Edited by Giulia Ceccon · Chief Marketing Officer
Rotterdam has 9 schools in the sen / special education category, providing families with focused options.
Compare 10 SEN / Special Education international schools in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Filter by curriculum, fees (average EUR 15,029), location, and more to find the right international school now.
International School Het Rijnlands Lyceum Oegstgeest (ISRLO) is an IB World School embedded in the Rijnlands Lyceum Oegstgeest campus, serving students aged 11 to 18. The curriculum combines the IB Middle Years Programme (MYP) for 11–16 with the IB Diploma Programme (DP) in the final two years. MYP spans five years, and students may receive the IB Middle Years Certificate or a Record of Achievement on completion. The DP offers six subjects from Groups 1–6, with Higher Level and Standard Level options, together with Theory of Knowledge, the Extended Essay and CAS. Languages of instruction are English, with Dutch, French and Spanish taught as separate language lessons. The campus hosts about 1,400 pupils, including around 350 ISRLO students, and provides a media library, ICT support, and a healthy canteen. Notable activities include Model United Nations, annual theatre productions, and language immersion events. The school emphasises practical inquiry, collaboration, and inclusion.
BSN is an independent, non-profit school for ages 3–18 across four The Hague campuses: Junior Leidschenveen, Junior Vlaskamp, Senior Leidschenveen and Senior Voorschoten. It delivers the British curriculum at all sites; senior schools offer IB Programmes and A-Levels, with Sixth Form pathways in A Levels, IBDP, IBCP and BTEC. Founded in 1931, BSN is governed by The Association, chaired by the British Ambassador to the Netherlands, with a Board of Governors and staff representation. Senior School Leidschenveen is the newest campus, planned to reach 550 pupils in Years 7–13; Junior Vlaskamp is noted for its facilities. The four campuses sit in residential areas with good transport links. The school runs a broad co-curricular programme, including MUN, the Duke of Edinburgh Award, sport, Art & Design, Music and Drama, plus trips and Eco projects.
Located in the Netherlands, Lighthouse Special Education is an international primary school for children with complex special educational needs, offering education in English. The school serves ages 3 to 13 in two small classes (5–8 and 8–13), each with up to eight pupils, and a preschool class, Three Little Ships, for ages 2.5 to 5. Curriculum combines the British National Curriculum, the International Primary Curriculum (UK), and the Dutch Primary Education Curriculum, with an individualized program for every student. For 5–13 year olds, it emphasizes basic skills in communication, reading, spelling, language and maths, using Edmark Reading Program and Numicon, and supports progress through tailored IEPs reviewed twice yearly. Learners access iPads with age-appropriate apps; therapies—speech and language, physiotherapy, sensory integration, and occupational therapy—are provided on-site by English-speaking, qualified therapists. The school focuses on social and emotional development, independence, and preparing students for school life within a supportive, multilingual environment.
BSN is an independent, non-profit school for ages 3–18 across four The Hague campuses: Junior Leidschenveen, Junior Vlaskamp, Senior Leidschenveen and Senior Voorschoten. It delivers the British curriculum at all sites; senior schools offer IB Programmes and A-Levels, with Sixth Form pathways in A Levels, IBDP, IBCP and BTEC. Founded in 1931, BSN is governed by The Association, chaired by the British Ambassador to the Netherlands, with a Board of Governors and staff representation. Senior School Leidschenveen is the newest campus, planned to reach 550 pupils in Years 7–13; Junior Vlaskamp is noted for its facilities. The four campuses sit in residential areas with good transport links. The school runs a broad co-curricular programme, including MUN, the Duke of Edinburgh Award, sport, Art & Design, Music and Drama, plus trips and Eco projects.
Welcome to Senior School Voorschoten (SSV), an international campus within The British School in The Netherlands. Located in a suburban area, SSV educates students aged 11 to 18 in English. Students follow the British National Curriculum up to GCSEs. In the Sixth Form, they choose between four distinct pathways: A Levels, BTEC qualifications, the IB Diploma, or the IB Career-related Programme. The campus features dedicated subject spaces, an atrium, and a student-led Eco-Garden that integrates environmental awareness into daily life. SSV is particularly known for its extensive co-curricular options, including a long-running Model United Nations (MUN) society where students debate global issues across Europe. Additionally, students participate in the Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award, completing community service and independent expeditions. Through targeted Mother Tongue Enrichment and Dutch language exams (CNaVT), SSV ensures students connect deeply with the local culture while preparing for global university destinations.
International School Wassenaar (ISW) is part of Rijnlands Lyceum Wassenaar (RLW) in the Netherlands. The school offers the International Baccalaureate Middle Years Programme (MYP) and Diploma Programme (DP) for students aged roughly 11 to 18. The RLW foundation, established in 1936, operates eight Dutch schools and collaborates with five abroad. In 2025 a new wing opened on the RLW campus to accommodate the International School. The campus lies in a leafy area near The Hague and Leiden, and it provides a warm, safe, supportive environment. Dutch is a subject within the IB curriculum, while all other subjects are taught in English. The school prepares students for university and higher vocational education. CAS is central to the DP, with activities such as the International Fair. ISW runs after-school clubs, a calendar of sports and trips, exchanges, a mentor programme, and a house system to foster leadership, wellbeing, and engagement globally today.
Harbour International Primary School sits in the heart of Rotterdam, offering an English-taught IPC-based program for ages 4 to 11. The curriculum blends the International Primary Curriculum with elements of the British curriculum, and literacy and numeracy are taught alongside IPC subjects, with English as an Additional Language (EAL) support for pupils who need it. The school serves a diverse community representing 69 nationalities, with around 280 pupils and small class sizes averaging 18. Dutch culture is woven into learning through All about the Netherlands activities, and the school is nut-free with snacks and lunches eaten in classrooms. The library is run by parent volunteers; there is a dedicated technology program and specialist music provision. A qualified gym teacher delivers PE to all pupils; younger children have PE on site, while older pupils walk to a local gym and Group 4–8 swim weekly. Co-curricular activities include coding, art, basketball, mindfulness, chess and music lessons; the Parents' Support Group coordinates volunteering and fundraising.
Rotterdam International Secondary School (RISS) is part of the Wolfert van Borselen School Group and operates two campuses: Junior on Bentincklaan 294 and Senior on Schimmelpenninckstraat 23. For students aged 11–18, the curriculum runs Foundation Years (grades 6–8), Middle Years (9–10) and Senior Years (11–12). RISS offers Cambridge IGCSE, the IB Diploma Programme (DP), the IB Career-related Programme (CP) and a BTEC International Level 3 Diploma in Business. In CP, three IB DP subjects sit with a BTEC core; DP core includes Theory of Knowledge, Creativity, Activity and Service, and the Extended Essay. A Rose Programme characterises Foundation Years as experiential learning, while Middle Years include RISS Reach course. Senior Years provide DP or CP pathways, supported by a library and digital resources, plus a broad extracurricular offering including Debate, Model United Nations and Duke of Edinburgh Award. The school represents more than 70 nationalities and offers language choices.
BSN is an independent, non-profit school for ages 3–18 across four The Hague campuses: Junior Leidschenveen, Junior Vlaskamp, Senior Leidschenveen and Senior Voorschoten. It delivers the British curriculum at all sites; senior schools offer IB Programmes and A-Levels, with Sixth Form pathways in A Levels, IBDP, IBCP and BTEC. Founded in 1931, BSN is governed by The Association, chaired by the British Ambassador to the Netherlands, with a Board of Governors and staff representation. Senior School Leidschenveen is the newest campus, planned to reach 550 pupils in Years 7–13; Junior Vlaskamp is noted for its facilities. The four campuses sit in residential areas with good transport links. The school runs a broad co-curricular programme, including MUN, the Duke of Edinburgh Award, sport, Art & Design, Music and Drama, plus trips and Eco projects.
The American School of The Hague offers an American-style education for students from over 80 nationalities, integrating Advanced Placement (AP) and the International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme into its high school offerings. The school operates across two campuses in Wassenaar: the Early Childhood Center and the Main Campus, which houses dedicated STEM centers, a theater, and specific science laboratories. A defining feature of the school is its Peace and Diplomacy program, which includes an active Model United Nations and the Sustainable Development Goal Academies. Through these academies, high school students design solutions for real-world issues and travel to implement their projects in communities within Nepal or Thailand. Furthermore, the school incorporates a fully inclusive learning support system, featuring self-contained classrooms for students with developmental delays. Students also participate in environmental initiatives like creating pollinator-friendly gardens and organizing waste-sorting systems on campus.
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