got final confirmation on the move last night. Indeed the feedback on Ombrosa is strange- it came from someone French so I need to probe a bit more with her!! Any other feedback/opinions you have on any of the schools is highly appreciated. I will visit all but can't get down to Lyon for at least another month so trying to do as much research as possible in advance. Such a mine field!!!

OP posts:
Report
BogstandardBelle · 25/02/2018 17:46

What age are your children?

The feedback that I hear is...
ISL - to only truly international option. Teaching in English, working towards IB / IGCSEs. Very high fees (often paid by employer). Attracts a lot of US expats who don't need/want to integrate into France but want their kids to be able to slot into Int school wherever they land next. Not bilingual in the slightest - kids can go through ISL from kindergarten to IB and still only speak rudimentary French.

CSI - French state school so crappy building and not great facilities, majority of teaching in French (6 hrs a week English in primary, then specific subjects at college / lycée). Yr children (depending on age) will be offered French lessons to help them adjust but they will be expected to become properly bilingual in French and English in order to progress. Very 'French' on the French side - highly academic, old-fashioned chalk-n-talk teaching, heavy focus on maths / French / science. Students work towards the OIB which is a French Bac with specific subjects taught in English. Reputation for very good results, academically. Anglophone section is fee-paying, but not private school fee levels. Very difficult to get in, at all levels due to limited places and huge demand.

Ombrosa - for French parents who want their children to speak English, and British / Americans who want the private school experience - nice buildings, landscaped grounds etc. Still pretty French in terms teaching, I've got friends who love it, others who've taken their kids out sharpish.

There are various other 'bilingual' options, including some private catholic schools which currently claim to offer an anglophone section as per CSI i.e. Some hours a week taught in English. Generally, they are all full of French kids whose parents want them to learn English, they really aren't truly bilingual. None have been accredited to offer the OIB yet and again, they attract French families.
Depending on yr kids ago you could also consider local French schools, especially if you are all English at home? Depends on yr longer term plans I guess.

Bon courage!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.