“La Maternelle”: learning to live in a social environment

With the addition of Pre-K and Kindergarten, our bilingual preschool provides children with the complete Cycle 1 of the French preschool system, a foundation for learning and thriving in their years ahead at the ISG and beyond. Our programs balance play and structured activities, using real-world projects to engage children in the community around them. A focus on expression, language and communication in French and in English helps students to develop self-awareness and social skills.

​Prioritizing Social Skills
The specially trained teachers, known as "professeurs des écoles," follow the national curriculum which itself places much importance on social skills. Children learn how to be independent, how to cooperate with their classmates, how to be responsible, and how to question the world around them. Indeed, social skills are recognized as being as important as academic skills in preparing the youngest students for their educational journey.

Creating Active Learners
French pupils begin their journey to education early, as young as 2,5 or 3 years old. Preschool in France is called La Maternelle and the objective of these introductory years is to ensure children acquire all of the necessary skills to become curious and responsible students -- in other words, active learners. The success and strength of the French educational system are due to the solid preparation that the students receive and the attention to detail they are taught in these three key skill areas: the social realm, the academic realm, and the artistic realm.

​Building a Strong Academic Foundation
The mission of La Maternelle is the same as that of French school in general: to promote a common culture, a set of values that will in turn help each child develop to his/her full potential while being an active member of the community. As such, academic skills are taught in a precise and progressive way. The French educational system is well known for its detailed attention to foundation. Indeed, children master a skill before being presented with the next one, as each skill is built upon the other.​