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International School of Aruba

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Phone
  
+297 583 5040

International School of Aruba

Address
  
Wayaca 238A, Oranjestad, Aruba

Similar
  
Colegio Frere Bonifacius, EPI College, Maria College, Colegio San Hose, Reina Beatrix School

2016 graduation of international school of aruba


The International School of Aruba (ISA) is a school in Aruba. It is private, non-profit and co-educational. In 2006, it moved to a new campus with a more centralized location.

Contents

It was founded in 1929 and was owned by Lago Oil and Transport Co. Ltd. From 1986 on, the school was governed by the ISA community and parent body. ISA was acquired by International School Services (ISS) in 2004. In 2005, a new campus was constructed and ISA was relocated to central Aruba in the residential neighborhood of Wayaca.

ISA has approximately 200 students from Montessori through grade 12, comprising over 18 nationalities; the largest group by nationality comes from the Netherlands/ Aruba, Venezuela, United States/ Canada, India, and Vatican City. The average class size is 15 students to 1 teacher.

ISA has 23 faculty members for the 2009-2010 school year. The staff are from 8 countries including a majority of US citizens, Canadians, Dutch/Arubans, South American and other island nationalities.

Winter concert international school of aruba elementary just one candle


History

The first English school in Aruba was opened in Seroe Colorado in September, 1929. It was owned and operated by Lago Oil and Transport Co. Ltd. to provide for the schooling of the expatriates' children. During the 1960s, the school also opened to dependents of island residents on a tuition basis. With the closing of Lago in 1985, the parents of the remaining students formed the International School of Aruba (ISA), a non-profit Foundation, to continue English language education on the island.

In March 2004, the Board of Directors passed the governance and ownership of ISA to International Schools Services (ISS), a not-for-profit organization of Princeton, New Jersey.

ISS promised to fund a new school building for ISA as part of the transfer agreement, and financed the construction of the new campus.

References

International School of Aruba Wikipedia